If you’ve consumed any financial commentary over the years, you’ve likely heard of Gary Shilling. His legendary, against the herd, call on interest rates in 1980 set him up for a 40-year run that made him exceptionally wealthy.
If you recall, many investment gurus in the early 1980s were predicting the future while projecting the past. After a decade of raging price inflation, the popular dogma was to pack one’s portfolio with gold coins, fine art, and antiques.
This was the proven, surefire way to preserve one’s hard-earned wealth from the ravages of inflation. The recent past and simple logic pointed to higher consumer prices ad infinitum.
Nixon had closed the gold window in 1971. Prices had quickly spiraled out of control. America, it seemed, was about to go full Weimar.
Howard Ruff, in his investment newsletter The Ruff Times, was predicting the dollar would soon turn to hyperinflationary ash, like conifer trees in a California wildfire. It was inevitable. And imminent! Continue reading







