Kurt RichebacherDr. Kurt Richebacher, Editor of The Richebacher Letter, is a world-renowned author, economist, and international banker. His work is regularly found in The Wall Street Journal, Barron's, the U.S. edition of The Fleet Street Letter and other respected financial publications. A native of Germany, Richebacher's background includes serving as chief economist at the German Banking Association, and later in the same position at the prestigious Dresdner Bank. Richebacher would then branch out on his own, cultivating his incendiary views on economics and finance in The Richebacher Letter. For nearly 60 years, Dr. Richebacher has followed world currency and credit markets, and never shied away from an informed opinion. Several years ago, Dr. Richebacher predicted the stock market would tank, and he never lost a cent during its collapse. His readers who followed his advice are still thankful to this day. Kurt Richebacher also hawks every move made by Alan Greenspan. He currently advises his readers on how to profit from, among other things, Greenspan's errors. Richebacher's readers count on his bias-free insight, opinions and predictions each month to get the most out of their investments. As analyst Leo Hood once said, "You may not like what he has to say, but ignore him at your own peril." Some of Kurt Richebacher's most timely predictions follow: - In September 1996, Kurt Richebacher warned that the Asian Tigers "were teetering on the edge of a cliff." In March 1997, he alerted his readers these countries were about to face "tremendous currency turmoil." Sure enough, in July 1997 the currencies began to fall like dominoes
and French national newspaper Le Figaro began calling Kurt Richebacher "the man who predicted the Asian crisis."
- In July 1998 Dr. Kurt Richebacher saw problems developing in Brazil. His research showed that its external debt was out of control, and its currency, the real, was is serious jeopardy. The real crashed in early 1999 and holders of Brazilian stocks were badly burned.
- In January 2000 he warned investors that the Internet stocks' days were numbered. "Next Christmas," he predicted, "very many of them will not be around." In March 2000, the bubble popped
tech companies collapsed and declared bankruptcy in droves
and $8 trillion of investors' wealth disappeared
Dr. Richebacher analyzes the same data that government and Wall Street analysts employ in their forecasts. But Richebacher reaches beyond the numbers, revealing what the mainstream "experts" fail to find. Learn how you can turn Kurt Richebacher's contrarian investing insights and economic analysis into personal profit: Kurt Richebacher: The Richebacher Letter Sign up for The Daily Reckoning
Learn what you can expect from today's markets and how to prosper in the face of uncertainty. One reader says, "You make more sense in one e-mail then a month of CNBC." Enter your e-mail address below: We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing
We Value Your Privacy | Read Daily Reckoning articles by Dr. Kurt Richebacher: The True Greenspan Legacy - 12/14/2005 by Dr. Kurt Richebächer "If Alan Greenspan jettisoned all inherited rules, he nevertheless chose one predominant rule, actually, his only rule: a strictly asymmetric policy pattern." America's Reality - 10/25/2005 by Dr. Kurt Richebächer "All that is needed to stop the consumer borrowing-and-spending spree in its tracks is a halt to the rise in house prices, implicitly finishing the provision of increasing collateral for higher borrowing." The Fed's Wild Imagination - 09/14/2005 By Kurt Richebächer "'Global savings glut.' You've heard members of the Federal Reserve refer to that term lately, but do you know what it really means? Luckily, the Good Doctor is here to explain
" |