The price of a commodity will never go to zero. When you invest in commodities futures, you're not buying a piece of paper that says you own an intangible piece of company that can go bankrupt.
Tough times helped many commodities producers become lean and mean through consolidation, mergers and cost-cutting. All that excess supply has been sopped up.
Bottoms in the investment world don't end with four-year lows; they end with 10- or 15-year lows.
Index investing outperforms active management year after year.
You can no longer buy commodities at Merrill Lynch. My guess is many analysts and even executives are too young to know how profitable a hot commodities market can be. They will soon.
If the current birth rate, which is the lowest in the major developed countries, continues, there will be no Japanese. Who will pay the enormous debt?
Commodities tend to zig when the equity markets zag.
Historically, there has been a bull market in commodities every 20 or 30 years.
Right now I own shares of companies in 28 countries.