AnCaps
ANARCHO-CAPITALISTS
Bitch-Slapping Statists For Fun & Profit Based On The Non-Aggression Principle
 
HomePortalGalleryRegisterLog in

 

 Harry Schultz on the Power Elite, Free Markets, the Internet and Why Gold Is Going Much Higher

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
CovOps

CovOps

Female Location : Ether-Sphere
Job/hobbies : Irrationality Exterminator
Humor : Über Serious

Harry Schultz on the Power Elite, Free Markets, the Internet and Why Gold Is Going Much Higher Vide
PostSubject: Harry Schultz on the Power Elite, Free Markets, the Internet and Why Gold Is Going Much Higher   Harry Schultz on the Power Elite, Free Markets, the Internet and Why Gold Is Going Much Higher Icon_minitimeMon Jul 19, 2010 5:05 am

Introduction: Chevalier Harry D. Schultz, KHC, KM, KCPR, KCSA, KCSS, has written scores of books and is considered a founder of the investment newsletter business. Based in Monaco, and now in his 80s, he has been producing his newsletter, The International Harry Schultz Letter (HSL), for over 45 years. During his 65 years of publishing, Harry has lived in 17 different countries and published his work in many of them. He is truly an international man whose shoulders have rubbed with some of the top political, business and social figures of our time. He prides himself of being stridently anti-communist and anti-socialist. According to the international edition of the Guinness Book of World Records from 1981-2003, Harry Schultz was the highest paid investment consultant in the world fetching anywhere from US$3500 to US$4500 dollars per hour. Mr. Schultz is quoted – even emulated – on a regular basis in various financial books, articles and in interviews including other newsletters. The book, 'Moneychangers' by Lewis Dorsey is based upon Harry Schultz. Knighted five times, Harry is a man for all seasons and a true citizen of the world.

Daily Bell: This interview will review material that you've gone over in your books, but we hope you will answer the questions nonetheless as some in our audience are not aware of your works or point of view. A good place to begin would be to ask how did you get interested in finance in the first place?

Harry Schultz: I have a love affair with cause-and-effect. The financial world is probably the nearest you can come to discovering the answers to both cause-and-effect. And that leads on to how to benefit from that knowledge.

Daily Bell: When did you adopt a free-market orientation?

Harry Schultz: From my earliest ages, I produced a newspaper, via typewriter, then mimeograph, for my mother, then the neighborhood, then the family, then the school & college. I then bought real newspapers, of small size of course, but the principles were nearly the same as for big ones. Running newspapers brings you into close contact with all elements of society.

Daily Bell: Did you discover Austrian finance or come to conclusions on your own?

Harry Schultz: Cause-and-effect flows neatly from the Austrian approach. I was a friend of Fritz von Hayek, but that was after the event. He spoke at one of my seminars ¬- his first ever at any seminar. I sort of brought him out of the academic closet. he was a delightful good-humored man.

Daily Bell: When did you begin writing a financial newsletter and why?

Harry Schultz: Those who bought my first book about Bear Markets, published by Prentice Hall, urged me to write newsletters. I continued to write books & booklets, but the newsletters had a more immediate impact. They are faster to the public than books, obviously.

Daily Bell: Why do people pay you so much for a consultation?

Harry Schultz: Hard to reply without sounding like I'm blowing my own horn. My batting average & forecasts in the Harry Schultz Letter (HSL) have been first rate, so people were willing to pay first-class prices. By the way, I have retired from giving consultations now. At my age, it's enough already.

Daily Bell: You've been successful for a very long time – and you may be, indeed, the oldest active investment writer and consultant around. How has the world changed in your opinion?

Harry Schultz: It's gotten unpleasant morally, as everyone now realizes – but it's too late for the wakeup call. It's gotten speedier, but not better because of speed. There is scant benefit to speed, whether by car, plane, email or market facilities. Speed has forced people to act before they can think things through. Often speed means you don't weigh the risk/reward factors – as there doesn't seem to be time for it. High tech makes things easier in many ways, but causes more stress, partly because it keeps breaking down. You see this with computer glitches, crashes and viruses. Also, hi-tech goads you into making fast decisions.

When big corporations must keep a full-time team of techies on-hand to fix computers that fizzle daily, then tech is not, repeat not, working. Private citizens can't afford the cost or the time-loss to keep tech working. For every hour technology saves us, we lose 75-90 minutes. The stress is not measurable.

Typewriters don't break down, yet we are forced to accept computers that do. Autos no longer break down. The computer nerds only want to sell them (Microsoft, Dell, etc) and promote updates (which cause new problems). They aren't interested in making them as efficient as cars and TVs have become. They've had decades to get it right but have made near zero progress toward reliability.

Speed is not a worthy goal, nor is the size of the mega bites your computer can handle. Dependability should be the goal. The same goes for banking, rating agencies and derivatives. Everyone wants profits, not dependability. It's a new form of fraud, masquerading as progress. Morality, where art thou? End of soapbox.

Daily Bell: Has investing changed?

Harry Schultz: In some respects, the more things change the more they remain the same – which applies mainly to our emotions. And emotions are what make you or break you in markets. You must control them, be able to switch from long to short in a flash, without 'caring' whether your investment has changed direction. I can switch from long gold to short gold in a flash, without emotion. It wasn't always so. You need to learn emotional control. You can be a believer in the gold standard, as I am, but still sell it short during a gold market correction. It's the same with every market.

Daily Bell: Has the Internet made a difference in terms of information flow?

Harry Schultz: Yes, some good and some bad. The overload of information makes it hard work to sort the wheat from the chaff. There is more to read than you can cope with, so you need great discipline. Not everyone is good at discipline. Oddly your cultural background affects this. Germans are good at discipline. Latins are less interested in it. Weather also plays a role in this, by the way. The thinkers, the book writers, are mostly from cool climate countries. Almost nobody writes books in Africa. It's too hot.

More: http://www.thedailybell.com/1204/Harry-Schultz-on-the-Power-Elite-Free-Markets-the-Internet-and-Why-Gold-Is-Going-Much-Higher.html
Back to top Go down
 

Harry Schultz on the Power Elite, Free Markets, the Internet and Why Gold Is Going Much Higher

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
 :: Anarcho-Capitalist Categorical Imperatives :: AnCaps' Laissez-faire Free Trade Zone-