Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
You're worth what you're worth
Greed is normally balanced by fear.
The only way to buy more is to produce more.
You don't help the economy by spending money.
Printing money is merely taxation in another form.
Wall Street is in trouble because Main Street is broke.
The real bubble in China is in US Treasuries, in US dollars.
Keynesians are to economics what witch doctors are to medicine.
My investment advice is rooted in my understanding of economics.
The only thing I can do with my bitcoin is give it to somebody else.
The strength in gold is revealing the general weakness in the dollar.
There is simply no way to sustain an economy based on consumer credit.
It is production that creates purchasing power, not the printing press!
Mutual funds are an overrated investment heavily promoted by Wall Street.
Confidence by itself, unless it has a valid basis, can get us into trouble.
Often President Obama's worst critics are Senator Obama and candidate Obama.
Fifty-dollar oil is just another stop on the road to much higher crude prices.
I don't want the technology of the 1950s, but I want the free market of the 1950s.
Gold has worked for thousands of years, but now with the Internet, it works even better.
You don't drive an economy by consuming - the consumer is not the engine, the consumer is the caboose.
Wal-Mart creates entry level jobs for people who don't have a lot of skills; those jobs don't pay a lot.
In a free market, businesses compete for customers by keeping prices down and for labor by keeping wages up.
Minimum wage laws make it illegal for a worker to accept a job that pays less, even if the worker needs that job.
The real story of Detroit [...] can be summed up in seven words. Private enterprise built it, government destroyed it.
All those commodities are going to have to rise in value as we are in short supply and we are printing too much money.
What got us out of the depression was capitalism, and we would have gotten out a lot quicker had the government not intervened.
When Trump was a candidate, he talked about the stock market, because, oh, the stock market was going up when Obama was president.
To get great again, we need to recreate what made us great in the first place, and so we're going to have to let interest rates go up.
Gold is not overvalued at $500, and gold will not be overvalued at $1,500 or $2,000. The real money is buying gold and putting it away.
The Philadelphia Feds manufacturers report for September revealed that despite a sharp slowdown, its prices paid index surged 257 points.
The left-wing agenda wants us to think that the reason there was a depression was because the government didn't do anything. That's not true.
At some point, the dollar has to give. You can't just keep printing money, and monetizing debt, and buying bonds, without the dollar imploding.
The middle class today would be poor by the standards of the 1950s. Today, with two people working, they would still live paycheck to paycheck.
Printing money is merely taxation in another form. Rather than robbing citizens of their money, government robs their money of its purchasing power.
Printing money creates inflation, which weakens an economy. Unfortunately, this kind of common-sense thinking never seems to penetrate academic circles.
The United States is like the Titanic, and I'm here with the lifeboat trying to get people to leave the ship... I see a real financial crisis coming for the United States.
One day we're going to look back at $1,700 with nostalgia. People are going to be shocked at how inexpensive gold was when it could be snapped up for such a bargain price.
The Fed is the biggest enemy of this economy. In fact, Ben Bernanke, as far as I'm concerned, he's public enemy No. 1. We're never going to have a recovery while this guy's in charge.
We're on a collision course for disaster. All we can do, all your viewers can do is brace for impactBuy gold. Buy silver Get as far away as you can from U.S. currency and the U.S. economy.
When the dollar collapses, it's not doing it in a vacuum. If the dollar loses value, it's doing so relative to some other currency. So the purchasing power that we lose, somebody else gets.
Once the government runs out of foreign and private sector bidders for new Treasurys, the Federal Reserve will be the only buyer, and the hyper-inflation cat will be completely out of the bag.
We are an indebted family going out for an expensive meal to celebrate getting approved foe a new credit card. It might feel good (at the time), but we're still simply delaying the inevitable.
People should have an escape valve for their money, their assets. If you have substantial financial assets, the government is going to confiscate the purchasing power of those assets and spend it.
We had a very upwardly mobile economy, and that peaked around the 1950s when the typical middle-class American family consisted of a father with a job and stay-at-home mom who took care of the kids.
That's what's really bothering me about Trump is the hypocrisy, because when Trump was a candidate, and he got elected - because, by and large, he told the truth about the phony nature of the recovery.
Of course if you happen to time the market really well, you can make more money with some of these smaller companies, but for someone with no exposure I wouldn't want to take the risk that they timed it wrong.
It can be argued that the U.S. brokerage and investment banking industry has transformed the modern American stock market into nothing more than a mechanism for transferring wealth from shareholders to management.
Every time the market has corrected, since 2008, it's always been the Fed that's made the bottom. The Fed has always saved the market either by cutting rates, launching QE, or threatening to launch another round of QE.
Once the dollar begins to collapse beneath the weight of all this new deficit spending, accumulation of contingency liabilities and the socialization of our economy, commodity prices and interest rates will head skyward.
Gold actually has properties - you can use gold for all sorts of things. People value gold for the metal. Nobody values bitcoin for the bitcoin; they value it because they believe that they can exchange it for something else.