What if the Fed DOESN’T raise interest rates?
Despite what you’ve read, we’re convinced that a rate hike
is not going to happen any time soon. Read why in a
special report being made available to Rick’s Picks subscribers.
If the consensus proves wrong and rates are held near zero,
there could be enormous opportunities for investors
with the guts to take the other side of the bet.
Why It Really Is Different This Time…
Rick’s Picks believes the Fed is unlikely to raise interest rates any time soon, let alone in September as many are predicting. This special report from our friend Doug Behnfield corroborates this and explains why in compelling detail. Doug, the savviest financial adviser we know, is an out-of-the-box thinker who has consistently gotten it right over the years we have known him, even when it meant going sharply against the consensus. Below are some key points he made in the report, which was originally prepared for clients and sent out a month ago. The report, entitled Thoughts on Normalized Rates and William McChesney Martin, is no less timely or relevant now, and its message is not to be ignored:
- With rates already near zero, it really is different this time because the Fed has no room for error
- Raising rates would weaken the stock market, strengthen the dollar and deflation and boost the cost of U.S. debt service
- Taken together, those things would necessitate – you guessed it! – even more-aggressive monetary easing than we’ve seen to date
Click on the link below and you will not only receive Doug’s eye-opening report, you will also get a free two-week trial subscription to Rick’s Picks that includes actionable daily trading ‘touts,’ intraday trading alerts and access to a 24/7 chat room that attracts gifted traders from around the world. Of course, you can cancel the trial subscription at any time with the click of a button, a few keystrokes and no further obligation.
Yes, I am eager to read Doug’s report! Please give me access to it now and enroll me for a free two-week trial to Rick’s Picks. Click here to sign up.