Start the conversation
Or to contact Money Morning Customer Service, click here.
It was Sir Francis Bacon who gave us the truism that "knowledge is power."
And the 17th century English philosopher and statesman did so centuries before Wall Street was even conceived.
But the brokers, fund managers, and other pros who dreamed up the investment markets knew a good thing when they saw it. They embraced Bacon's maxim, launched the first U.S. stock exchange in 1790, and spent the next two centuries transforming this country's individual investors into scared vassals of the Wall Street elite.
And the big banks, brokerages, and other investment pros did this by never forgetting the simple precept that "knowledge is power."
I see this play out on an almost-daily basis thanks to the endless streams of impenetrable reports that come from the bankers in New York or our elected leaders in Washington.
Most Main Street investors lack the knowledge to "decode" these reports, so they also lack the power to respond in a constructive manner.
Instead most of us just react – panic, really. Here's a better idea that will lead to profits…
Why There's So Much Market "Noise" Out There
An upbeat economic report prompts investors to shoot stocks higher one day. But on the next, a seemingly conflicting report causes share prices to plummet.
Wall Street isn't fazed by this whipsaw trading, of course: As individual investors, we must travel the road that's owned by the pros. And that means we must pay a "toll" – in the form of a commission or transaction fee – with every move we make.
In fact, there's even an incentive to make us take more trips – heading north (bullish) one day and south (bearish) the next: The more trips we take, the more of those "tolls" that we have to pay – and the larger the pile of profits that Wall Street reaps.
Knowledge isn't just power: It also represents profits… even wealth.
I'm putting such a fine point on this – and telling you about Francis Bacon – for a very specific reason: Thanks to the 30 years I've spent watching and working with Silicon Valley companies, I long ago "cracked the code" that gives Wall Street so much power over America's Main Street investors.
I've identified the three specific economic reports that matter – and have deciphered what they mean. And I know which ones are just claptrap – mind-numbing clutter – designed to maintain the very one-sided status quo.
And today I'm going to give you a backstage pass… so you'll have direct access to that "knowledge" – and the "power" profits that accompany it.
Use This Backstage Pass to the Market's Condition
I'm sure that almost all of you – at one time or another – have heard someone talk about a "velvet rope." If so, have you stopped to think about what the term means?
Think about some of the finer places you've visited – a Broadway play, a hot new restaurant, or that just-opened nightclub: As you wait your turn, the "gatekeeper" – a maître d', hostess, or bouncer – keeps you on that "other" side of a literal "velvet rope."
That wait can be long… and frustrating – especially when the "connected" patrons get in before you.
Wall Street plays the same game. The bankers, fund managers, and other pros want to keep you at bay – while giving their best clients first access to the "best-in-show" investments. But in this case, the velvet rope is knowledge – about the relative health of the U.S. and global economies.
And the Wall Street crowd will hate me for telling you this, but the game is nowhere near as complicated as the pros would have you believe. In fact, in assessing the strength of the U.S. economy as I analyze tech plays, I've really found that three economic "data points" are the most important to follow.
About the Author
Michael A. Robinson is one of the top financial analysts working today. His book "Overdrawn: The Bailout of American Savings" was a prescient look at the anatomy of the nation's S&L crisis, long before the word "bailout" became part of our daily lexicon. He's a Pulitzer Prize-nominated writer and reporter, lauded by the Columbia Journalism Review for his aggressive style. His 30-year track record as a leading tech analyst has garnered him rave reviews, too. Today he is the editor of the monthly tech investing newsletter Nova-X Report as well as Radical Technology Profits, where he covers truly radical technologies – ones that have the power to sweep across the globe and change the very fabric of our lives – and profit opportunities they give rise to. He also explores "what's next" in the tech investing world at Strategic Tech Investor.
Tags: $CLGX, expert investing tips, expert investing tips 2014, expert investing tips today, expert investment advice, expert investment advice 2014, investing tips, investing tips 2014, investing tips today, Investment Advice, investment advice 2014, Wall Street