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Ron Paul’s Investment Portfolio: ‘A cellar-full of canned goods and nine-millimeter rounds’

It appears Ron Paul has been reading Jake Gint’s blog.

By Jason Zweig

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul marches to his own drummer in politics – and in his investment portfolio, too.

Here at Total Return, we’ve looked at hundreds of the annual financial-disclosure forms in which the members of Congress reveal their assets and trades – and we’ve never seen a more unorthodox portfolio than Ron Paul’s. (In fact, The Wall Street Journal revealed problematic trading in Congress more than a year and a half before the “60 Minutes” episode that recently raised a ruckus over the same topic, but that’s another matter.)

According to data available through his 2010 “Form A” financial disclosure statement, filed last May, Rep. Paul’s portfolio is valued between $2.44 million and $5.46 million. (Congressional disclosures are given in ranges, not precise amounts.)

Most members of Congress, like many Americans, hold some real estate, a few bonds or bond mutual funds, some individual stocks and a bundle of stock funds. Give or take a few percentage points, a typical Congressional portfolio might have 10% in cash, 10% in bonds or bond funds, 20% in real estate, and 60% in stocks or stock funds.

But Ron Paul’s portfolio isn’t merely different. It’s shockingly different.

Yes, about 21% of Rep. Paul’s holdings are in real estate and roughly 14% in cash. But he owns no bonds or bond funds and has only 0.1% in stock funds. Furthermore, the stock funds that Rep. Paul does own are all “short,” or make bets against, U.S. stocks. One is a “double inverse” fund that, on a daily basis, goes up twice as much as its stock benchmark goes down.

The remainder of Rep. Paul’s portfolio – fully 64% of his assets – is entirely in gold and silver mining stocks. He owns no Apple, no ExxonMobil, no Procter & Gamble, no General Electric, no Johnson & Johnson, not even a diversified mutual fund that holds a broad basket of stocks. Rep. Paul doesn’t own stock in any major companies at all except big precious-metals stocks like Barrick Gold, Goldcorp and Newmont Mining.

Rep. Paul also owns 23 other miners – many of them smaller, Canadian-based “juniors” whose stocks are highly risky. Ten of these stocks have total market valuations of less than $500 million, a common definition of a “microcap” stock. Mr. Paul has between $100,010 and $326,000 (roughly 5% of his assets) invested in these tiny, extremely volatile stocks.

Rep. Paul appears to be a strict buy-and-hold investor who rarely trades; he has held many of his mining stocks since at least 2002. But, as gold and silver prices have fallen sharply since September, precious-metals equities have also taken a pounding, with many dropping 20% or more. That exposes the risk in making a big bet on one narrow sector.

At our request, William Bernstein, an investment manager at Efficient Portfolio Advisors in Eastford, Conn., reviewed Rep. Paul’s portfolio as set out in the annual disclosure statement. Mr. Bernstein says he has never seen such an extreme bet on economic catastrophe. ”This portfolio is a half-step away from a cellar-full of canned goods and nine-millimeter rounds,” he says.

Read the rest here.

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10 comments

  1. 4fl3x

    Here is a link to the blog Wood is referencing http://www.jakegint.blogspot.com/

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  2. TJWP

    Ron knows what is up. And he practices what he preaches.

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  3. Chris

    Buying and holding an inverse leveraged ETF is always fun.

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  4. Vegas Trader II

    “The Big Red Bar” just posted on Flys site, this guy may be the bulls WORST nightmare..

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  5. Dirk Diggler

    Wow, what a hit piece.

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    • fake amish

      gotta expect it from the money manager douche bags. they would be flipping burgers if ron paul was in anyway the norm.

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  6. Taco

    More propaganda bullshit straight from the anal-defective minds of central bankers, and paid for with free monopoly money.

    Fuck all central bankers up the ass with a bent, whitehot crowbar.

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  7. Weirdo Jay

    The thing about rising prices in gold is that the costs of mining goes up and earnings tend to disappoint. Over time the inventory of gold builds up as the price underperforms, and eventually you may have miners that hold $200M in inventory that can be bought for $150M in market cap because disappointments in short term earnings suppress the price. Ironically in 1980 AFTER gold had peaked, the miners finally started to play catch up. The other factor on miners is that they tend to correlate with stocks enough to keep the prices down as well. Eventually they will probably play catch up.

    The gold miners with any kind of margin of safety with regards to their inventory, or at least close to it are just fine, especially the juniors because the possibility for a big discovery gives them plenty of upside as well.

    There will come a point when a great arbitrage opportunity exists long gold miners, short gold, but I suspect gold will build another base perhaps this year, then breakout and finally start to go parabolic like it did in 1980.

    just my penny for my thoughts and common “cents” to make my 2 cents.

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