Mauldin sees a gas tax as a push toward those cleaner domestic energy sources.
FORBES: John Mauldin And The Compromise To Save The Republic
To see more insights from John Mauldin on his newsletter Thoughts From The Frontline, click here.
My own guess is that Mauldin is more right on the economy and Fisher more right on stocks.
At the same time, pressure on the last-mile links appears to be abating, says Alan Mauldin of TeleGeography.
Despite the talk of oil, though, Mauldin believes that the future is nuclear.
FORBES: John Mauldin And The Compromise To Save The Republic
Mauldin recognizes that markets go through long cycles of expanding and contracting valuations.
Consider this peek by financial guru John Mauldin about his recent meeting with 10 U.S. Senators to discuss his book Endgame.
FORBES: Not Default, Growth: Wall Street, Main Street And Even Washington Gets It Now
John Mauldin is president of investment advisory firm Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC.
On this count, Mauldin is a little harsh, saying that only about 1 percent of his readers are really traders at heart.
In the U.S., says Mauldin, that solution will need to involve compromise.
FORBES: John Mauldin And The Compromise To Save The Republic
See The Deflation Question for more on deflation from John Mauldin.
Some very smart forecasters, such as Forbes columnist A. Gary Shilling and newsletter writer John Mauldin, think the U.S. is in a balance-sheet recession.
Mauldin has a pretty surefire tongue-in-cheek plan to produce domestic oil.
FORBES: John Mauldin And The Compromise To Save The Republic
John Mauldin, publisher of an investment newsletter, points out that during America's 1980s savings-and-loan crisis, bottom-fishers could net perfectly good mortgages for 15 cents on the dollar.
So while Ken Fisher is probably right about stocks, John Mauldin is probably right about the Debt Super Cycle endgame and its near-term damage to economic growth.
Some very smart forecasters, such as Gary Shilling and John Mauldin here, think a long-Japanese-like deflationary stagnation is a more likely scenario than a 1970s style stagflation.
Investment adviser John Mauldin stops short of classifying the current overall market as a "bubble, " even though graphs showing the annual rise in funds and assets resemble the Nasdaq circa 1999.
If it all plays out the way Mauldin is predicting, there is a lynch mob gathering and Bank of America and other big subprime pushers like Citigroup are firmly in their sights.
The U.S. has roughly the same number of jobs today as it had in 2000, but the population is well over 30, 000, 000 larger, John Mauldin wrote for Business Insider on Friday.
John Mauldin, an investment consultant, calculated in a recent column that total portfolio returns over the next ten years were likely to be around 5%, far less than the 8-9% projected by most funds.
As a general rule, I would say that the people who forward a John Mauldin email are more sophisticated than the people who forward something they got from Glenn Beck or some rented email blast.
Mauldin, despairingly, envisions a Value Added Tax as the desperate alternative to Depression 2.0 which he predicts is the consequence of not getting the deficit under control (something which, of course, The Deal does not really do).
FORBES: Not Default, Growth: Wall Street, Main Street And Even Washington Gets It Now
Zuckerman agrees with Mauldin.
FORBES: Zuckerman Sees Daily Fiscal Damage, Calls For Compromise
Lots of things are important when it comes to stock performance, and unfortunately a rather disturbingly high number of them are generally ignored by most investment analysts: religion (yes, religion), fertility, ethical corruption, moral corruption, property rights, soundness of currency, debt, tax progressivity, and size of government (which is another topic on which Mr. Mauldin has become a little muddled: more on this later).
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