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ANNOUNCEMENT: On June 10, 2008, the Dow closed at 12,289. During that day, Moneysage penned an analysis, entitled "Are Summer Horrors Ahead for the Stock Market?" As of this writing (October 9, 2008, 1:09 pm EST) the Dow stands at 9,137. The drop of 3,141 points represents a decline of 25%. We have heard from a number of early subscribers who heeded the advice in the analysis Moneysage published and managed to preserve much of their wealth. To read the prescient analysis that at the time was available by subscription, please click here.


Hello and welcome to Money-sage.com. Moneysage provides a critical, impartial, and ongoing analysis of key developments and trends in the economy, the Federal Reserve, the financial system, and the financial markets. We also analyze political and foreign developments insofar as they may affect the prospects for financial markets and for investment decision-making. We seek to derive and present to our readers relevant insights which may flow from our analysis. Our assessments and forecasts may be unpalatable at times, but we shall always call it like we see it.

As of June 7, 2008, all content published by Moneysage will be available to paid subscribers only.* All transactions will be handled by Paypal. If you do not have a Paypal account, you will have the opportunity to create one at the start of the subscription process (click the link above or click here for an explanation, with photos, of that process).

  • A personal monthly subscription is $7.00.
  • Institutions and groups can purchase a monthly subscription for $400 (please write us if you are interested in purchasing the latter).


To get started, please click here to register for an account or click on the link at the top of the left sidebar.


*For background, please read this post. The Money-sage archive will continue to be available to the public so those who maybe considering a subscription can review the quality and perspicacity of the sage's musings, to wit: our early warnings about the prospective implosion of the Chinese equity market (Chinese Tulips?) and of the dangerous overvaluation and risk of any number of "emerging markets" (Emerging Markets, Submerging Markets).