How to Make 300% Gains in This Beaten-Up Market![caseyresearch](https://i0.wp.com/commonstockwarrants.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/caseyresearch.jpeg?resize=120%2C120&ssl=1)
By Justin Spittler
Itās in its worst economic downturn in nearly a centuryā¦
Its stock market has plunged 70% since 2010ā¦
And its currency has lost 35% of its value over the past two years.
For most folks, this sounds like a market to avoid.
But for Casey Research founder Doug Casey, it sounds like a promising money-making opportunity.
Longtime readers know Doug made millions buying assets most investors wouldnāt go near. He literally wrote the book on how to make money investing in hated markets.
That book, Crisis Investing, spent 34 weeks on The New York Times best-seller list. In it, Doug explained how to make huge gains while risking little by investing in beaten-up markets. This strategy is so successful for those who know how to use it, we’ve called it āthe worldās most powerful wealth-building secret.ā
ā¢Ā Regular readers know weāre talking about Brazilā¦
Brazil is the worldās fifth most populous country. It has the worldās eighth biggest economy.
Not long ago, it was a rising star of the global economy.
Its economy more than quadrupled in size from 2000 to 2011. Brazil was even the āBā in āBRICS,ā a Wall Street acronym for five emerging markets with big growth potential.
But it didnāt live up to the hype.
ā¢Ā Today, Brazilās economy is a disasterā¦
Its economy hasnāt grown since 2010. To put that in perspective, the U.S. economy has only had two down years since 1992, when it shrunk during the 2008ā2009 financial crisis.
Brazilās stock market and currency have also tanked. Inflation in Brazil is above 10% for the first time in 12 years. Unemployment is at a six-year high and rising.
Brazilās socialist president, Dilma Rousseff, is a big reason the countryās economy imploded. Five years into her presidency, Brazilās finances were in shambles. The country went from a 2.3% government surplus in 2011 to a 10.3% deficit last year.
Rousseff is still in office right now. But she may not be for long. Sheās currently standing trial for impeachment.
Many folks are hopeful a new government can turn things around in Brazil.
ā¢Ā Nick Giambruno, editor of Crisis Investing, has been following Brazil closely for monthsā¦.
As you may know, Nick is Doug’s globetrotting companion. His investing style is similar to Doug’sāhe buys cheap markets and industries other investors run away from.
In 2013, Nick used this strategy to make huge gains investing in the tiny European island of Cyprus. The country just had a horrible banking crisis. Its stock market was down 98%. It was one of the worldās most hated markets.
Nick recommended eight dirt-cheap Cyprus stocks to his readers. One of those stocks tripled in less than two years. Two doubled over the same period. Another gained 97%.
ā¢Ā Now, Nick is stalking Brazilian stocksā¦
Heās not a buyer yet. As bad as things are in Brazil right now, Nick says things will get worse.
ā¢Ā And with Brazilian stocks staging a big rally recently, thereās no reason to buy Brazilian stocks todayā¦
Brazilās main stock index, the Bovespa, jumped 45% from the end of January to the end of April.
Some investors wondered if Brazilian stocks had bottomed. Nick says they havenāt. In the April issue of Crisis Investing, he said fundamentals werenāt fueling the rally:
[T]he only buyers of Brazilian equities the last few months were foreigners. Local investors have been selling.
As far as I can tell, foreign investors are buying in hopes the new government magically makes things better. I donāt see this happeningā¦
Nick knows that it pays to watch whoās buying and whoās selling. In this case, the locals are selling. Locals have a front-row seat to the action. If theyāre selling, that probably means things are getting worse.
ā¢Ā Back in April, Nick warned his readers to stay away from high-flying Brazil stocksā¦
He reminded them that Brazil still has big problems:
Replacing one corrupt government with another is not going to fix these problems. The worst is yet to come in Brazil. Itās shaping up to be a lovely train wreck.
I believe soon, one (or a combination) of these things will trigger a full-blown crisis in Brazil. It will thrust Brazil onto the front pages of First World newspapersā¦and get Wall Street to say, āSell anything Brazilian.ā
ā¢Ā Nick thinks Brazil’s currency could collapseā¦
That might sound like a bold prediction. But keep in mind, Brazilās had five currency crises in the past 75 years. Thatās one every 15 years. The last one was in 1994. According to Nick, Brazil is long overdue for a currency crisis.
ā¢Ā Nick is waiting until thereās āblood in the streetsā before he buys Brazilian stocksā¦
Thatās when heāll pick up shares of the world-class Brazilian company on his watch list.
The company dominates its industry and is ultra-efficient. Itās also grown its profits by an average of 13% every year since 2010 despite Brazilās economic downturn. He will let his Crisis Investing readers know when it’s time to buy.
ā¢Ā In the meantime, you can make money betting against Brazilian stocksā¦
Nick told readers how to bet against Brazilian stocks in April. His timing was spot on.
Last month, the Bovespa plunged 10%. According to the Financial Times, it was the worldās worst-performing stock market during the month of May.
Nickās bet against Brazilian stocks paid off big. It returned 25% in just over a month.
If you didnāt get in on this trade, donāt worry. As we said, Nick thinks Brazilian stocks are headed much lower. In April, Nick said āa 300% gain is a reasonable targetā for this trade.
You can invest alongside Nickāand learn exactly how to profit from Brazil in the coming monthsāwith a subscription to Crisis Investing. By clicking this link, you can sign up for a risk-free trial. Youāll also get a chance to watch a short video about a much bigger crisis on Nickās radarā¦and how to profit from it. Click here to view this free video.
Chart of the Day
Brazilian stocks could deliver huge gains after they ābottom out.ā
Todayās chart shows the performance of the Bovespa, Brazilās version of the S&P 500, since 2000.
You can see Brazilian stocks began a huge bull market about fourteen years ago. The Bovespa gained 778% from 2002 to 2008. For comparison, the S&P 500 has gained 211% since its historic bull market began in 2009.
In 2008, Brazilian stocks plunged when the global financial crisis hit. They never fully recovered.
Nick thinks Brazilās current economic crisis will send stocks even lower. This could set up a buying opportunity like we saw in 2002.