strtotime('2017-10-04 13:59:59') || isset($_GET['test1004'])):?> strtotime('2017-10-18 13:59:59') || isset($_GET['test1018'])):?>
font size: A  A  A

ACTUAL CASE HISTORIES:

  • Super-powerful investments tied to the rising Cycle of War — up 324% … 824% … up to 1481% (Hint: These are beating “traditional” crisis investments 28 to 1 … 30 to 1 … even to 68 to 1) …
  • Investments riding a megatrend driven by the Great Supercycle — up 719% … 1,076% … up to 1,214% …
  • PLUS, investments on rising U.S. stocks that are already exploding 397% … 850% … up to 2,150% …
  • Often in as few as 13 days!

PLUS:

  • ETFs with the power to pay you 180% or more as the yen and Japanese stocks plunge in 2018 …
  • MORE ETFs … that have the power to nearly triple your money — with gains of up to 180% and MORE — when the euro and European stocks crash …
  • STILL MORE ETFs designed to pay you at least 180% as the U.S. dollar and stock market become the third domino to fall.

A Special Bulletin
by Founder Martin D. Weiss
with Senior Analyst Sean Brodrick
Weiss Research’s Edelson Institute

Dear Fellow Investor,

Dr. Martin D. Weiss, founder of Weiss Research’s Edelson Institute

This is, by far, the most important forecast of my career:

Late this year FIVE of the most powerful financial and geopolitical cycles known to man will converge in one time and place.

These are the same cycles that accurately warned of the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Great Recession of 2008-2009 and every other major economic event in-between.

They are the same cycles that helped Senior Editor Sean Brodrick and our other Edelson Institute experts predict every major top and bottom in stocks and gold since 1987.

I’m talking about …

Plus …

Late this year these financial cycles will join forces, just like they did in the 1930s.

Only this time, these financial cycles have been turbo-charged by the threat of war. These governments were already drowning in debt. Now they’re piling on still more in a big hurry.

On that day, these cycles will combine
to become a SUPERCYCLE
with enormous destructive power.

We will soon witness the beginning of the end for Western-style socialism.

For decades, politicians in the U.S., Europe and Japan have been allowed to buy votes — to purchase power — with borrowed money.

They introduce massive social programs, then pay for them with debt … by selling investors trillions of dollars in government bonds — or in the case of the U.S. Treasury securities, Ginnie Maes, Fannie Maes and more.

But now, late this year will mark the end of the era in which governments could amass obscene amounts of debt with impunity …

And it will mark the beginning of the era in which mankind will pay the price for that horrific debt.

The crisis will begin in Japan’s. It’s one quadrillion-yen debt will implode, leaving the yen and Japanese stock market in ruins.

Once again, vast sums in flight capital will flood into the U.S., driving the U.S. dollar and stocks even higher.

Next, the crisis will hit Europe’s, where 22 “Greeces” are rapidly approaching the brink of bankruptcy.

While the euro and European stocks collapse, trillions of euros in flight capital will come flooding into the United States — the world’s last safe haven — driving our own dollar and stock-market sky-high.

Then, finally — most likely some time in 2020 — it will be America’s turn to pay the piper.

The investors who loan Washington the money it desperately needs to pay its bills will snap their wallets shut. The U.S. government will simply run out of money.

All hell will break lose as government payments to individuals and private companies are postponed, or worse.

For those who are unprepared, it will be a nightmare of millennial dimensions.

But for those in the know — who see this crisis coming — it will be an investor’s dream. You will have scores of opportunities to multiply your money and build a fortune to endure for generations.

The facts on the ground in Japan
are especially disturbing.

Last month, I rushed home from Japan. I have lived there on and off since 1979. Studying Japan’s history and economy — plus its future — has been a lifelong endeavor for me.

And I can tell you flatly: Japan is at the center of two of the most threatening conflicts on the planet today — twin threats that could be more dangerous than Russia’s threat to Europe:

  1. Japan faces a fierce battle with China over the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea, plus, at the same time …
  2. Japan is in the cross-hairs of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un. If President Trump makes good on his recent promise to exercise his “only option” (the military option), it will trigger an immediate crash in Japan’s financial markets.

Certainly, there’s still a good chance that the conflict will not reach Japan. Fortunately! But there’s no chance Japan can escape the economic impacts of those threats.

The cost of insuring against an actual default on Japanese bonds has just surged by 60%. That sudden surge cannot merely be the result of Japan’s massive debts; they’ve been massive for a long time.

Rather, it reflects a surging fear among professional traders that Japan will have to borrow and spend massively to defend itself against the rising threat of a new nuclear power on its doorstep, North Korea.

Even before this latest crisis began, the Japanese government was already struggling with not just one, but two economic crises:

The first is debt. Just consider the terrible facts:

* Japan’s government is saddled with the largest debt in the world: More than ONE QUADRILLION YEN in debt. That’s a “one” followed by FIFTEEN zeros. And it means that even if Japan had a yearly budget surplus of one trillion yen, it would still take 1,000 years for the country to pay off its debt.

* Tokyo’s debt is nearly two-and-one-half times the size of the entire Japanese economy and far larger than the debt load that pushed Greece, Ireland and Portugal to the brink of collapse.

* Japan’s debt is still skyrocketing. Social welfare spending in Japan, which is already one-third of its 106-trillion-yen budget, is rising automatically by about one trillion yen every year.

Japan’s second crisis is that consumers are NOT spending — and for good reasons:

* Because their prices have fallen for over a decade and a half, Japanese consumers and companies believe that everything they want to buy will be cheaper tomorrow. So, they have little reason to spend money.

* Japanese citizens are hoarding cash because they fear that Tokyo will cut their retirement checks and other government benefits. They’re saving as much as they can for the rainy days they believe are coming. And the new threat from North Korea is now adding to their fears.

This is an extremely dangerous situation.

It is slashing government revenues, even as the nation’s debt and the cost of servicing that debt is about to surge.

OUR FORECAST: Japan’s already-bulging budget deficit will explode. Its debt load will strangle the economy. Its bond market will collapse. And all of the powerful economic cycles will converge and begin the Supercycle that will signal its decline.

Plus, for reasons I’ll explain in a moment, exports — still the lifeblood of the Japanese economy — will plunge. The economy will crater. Tax revenues will evaporate.