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Paperback Game Over: How You Can Prosper in a Shattered Economy Book

ISBN: 044656138X

ISBN13: 9780446561389

Game Over: How You Can Prosper in a Shattered Economy

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Book Overview

In these extraordinarily uncertain economic times, bestselling author Leeb has carefully analyzed some of the basic and fundamental flaws of the economy and provides some key and valuable information... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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This is the book I am giving my friends

Over the past 5 years I've read well over a hundred books on peak oil, the state of the world's resources, and how the world's financial systems work. As I came to understand the staggering broader implications of our resource predicament, I began looking for a single book I could give to my friends that would provide a self-contained, straightforward explanation of our dilemma. Many of the earlier books are excellent, but some of those are also very technical, others engage in wishful thinking, and still others just didn't present the information in the way I would have wished for various reasons. "Game Over" thoroughly explains the fundamental problems facing us while sparing the reader details about oil extraction technology and similar topics. For me, the fact that it is also an investment book is secondary, although many readers may also find that useful. I am a geophysicist with long exposure to resource-related issues. As it happens, I started studying geophysics around the same time (1970) that US oil extraction (the common euphemism is "production," as if they're actually making the stuff) peaked, just as was predicted in a 1956 technical paper by a brilliant physicist/petroleum engineer who was ridiculed for many years for that prediction - until it happened. US extraction, once the highest in the world, has been declining for nearly 40 years since then. This irreversible decline came in spite of periods of vigorous exploration for new fields and impressive advances in exploration and extraction technology. Simply put: if it's not available, you can't have it. In the 70s following the US peak, we speculated about what might happen when world oil extraction began to decline but it was all theoretical and far in the future and just an intriguing idea. Now the evidence strongly suggests that the world peak is at last near; there is some evidence we are there now, in spite of the recently crashing oil price. The US extraction decline only became obvious in retrospect and the same will be true for world decline. I cannot overstate the importance of this issue. There are excellent reasons to believe that the peak in oil extraction will also mean the peak in food production, a frightening thought in a world with a huge and growing population, many already living with the specter of starvation. Also, the irreversible decline in the extraction of oil and other critical resources will likely bring an end to capitalism as we know it because a positive sum game will have become a negative sum game. Getting from that realization to a system that is sustainable on a finite and damaged world will be a very tough slog. "Game Over" provides the background to understand these things. Leeb is well qualified to explain these issues; he has degrees in economics, mathematics, and psychology; he is rational, understands markets, and understands why people are psychologically resistant to acknowledging the approaching disaster let alone de

essential reading for policymakers and investors

I've been an avid reader of Stephen Leeb for years, both through his books and his investment newsletter. Leeb's economic predictions have consistently been dead-on accurate, and well ahead of the curve. In the late 90's he predicted the collapse of tech shares, when others on Wall Street refused to believe it was possible; in the early 2000's when oil was at $50/barrel he predicted oil prices rising to $100/barrel and beyond by the end of the decade; and in his last book The Coming Economic Collapse, written in 2006, he predicted the disastrous consequences of falling housing prices, which we're seeing played out right now. At the same time, Leeb's investment recommendations have outperformed the market year after year, making people like me who've followed his advice a sizable fortune even while most stocks on the S & P have crashed and burned. Now in his latest book Game Over, Leeb offers another economic forecast, and with such a track record, investors and policymakers should read this one closely. Leeb claims that even if/when we get out of this current financial crisis, our problems will be far from over. As soon as the economy picks up steam again, it will put unsustainable demand on the earth's diminishing natural resources -- fossil fuels, precious metals, etc. -- driving up the price of everything and creating massive inflation that will wipe out the savings of millions. With the developing world consuming more and more every day and the world's oil fields running dry, it's only a matter of time before we reach what Leeb dubs the Absolute Peak in the earth's resources, when it takes more energy to extract new energy than we would gain from the extraction. In other words, for every barrel of oil as yet untapped, it would require more than a barrel of oil to get it out. If we reach this state, it is indeed Game Over for world civilization as we know it, since it would be effectively impossible to bring new energy sources online. Leeb outlines policy proposals, discussing the pros and cons of various alternative energy sources, viewed in terms of the demand that using them would place on other resources. One of Leeb's most brilliant insights in this book is describing the complex array of interconnections among the earth's resources; for instance, extracting more oil will strain the earth's freshwater supply, but to increase freshwater we will need more energy, and so on. Leeb calls for a vast research committee of engineers, economists, and the like to unravel these complex relationships and come up with a plan for building alternative energy infrastructure as fast as possible. And, as always, Leeb offers specific investment recommendations to survive the chaos. Leeb's recommendations consist mostly of hard assets, such as precious and industrial metals and some plays on alternative energies. The big one is gold, which, as Leeb points out, is a store of value that people turn to in inflationary times, but is also a great hed

Seize the day

Over the past two years, we have been on quite a financial roller-coaster. Stocks went from a bull market to a massive sell-off. Oil prices spiked to over $140 and then plummeted briefly to under $40. Ditto for most other commodities. T-bill yields fell so low they became money-losing investments. Gold, which many thought was a dead asset, has outperformed the S & P 500 (though it too has been volatile). I wish I could say the chaos and uncertainty was over, but I can't. If anything, the economic and financial drama will only get worse. However, I believe what is stated in Game Over: How You Can Prosper in a Shattered Economy, Dr. Leeb laid out for me crucial information about what lies ahead of us for the next five years, including ...How to safeguard wealth and build a substantial nest egg even as the current crisis worsens. Why today's global campaign to save the economy will only hasten an approaching catastrophe. The unstoppable forces that will fundamentally alter the fabric of human civilization. Last fall, we saw what can happen when the economy tips just a little way onto the side of recession. It was the greatest financial meltdown since the early 1930s. A devastating event for most investors that created worldwide shockwaves. The entire investment banking industry disappeared almost overnight. Banks around the world either went bankrupt or were forced to beg for government bailouts. The U.S. government was forced to essentially take over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to prevent mortgages from becoming unavailable to the majority of Americans. Now governments around the world are desperately taking extreme measures to pull us out of that recession before it gets any worse. Money is being created at a rate even greater than during World War II. Nearly $8 trillion have been coughed up by the government and the Federal Reserve in order to jumpstart the financial system. Indeed, this is a war - a war to prevent economic collapse and a much greater meltdown of asset values. Fortunately, while the volatility will be great in the months ahead, I believe it's a war we will easily win. In fact, the real threat to our long-term financial security lies on the other side of that razor's edge. As terrible as the market crash was, it was just a bump in the road compared to what Dr. Leeb says is coming. And that's why we need to prepare ourselves for the next big crisis today. Game Over: How You Can Prosper In A Shattered Economy, helped me select specific investments now that will protect my savings when we encounter further recessionary bouts, like the one last fall. More importantly, I believe it will help me prosper as the extreme money creation fuels the fires of double-digit inflation and sends commodity prices soaring to even greater heights than we saw in the Spring of 2008. It showed me which investments are set to produce the bulk of the profits for the next five to ten years, and which to avoid if you value your

Essential reading in turbulent times

Stephen Leeb has a knack for boiling complex issues down in a concise, easy-to-understand manner for the layman. More importantly, he has an uncanny record of spotting major trends well ahead of the crowd. Investors who ignore Leeb's sage comments do so to the detriment of their wealth. The list of trends he has been out in front of over the years are numerous, but let me just touch on two of them. A decade ago when oil prices were below $20 a barrel and inflation was less than 2 percent, Leeb had this to say about where oil and food prices were headed in his book Defying the Market: Strong economic growth, particularly in developing countries, will create a tremendous appetite not just for energy buy for food as well, as populations move up the food chain and demand greater quantities of more protein-rich nourishment. Technological and natural limits will curtail our ability to expand the supply of food and process will rise. A variety of food-related companies will see both profits and share prices soar. We all know what followed. Prior to the collapse in commodities in 2008 (as a result of the global financial crisis), oil prices were approaching $150 a barrel and the cost of food was going through the roof thanks in large part to strong demand from emerging economies like China and India. Oil stocks were big winners during the period and fertilizer stocks, like Mosaic and Potash of Saskatchewan, rose 15- to 20-fold while the Dow and S & P went essentially nowhere. But Dr. Leeb's keen insights haven't stopped there. Here's a quote from his last book, The Coming Economic Collapse pertinent to where were find ourselves today: With home prices, stock prices, and the economy all slumping, all feeding on one another, it would indeed be a vicious circle. Record levels of unemployment would likely. Could the policy-makers rescue such a situation? Clearly, it would be a far greater challenge than rescuing the economy in the wake of the tech bubble. It would take massive amounts of money. Interest rates would likely fall to zero. Government spending would need to reach unimaginably high levels. In other words, if the economy survived, it would emerge with much higher debt levels then before. Moreover, we would still face the same hideous inflationary problem, a shortage of energy, and the prospect of sharply rising oil prices. Sound familiar? Keep in mind that this book was published four years ago, well before the housing crisis was front-page news. Today, short-term interest rates are at essentially zero and the government is throwing a $1 trillion at the economy in a Herculean effort to get the economy going again. Raging inflation hasn't taken hold yet, but it sure looks like that will be the next act. And I, for one, am investing accordingly. If even the best-case scenario he outlines in his newest book comes to pass it will make the terrible 1970s look like a picnic for investors.

prophetic and painful

The Game Leeb writes about is whether or not alternative energy systems can be developed before there is painful economic collapse. "Game Over" refers to a world where the easily extractable energy and mineral resources are gone (peak commodities) and we haven't developed the alternative technologies to maintain our society in the absence of low cost oil. Leeb outlines how energy and other resource limitations have come to dominate global economics. He explains the familiar concept of peak oil, and introduces the concept of absolute peak oil, the point where the energy cost of oil production just matches the energy extracted. Further Leeb goes on to describe how the extraction of minerals, water and even food are coupled to energy production. Leeb is concerned with the problems of building out of the most common alternative energy systems to a large scale. Much of this book is recycled material found in Leeb's earlier work The Oil Factor: Protect Yourself and Profit from the Coming Energy Crisis which made a more technical presentation of most of the economic ideas in the first few chapters. As in the The Coming Economic Collapse: How You Can Thrive When Oil Costs $200 a Barrel this book is written for a more general audience, but unlike his other books which are mainly directed at individual investors, the first three sections of Game Over are directed to the broader questions of how our complex and technological society can deal with resource limitations, which have been magnified by rapid economic development of Asia. Only the last section of the book is directed to investment choices for individuals. One weak spot in the book is a chapter on the costs of complexity, which comes off as a bit of a political rant against the costs of having bad regulations and archaic ownership systems that make it difficult to move to solutions to the Energy supply problems. He might have added some material about how the demand for safety, adds to energy costs over time, as in pollution controls and automotive safety features making cars less efficient. For a book emphasising alternatives to oil, Leeb says surprisingly little about global warming. He seems to underestimate the size of US coal reserves and so doesn't discuss the CO2 production problem. My suspicion is that when things get tough, concerns about our ecological commons will be swamped by immediate and local economic concerns. Another item almost entirely left out of the discussion is population control. In a world where change is driven by the billions in the third world expanding their consumption patterns, it seems Leeb is implying its already too late to do anything about overpopulation. Leeb's investment advice has been fantastic. My interpretation of his oil price indicator was a market sell signal in late 2007. A big question right now is how long will the deflationary fears and trends last. This book's advice is based on the premise that the pain of deflation
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