Why This Speculative Investment Could Ruin Your Savings

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In 2007, Americans saved a total of $57.4 billion. That same year, we spent $92.3 billion on legalized gambling.

That data, which comes from Christiansen Capital Advisors via Jason Zweig of The Wall Street Journal, says a lot.

Are you surprised by that imbalance?
We sure were. And while it's worrisome that we spend more on gambling than we save, it's even more troubling for another reason: We have an addiction to trying to get rich quick.

Gambling, after all, is about putting up a small amount of money in the hopes of winning a large amount of money. (We grant you that there's also an entertainment value to it.) It's a high-risk, high-reward game. Sounds a little bit like Wall Street ... and how Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) carried 25:1 leverage in 2007.

The intersection of Wall and Main
As the savings stats suggest, Main Street Americans took on too much debt without enough cash in the bank back during those heady housing boom years. We compounded the problem by taking unhealthy risks. We all know how that's turned out.

Thankfully, it was not all for naught. Groundbreaking new data has revealed that Americans have learned from the recent crisis and are changing their ways. We're getting smarter about saving, more conservative about the risks we take, and all in all setting up our country for a brighter financial future.

OK, that was some serious sarcasm
In reality, there is no groundbreaking new data. While U.S. savings rates are up (prompting some economists to worry about deflation), given the evidence, our guess is that that's a temporary phenomenon. Sketchy "get rich quick!" infomercials are back in full force, data from online brokerages have shown that day traders are back in the market, and there's a new scheme that individual investors are trying out: currency trading.

According to Aite Group, currency trading among retail investors is on the rise. Daily trading by these -- for lack of a better word -- amateurs is expected to rise to $125 billion per day in 2009, up from $100 billion per day last year and $10 billion per day in 2001. That's a lot.

But here's our advice when it comes to retail investors and currency trading: Unless you're a professional driver on a closed course, stay away.

Who listens to us?
Yet currency trading has big-time appeal to small-time investors. As the Journal noted recently: "Investors are typically attracted to currency trading because of the vast leverage available -- as much as 500 to 1. That allows an investor to put up just a few hundred dollars of capital to make a bet of tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars."

While that is some serious upside, consider this: The vast majority of currency trades are made by hedge funds, large corporations, and central banks. In other words, your counterparty in a currency trade is likely to be someone who is -- and this is important -- vastly more qualified to make currency trades than you are. This prompted Gary Tilkin, chief executive of online firm GFT, to tell the Journal that trading currencies "is a business for speculators, not investors. It's more common to come in with $2,000 and lose than it is to turn that $2,000 into $25,000."

Your broker, however, will not tell you this. (Shocker.) The Journal notes that Citigroup (NYSE: C) and Deutsche Bank, among others, now have products to entice retail investors.

The right idea, the wrong execution
Glibness aside, individual American investors are right to be worried about the future of the dollar. That's natural given that the U.S. national debt, stimulus spending, and inflation have made the future of the U.S. greenback a page-one headline these days.

Furthermore, we agree that the outlook for the dollar isn't so rosy. In fact, I (Tim) recently declared that the dollar is doomed and pointed investors to Philip Morris International (NYSE: PM) -- my No. 1 dollar protection stock.

While one stock is not enough to protect you and your savings from a decline in the dollar, currency trading is not the answer, either. What you need is a diversified portfolio with exposure to a basket of currencies, as well as to commodities that will hold value even as the dollar declines in value. That means stocks with 100% foreign exposure such as the aforementioned Philip Morris or FEMSA (NYSE: FMX), stocks with vast commodity reserves like ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM), and careful, measured use of low-cost currency or commodity ETFs such as iShares Silver Trust (NYSE: SLV).

That's your huckleberry
A balanced approach like that will yield protection from a declining dollar without subjecting you to the massive risks of currency trading. Even better, it will help you make money slowly over time ...which as history has shown us time and time (and time) again, is the only way to do so sustainably.

At Motley Fool Global Gains, we specialize in finding and vetting foreign stocks to help you achieve better global balance in what we'll guess is your dollar-denominated portfolio. While Philip Morris and FEMSA are two solid picks, there are many more currencies and countries you need exposure to. But you're in luck: You can see all of our research and recommendations by being our free guest at the service for 30 days. Click here to take us up on the offer.

Brian Richards does not own shares of any companies mentioned. Tim Hanson owns shares of Femsa and Philip Morris International. Both are Global Gains recommendations. The Fool has a disclosure policy. It does not stockpile bullion.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On October 12, 2009, at 5:58 PM, Ralphy56 wrote:

    Buy Silver.......it save you from obama. R.S.

  • Report this Comment On October 12, 2009, at 7:42 PM, dragonite9009 wrote:

    Hmm.... I don't see how stocks are going to help when the dollar goes to zero .... what happens to stocks then? What happened to Germany's stocks? Or Argentina's? Don't you have to be invested in the market in foreign currency offshore?

  • Report this Comment On October 12, 2009, at 9:35 PM, ybckorea wrote:

    Dragon, If you actually believe that you are in real trouble.

  • Report this Comment On October 12, 2009, at 10:04 PM, limanova wrote:

    Dragon, during long years of inflation I observed in Brazil '65-'95, two things besides the inflation adjusted savings ("poupança") accounts kept ahead--real estate and stocks.

    Of course you should choose well in both, anywhere around the world.

  • Report this Comment On October 12, 2009, at 10:45 PM, sodapops wrote:

    Just for information, day trading is not a get rich quick scheme. It is generally hard work to grind out a few dollars per trade/day.

  • Report this Comment On October 13, 2009, at 2:39 AM, Unprotected wrote:

    How do you plan to provide for the protection and creation of jobs, like the millions that have disappeared from manufacturing, engineering, and technology? Saving financial institutions from their own precociousness may play well inside the beltway and on Wall Street, but which among them will provide loans and financial cover for those with no jobs? The loss of US based jobs to illegal and H1B visa holders is at the base of Main Street's malaise - what will you do to fix it?

  • Report this Comment On October 13, 2009, at 9:03 AM, ziq wrote:

    One person's investment may be another person's speculation. The main thing is, if you only invest (or gamble) money you have and can afford to, you won't get into trouble even if you lose it all. Neglect of that principle is what brought us to be brink of disaster. A few bad calls should be no big deal, but may be if they're leveraged 500:1!

    On another note I just have to say that if you really believe "the loss of US based jobs to illegal and H1B visa holders is at the base of Main Street's malaise" your economic analysis is tainted by your political ideology.

  • Report this Comment On October 13, 2009, at 9:27 AM, rmiers1 wrote:

    Ten to twenty percent of investment portfolio in hard currency is decent insurance against major market disruptions, both in equities and currency inflation and deflation. Run-away policies have ruined many of good countries, Such is the intent today.

  • Report this Comment On October 13, 2009, at 9:36 AM, lapinex wrote:

    Why did you say: "The Fool has a disclosure policy. It does not stockpile bullion." Doesn't bullion have a place in anti-inflationary portfolios?

  • Report this Comment On October 15, 2009, at 9:03 AM, PokerDonkey wrote:

    "It's more common to come in with $2,000 and lose than it is to turn that $2,000 into $25,000."

    How much more common? 10 times? I'll take that all day long.

  • Report this Comment On October 15, 2009, at 3:12 PM, globalsailor wrote:

    I think the best thing to do if you want to protect yourself against the dollar and you just want to take it easy is to find fixed income instruments that pay in foreign currencies. This is both a pure bet on the currency and a way to make low risk returns in that currency.

    The only problem is: they're hard to find.

  • Report this Comment On October 16, 2009, at 2:07 PM, Retirefunds wrote:

    I believe that once Americans are paying $4 to $5 for a gallon of gasoline (possibly as early as next year) it will be too late to use oil or gold to hedge the dollar.

    Now is that time.

    HP

    http://Retirefund.Blogspot.com

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