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That's not to say that I think the economic news will improve or that markets are poised for a sustained surge. Media pundits, economists and market seers vastly overestimate their ability to predict such things. What I do know is that smart investors yearn for this kind of turbulence. As Warren Buffett once put it: "The true investor welcomes volatility" because it often produces "irrationally low prices" for "solid businesses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reasons to be Cheerful | 9/20/2007 | See Source »

...Some investors are so keenly aware of this tendency to get spooked by market mayhem that they view their own fear as a sign that things are about to turn around and that it's time to buy. Jeff Vinik, a legendary investor in the U.S., once told me: "I'm scared at almost every [market] low. And I try to remember, when I'm really scared, that we're getting real close to a good low." Zweig cites another renowned investor, Brian Posner, who quips: "If it makes me feel like I want to throw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reasons to be Cheerful | 9/20/2007 | See Source »

...TIME Europe editor William Green, an avid investor in out-of-favor stocks, has money with Third Avenue, but not in its real estate fund

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reasons to be Cheerful | 9/20/2007 | See Source »

...highest standards of international conduct. And activists have been able to use the Games as a way of holding China to account. That has been done most obviously in the case of Darfur. Critics say Beijing's support for the government of Sudan--where China is the biggest investor in the growing oil industry as well as its biggest customer, importing about two-thirds of the country's crude production last year--amounts to support for genocide in Darfur. For years, Eric Reeves, a professor of English at Smith College, has been writing articles and giving speeches on Darfur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China's Olympic Warmup | 9/20/2007 | See Source »

What Russia does have is money. Many in the oligarch class have achieved the kind of stability and self-assurance required to relinquish their much-guarded privacy and enter this very public sphere as investors and producers. Entering the offices of Igor Desyatnikov in central Moscow, visitors are obliged to pass through a metal detector, then withstand the menacing stares of several bodyguards. Desyatnikov himself sits behind a large walnut-topped desk, a colonel's sheepskin hat resting on a far corner. Desyatnikov made his fortune in the sale of a private bank in 2004, and he heads an investor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Reel Russia | 9/13/2007 | See Source »

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