Editor’s Note: In today’s special Daily, we’re pleased to welcome Jim Rickards. Jim’s editor of Strategic Intelligence. He’s one of the world’s foremost experts on the U.S. dollar and currency collapses. He’s even helped the U.S. government develop top-secret contingency plans in the event of a financial attack on the U.S. dollar.

Below, Jim compares the investing styles of Warren Buffett and the late Hugo Stinnes. (Stinnes was once Germany’s wealthiest man and a prominent investor in the 1920s.) The similarities he draws may be pointing to disaster ahead…


From Jim Rickards, editor, Strategic Intelligence: Hugo Stinnes is practically unknown today. But this was not always the case…

In the early 1920s, he was the wealthiest man in Germany at a time when the country was the world’s third-largest economy. He was a prominent industrialist and investor with diverse holdings in Germany and abroad.

Chancellors and Cabinet ministers of the newly formed Weimar Republic routinely sought his advice on economic and political problems. In many ways, Stinnes played a role in Germany similar to the one Warren Buffett plays in the U.S. today…

He was an ultrawealthy investor whose opinion was eagerly sought on important political matters, who exercised powerful behind-the-scenes influence, and who seemed to make all the right moves when it came to playing the markets.

From 1922 to 1923, Germany suffered the worst hyperinflation experienced by a major industrial economy in modern times. The exchange rate between the German paper currency, the reichsmark, and the dollar went from 208-to-1 in early 1921 to 4.2 trillion-to-1 in late 1923.

At that point, the reichsmark became worthless and was swept down sewers as litter. Yet Stinnes was not wiped out during this hyperinflation. Why was that?

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Rickards:  “Warning, I’ve Changed My Thesis on Gold”

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Stinnes was born in 1870 into a prosperous German family that had interests in coal mining. He worked in mines to obtain a practical knowledge of the industry and took courses in Berlin at the Academy of Mining.

Later he inherited his family’s business and expanded it by buying his own mines. Then he diversified into shipping, buying cargo lines.

His vessels were used to transport his coal within Germany along the Rhine River and from his mines abroad. His vessels also carried lumber and grains. His diversification included ownership of a leading newspaper, which he used to exert political influence.

Prior to the Weimar hyperinflation, Stinnes borrowed vast sums of money in reichsmarks. When the hyperinflation hit, Stinnes was perfectly positioned. The coal, steel, and shipping vessels retained their value.

It didn’t matter what happened to the German currency—a hard asset is still a hard asset. It doesn’t go away… even if the currency goes to zero. Stinnes’ international holdings also served him well because they produced profits in hard currencies, not worthless reichsmarks.

Some of these profits were kept offshore in the form of gold held in Swiss vaults. That way, he could escape both hyperinflation and German taxation.

Finally, Stinnes repaid his debts in worthless reichsmarks, making them disappear. Not only was Stinnes not harmed by the Weimar hyperinflation, but his empire prospered and he made more money than ever.

He expanded his holdings and bought out bankrupt competitors. Stinnes made so much money during the Weimar hyperinflation that his German nickname was “Inflationskönig,” which means “Inflation King.”

When the dust settled and Germany returned to a new gold-backed currency, Stinnes was one of the richest men in the world while the German middle classes were destroyed.

Warren Buffett uses the same techniques today.

It appears Buffett has studied Stinnes carefully and is preparing for the same calamity Stinnes saw—hyperinflation. Buffett purchased major transportation assets in 2009 in the form of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad.

This railroad consists of hard assets in the form of rights of way, adjacent mining rights, rail, and rolling stock. The railroad makes money moving hard assets, such as ore and grains.

Next Buffett purchased huge oil and natural gas assets in Canada in the form of Suncor. He can now move his Suncor oil on his Burlington Northern railroad in exactly the same way that Stinnes moved his coal on his own ships in 1923.

For decades, Buffett also owned one of the most powerful newspapers in the U.S., The Washington Post. He sold that stake recently to Jeff Bezos of Amazon but still retains communications assets. He’s also purchased large offshore assets in China and elsewhere that produce non-dollar profits that can be retained offshore tax-free.

A huge part of Buffett’s portfolio is in financial stocks—particularly banks and insurance companies—that are highly leveraged borrowers. Like Stinnes in the 1920s, Buffett can profit when the liabilities of these financial giants are wiped out by inflation while they nimbly redeploy assets to hedge their own exposures.

In short, Buffett is borrowing from the Stinnes playbook. He’s using leverage to diversify into hard assets in energy, transportation, and foreign currencies. And he’s using his communications assets and prestige to stay informed on behind-the-scenes developments on the political landscape.

Buffett is now positioned in much the same way that Stinnes was positioned in 1922.

If hyperinflation were to slam the U.S. today, Buffett’s results would be the same as Stinnes’. His hard assets would explode in value, his debts would be eliminated, and he would be in a position to buy out bankrupt competitors. The middle classes in the U.S. would be wiped out, as they were in Germany.

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My advice to you when it comes to billionaires like Buffett is to watch what they do, not what they say. Stinnes saw the German hyperinflation coming and positioned accordingly.

Buffett is following Stinnes’ strategy. Perhaps Buffett sees the same hyperinflation in our future. It’s not too late for you to take some of the same precautions as Stinnes and Buffett.

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