I read a rather controversial article recently in the Wall Street Journal aptly entitled “ Leverage Baby! ” outlining the case for taking on debt to invest it at a higher rate. The main premise of the article was that now may be an optimal time to actually take out loans at extremely low interest rates, use that money for higher yielding investments and keep the proceeds. While this concept sounds plausible and this practice is actually being employed en force by the country’s largest banks (borrowing Fed Funds at 0% and investing it and loaning it out at higher rates), you’re not Goldman Sachs and neither am I. I think this is a risky proposition, especially for routine retail investors. Stocks May Have Seen Their Best Days – With markets rocketing 70% off their lows in March 2009, what would make you think they’re going to continue to proceed at the “historical” long-term return rates of 8-9% annually? The S&P500 went basically nowhere from 2000-2010 in what will forever be dubbed the “Lost Decade”. There’s no reason to believe the next decade will be any different. In light of the fact that income producing instruments are delivering virtually zero returns, then yes, I do choose to have my investable assets in stocks. But I’m not leveraging up to do so. I just view stocks as the most aggressive asset most likely to exceed inflation, not necessarily that I’d mortgage my house to throw more money at the next BP. You’re Not a Sophisticated Investor – Even investors who do qualify under the conventional “sophisticated investor” are virtually never sophisticated enough to protect themselves from themselves. Thousands of investors were taken for a ride by the various Ponzi schemes the collapsed in the past 2 years (Madoff was just one of dozens) and many more lost millions in exotic CDOs, MBS and other acronyms they probably didn’t understand. While many of us think we’re smart investors, what the data tells us is that most of us (professional money managers included) aren’t any better at picking stocks than a monkey throwing darts at the stock section of a newspaper. Making the presumption that by leveraging up and investing with any particular assumed return

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With Rates This Low, Should You be Borrowing to Invest?
