>>> Marvin Gandall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 01/05/2008 12:34 PM >>>
(From today's Barron's - Randall Forsyth, "What Zimbabwe Can Teach
America
About Asset Values")

WHERE WAS THE BEST PLACE to invest in 2007?

If you had picked emerging markets a year ago, you'd have been rewarded
with
a 33.55% return, by Morgan Stanley Capital International Indices'
reckoning.
And if you were keeping score in dollars, which after all is what
really
counts to most Barron's Online readers, you netted 39.78%. (Thanks to
Bianco
Research for gathering these data.)

But that paled next to 2007's top bourse: The Zimbabwe Stock Exchange,
which
gained 322,111%. Jot that down if you're looking to win a bar bet.

Yet that gain is far less spectacular than it seems. Inflation was
estimated
by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe at 24,059% last year, so the real gains
in
stock prices were far less than the nominal numbers indicate.

And that inflation estimate is just that. With goods disappearing from
store
shelves in the hyperinflation, Zimbabwe's Central Statistical Office
stopped
provided inflation data in September because it had no prices to go
on.
Independent economists estimate inflation is running at 50,000% to
100,000%,
according to local press reports. That would compare with the 32,400%
inflation rate in Weinmar Germany in 1923.

^^^^
CB: Hey, with all that inflation , they might be able to inflate a
bubble.

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