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Doom and gloomers fight amongst themselves

bear-fight1Roubini says we have asset bubble everywhere and everything is going to end badly.

Jim Rogers says Roubini knows nothing and that he doesn’t see any bubble. Jim Rogers sees commodities going higher.

Peter Schiff takes a stab at Roubini and says Roubini doesn’t understand gold. Schiff says gold is going higher.

Harvard University financial historian Niall Ferguson claims he’s a better doom and gloomer than Roubini in terms of timing and accuracy.

Disarray in the bear camp is probably good for bulls.

Marc Faber's 2010 Investment Outlook: Bullish Sentiment Too High For His Liking

Always the contrarian, Marc Faber’s investing advice for 2010 is this — listen to the experts, and then do the opposite. Faber, the editor of The Gloom Boom & Doom Report, wrote in his most recent January newsletter that he was bullish on U.S. stocks.

Nothing lasts forever, though.

He’s changed his mind after participating in this week’s Barron’s round-table discussion. “Everybody was looking for further gains in stocks,” he tells Henry in this clip. That opinion is also reflected by Bloomberg’s latest investor survey, which registered its highest level of bullish sentiment since the survey began in 2007.

That overwhelming consensus worries Faber. He now thinks a correction in U.S. stocks could come much sooner than most predict. Momentum players who are driving the market could “pull the trigger relatively quickly,” he says. He also observes that the charts of stocks favored by momentum investors, like Google, RIM, Apple and Amazon, look to be flattening out.

Overall, 2010 will not be one for the record books, as 2009 was. He’s looking at a more normal 5%-10% rate of return for global investors.

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