By
Gary
Scott
One international investment trend that prospers during these times of turmoil is nano tech. Investors who understand that the chaos is caused by transition from one new wave of productive technology to another have an enormous advantage because they know to look for the next wave. For example there was a time of turmoil when mankind shifted from steam technology to the internal combustion engine. Investors who had been big in railroads (but were smart) shifted to investing in automobiles and trucking and bus lines. Then chaos came again when the jet engine made the airplane an effective form of transportation and smart investors shifted into airline shares.
In the next era, the information era, the PC, Internet (and Microsoft) became the major carrier of mankind and investors who saw this potential once again jumped ahead of the pack.
So where do we go
next before the quantum computer starts to have an impact?
One area is in health care - see Foundations
Of Health at GaryScott.com/health.
Good health and high energy will become more important than
ever before!
There are many areas where you can look for opportunity and one will be in nano technology.
Before you invest though remember the golden rules of investing.
1. Money isn't everything
2. Work only with people you like
3. Buy businesses, not stocks
4. Invest only in what you understand
5. Don't over diversify
6. Keep looking for new opportunities
7. Buy businesses you plan to keep for life
8. Look for businesses that are available at a good price
9. Do what you like

Gary and Merri Have Investing Meetings at Hotel Quito in Ecuador
If nano technology is of interest to you, then in keeping with rule #4, here is some important information shared by an informed reader I respect very much.
"Hi
Gary, Just thought I'd pass along the best links I know
of covering
nanotechnology. The mainstay of this field is Eric Drexler's
Foresight Institute, foresight.org.
Foresight also runs a news site at nanodot.org which
provides continuous updates on what's happening in the field
from scientific, business and societal viewpoints. I would
be a bit cautious about Scientific American on this subject...
in the past they have run some stories on nanotech that were
way off the mark. Keep up the good stuff! Charles."

Gary Scott Conducts
International Investing Courses. For details go to GaryScott.com/catalog
Until next message, good global investing!
Gary Scott
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