Revealed: An Inside Look at Ron Paul's Portfolio

Posted: January 22, 2013 at 7:46 pm

Ron Paul is alot like licorice; not everyone likes him, but the ones who do really like him.

The former Texas congressman built his reputation and loyal following by taking strong positions on a number of controversialissues .

The first is his desire toaudit and eliminate the Federal Reserve. Paul is a free-market capitalist and doesn't believe a centrally controlled, non-elected entity should have the ability to dictate interest rates and change the trajectory of theeconomy .

Paul has also expressed deep concerns about the U.S. dollar, which is not backed by any physicalasset , and has been steadily devaluing against other currencies since 2001 under growing domestic trade deficits.

Finally, Paul is also worried about the possibility of massiveinflation . Although the U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics' Consumer PriceIndex has yet to show any serious signals of inflation, with central banks around the world fully committed to monetary stimulation, thedevaluation of fiatcurrency is a very real consideration for many investors.

But unlike many politicians simply tickling populist fancy, after taking a look at Paul's portfolio, it's obvious the manputs hismoney where his mouth is.

The typical congressional portfolio might have 10% incash , 10% inbonds , 20% inreal estate and 60% instocks orstock funds , according to theWall Street Journal.

But Paul has taken a radically different approach.

His 21% allocation to real estate looks pretty normal. So does his 14% allocation in cash. But where he parts ways with his congressional brethren is the remaining 64% of his portfolio, which is invested in gold- and silver-mining stocks. Adding to hiscontrarian style, his 1% allocation to stocks funds are invested in "short" funds, a bet against future stock gains.

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Revealed: An Inside Look at Ron Paul's Portfolio

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