Sir John Templeton’s Last Testament:
Financial Chaos Will Last Many Years

When Sir John Templeton passed away in
July of 2008, we lost one of the greatest
investment minds of our time.
But with great lucidity, in June of 2005,
Sir John penned a memorandum to friends and
family that is uncanny and prophetic in its
vision of what would happen to the U.S. and
global economy.
The first two words — so pithy yet so
powerful — are bolded and highlighted on his
original document. They read, simply: “Financial
Chaos.”
Recently, Sir John’s son, Dr. John
Templeton, or “Jack” to his friends, shared
with me the memo that has never seen public
light.
As Jack relates, his father wanted the
memo to be widely circulated. Unfortunately,
it was not; instead it was discovered in a
file cabinet only after Sir John’s passing.
Now, before you read Sir John’s
memorandum below, let me share with you some
background information, information that Sir
John would have insisted you know.
On two occasions Sir John invited me to
his home-base in Lyford Cay, a small enclave
of Americans and Europeans who live in
Nassau in the Bahamas.
I was among the last journalists to
interview the man Money magazine described
as “arguably the greatest global stock
picker of the [20th] century.”
Sir John had become famous, first, as a
trendsetter in equity investing by becoming
the foremost American expert in global
investing, which he began in the 1940s.
As he explained to me, just after
graduating Yale, he was almost dumbfounded
that Americans rarely invested abroad. For a
long time, he recounted, it was almost
considered unpatriotic for an American to
buy foreign securities.
He eventually launched the Templeton
Funds for such global investing, which was
later bought out by Franklin investments and
is now called the Franklin Templeton Funds.
Investors who took his advice did
extraordinarily well. Though of very humble
means, Templeton himself became a
billionaire.
When I met with Sir John for the last
time, for the purposes of an interview that
would appear in Newsmax’s Financial
Intelligence Report, our investor
newsletter, Sir John made a deal with me.
He would offer his views on the stock
market and investment advice if I were to
make sure to include his views on
spirituality and faith. I agreed.
After officially retiring from the money
management world, Sir John’s main focus was
to advance spirituality to improve the human
condition. His vehicle for doing so was his
John Templeton Foundation, based in West
Conshohocken, Pa., run by his son Jack, a
former surgeon.
The foundation is perhaps best known for
its annual award, the Templeton Prize,
described as honoring “a living person who
has made an exceptional contribution to
affirming life’s spiritual dimension,
whether through insight, discovery, or
practical works.”
For Sir John, and his son Jack, faith and
spirituality are not mutually exclusive with
economic prosperity.
They have argued, and the Templeton
Foundation has continued to advance their
belief, that religious values are basic and
intrinsic to the ideas of human liberty and
the free enterprise system.
For sure, Sir John was a visionary in
many ways.
His wisdom gave him tremendous insights
into the human condition and the practical
effects of that condition on society and the
economy as well.
Sir John had accurately predicted the
dot-com crash of 2000 and 2001. When I met
him again for the last time in December of
2004, he was warning that the housing bubble
would eventually crash, with home prices
falling by as much as 50 percent or more
from their highs in some markets.
He predicted a fall-off of the stock
market after that.
Both predictions were not widely accepted
at the time, yet they eventually came to
pass.
In his last memorandum on the markets and
the economy, he elaborated on these same
themes, warning of dire economic “chaos” —
which he predicted would last many years.
Still, he was optimistic on equity
investments, specifically in globally
diverse companies with high growth patterns
and wide profit margins.
He suggested such stocks would remain
“valuable” for investors to preserve and
grow one’s wealth.
As you read this memo, please remember
that Sir John has left an important legacy,
not just here in his “Last Testament” to
investors, but in his writings and in the
important work of his foundation, so ably
led by his son, Jack.
Scroll down to read the
memorandum
To your success,

Christopher Ruddy
CEO & Editor in Chief
Newsmax and Moneynews
President of Newsmax’s Financial Brain Trust
P.S. We have placed this article along
with other important articles on our website
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Aftershock readers are saying!
John M. Templeton
Lyford Cay, Nassau, Bahamas
MEMORANDUM (June
15, 2005)
Financial Chaos — probably in many
nations in the next five years. The word
chaos is chosen to express likelihood of
reduced profit margin at the same time
as acceleration in cost of living.
Increasingly often, people ask my
opinion on what is likely to happen
financially. I am now thinking that the
dangers are more numerous and larger
than ever before in my lifetime. Quite
likely, in the early months of 2005, the
peak of prosperity is behind us.
In the past century, protection
could be obtained by keeping your net
worth in cash or government bonds. Now,
the surplus capacities are so great that
most currencies and bonds are likely to
continue losing their purchasing power.
Mortgages and other forms of debts
are over tenfold greater now than ever
before 1970, which can cause manifold
increases in bankruptcy auctions.
Surplus capacity, which leads to
intense competition, has already shown
devastating effects on companies who
operate airlines and is now beginning to
show in companies in ocean shipping and
other activities. Also, the present
surpluses of cash and liquid assets have
pushed yields on bonds and mortgages
almost to zero when adjusted for higher
cost of living. Clearly, major
corrections are likely in the next few
years.
Most of the methods of universities
and other schools which require
residence have become hopelessly
obsolete. Probably over half of the
universities in the world will disappear
quickly over the next thirty years.
Obsolescence is likely to have a
devastating effect in a wide variety of
human activities, especially in those
where advancement is hindered by labor
unions or other bureaucracies or by
government regulations.
Increasing freedom of competition is
likely to cause most established
institutions to disappear with the next
fifty years, especially in nations where
there are limits on free competition.
Accelerating competition is likely to
cause profit margins to continue to
decrease and even become negative in
various industries. Over tenfold more
persons hopelessly indebted leads to
multiplying bankruptcies not only for
them but for many businesses that extend
credit without collateral. Voters are
likely to enact rescue subsidies, which
transfer the debts to governments, such
as Fannie May and Freddie Mac.
Research and discoveries and
efficiency are likely to continue to
accelerate. Probably, as quickly as
fifty years, as much as ninety percent
of education will be done by
electronics.
Now, with almost one hundred
independent nations on earth and rapid
advancements in communication, the top
one percent of people are likely to
progress more rapidly than the others.
Such top one percent may consist of
those who are multi-millionaires and
also, those who are innovators and also,
those with top intellectual abilities.
Comparisons show that prosperity
flows toward those nations having most
freedom of competition.
Especially, electronic computers are
likely to become helpful in all human
activities including even persons who
have not yet learned to read.
Hopefully, many of you can help us to
find published journals and websites and
electronic search engines to help us
benefit from accelerating research and
discoveries.
Not yet have I found any better
method to prosper during the future
financial chaos, which is likely to last
many years, than to keep your net worth
in shares of those corporations that
have proven to have the widest profit
margins and the most rapidly increasing
profits. Earning power is likely to
continue to be valuable, especially if
diversified among many nations.
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