speaking together ET NowFaber revealed how he got the nickname. The story is from the 1970s.
Faber wrote endlessly about the stock market crash of 1987. That’s when people started calling him Dr. Doom, Faber said.
“I thought I combined the different names gloom, boom and doom, because, obviously, there’s also a boom and we discovered a lot of emerging markets in the 1980s and 1990s so that’s how the name came about,” he said.
Faber began publishing his Bearish Outlook Reports in the 1970s for personal use and also because Americans were unfamiliar with foreign exchange rates, the value of the dollar against gold, and the value of the dollar against European currencies at this time.
As the publisher of the widely followed “Gloom, Boom and Doom Report”, he provides contrasting insights into global financial markets, emphasizing the importance of prudent investing and the potential for catastrophic economic events.
Faber’s perspectives are both respected and controversial, making him a notable figure in the world of finance.
Marc Faber’s investment philosophy lies in contrarianism, where he often advises investors to take positions that are contrary to prevailing market sentiment.
He is a strong advocate of diversification into precious metals, especially gold, as a hedge against inflation and currency depreciation.
Commenting on current global trends, Faber said ET Now That the debt levels of Western societies, in other words, Western Europe and the US, are increasing interest payments. According to him, the governments of the western world have no choice but to print money.
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)

