Born at the tail end of the legendary commodities bull market of the 1970s, Luke Burgess is one of a new generation of investors who have become fascinated with the intrinsic and universal value of gold and the junior companies that chase the yellow metal. But Mr. Burgess is more than just a worshipper of the yellow metal. He holds investments in other metals including silver, platinum, palladium, copper, zinc, molybdenum and is also a large investor in other tangible natural resource commodities including oil, natural gas, land and even foods. Mr. Burgess is the managing editor of Hard Money Millionaire and is also a weekly contributor to Wealth Daily and has had his articles published on other investment sites like StockHouse, Seeking Alpha and Goldseek. He has additionally been a featured guest on countless radio programs including Trader's Nation, The Bill Meyer Show, Sound Investing Radio, The Brent Clanton Show, Stock Doctor, The Economic Contrarian, On the Money, The Andre Eggelation Show, KXYZ Biz Radio and Investments Advisor Review.
Hard Money Millionaire is a high-end investment advisory service that delivered subscribers 22 winning investments out of 23 recommendations in 2009, with seven investments returning a +100% gain. The publication’s current investment strategy is to seek both near-term (1-3 months) and mid-term (12-24 months) profits from the precious metal and energy markets, and establish a hedge against the devaluation of the U.S. dollar. The editors achieve this goal with a diversified and risk-balanced investment portfolio that includes exposure to physical precious metals and energy commodities, focused equity funds, quality natural resource stocks and positions that short the U.S. dollar and U.S. Treasuries. Specifically, they focus precious metal and energy investments on gold, silver, crude oil and natural gas with exposure to alternative energy generation. With positive changes in key markets, Hark Money Millionaire may also expand its list to include copper, zinc, nickel, rare earth metals, platinum, palladium, uranium, electricity, coal and new technologies.