By Walter Brandimarte
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire investor George Soros
forecast on Monday that the U.S. economy is "on the verge of a
very serious economic correction" after decades of
overspending.
"We have borrowed an awful lot of money and now the bill is
coming to us," he said during a lecture at the New York
University, also adding that the war on terror "has thrown
America out of the rails."
Asked whether a recession was inevitable, Soros said: "I
think we are definitely in for a slowdown that I think will be
a bigger slowdown than (Fed Chairman Ben) Bernanke is seeing."
Famous for his speculative attack on the Bank of England
that made him more than $1 billion, Soros declined to nominate
which currencies are more vulnerable currently. He also
declined to comment specifically on the dollar.
"I know exactly where the currencies are going to but I'm
not going to tell that to you," he told the audience.
Last week, investment guru Jim Rogers, who co-founded the
Quantum Fund with Soros in the 1970s, recommended selling the
dollar as well as U.S. investment banks and U.S. housing
stocks.
Soros said that, for now, China is the "absolute winner" in
economic terms, and will continue to see its economy soaring
during the next few years.
"Now it is going through this fantastic transformation but
in 10 years time I think you may well have a financial crisis
in China," he said.