avatar

Trump’s Very Massive Recession May Have Already Begun – Ep. 157

The Peter Schiff Show Podcast
The Peter Schiff Show Podcast
Episode • Apr 5, 2016 • 32m


* Today is the Wisconsin Primary but Donald Trump has been getting a lot of flack in the media over the last couple of days about his comments about the U.S. economy, particularly in the financial media because Donald Trump has now predicted a "very massive recession" in the U.S.

* He didn't just say a recession, he's predicting a massive recession

* Most of the pundits on television don't see any recession at all - not even a mild one

* So here you have Donald Trump saying, not only is the recession going to be massive, it's going to be very massive

* The media is all over Trump: "What is he talking about? The economy is in great shape! He's peddling all kinds of fiction! We have this massive economic growth!"

* the President television today taking credit for this great economy with all these years of jobs

* Of course what the President doesn't admit to, is, it's not job creation - it's job destruction

* We're destroying full time jobs, the by-product of that destruction is that we create a bunch of part-time jobs that people don't really want but that's all they can get

* Yet the President is taking credit for that

* It's like setting a fire and taking credit for putting it out

* That's what the Federal Reserve did with the 2008 Financial Crisis

* Let's look at some of the economic news that came out over the past couple of days that resulted in the Atlanta Fed reducing its Q1 GDP estimate - yet again - to .4

* In last Friday's podcast I said that I thought they would be revising it down, and based on the numbers that just came out, they did

* One if the reasons the Atlanta Fed cited for the revision was yesterday's release of February Factory Orders

* They were expected to be down 1.6; instead it came out as -1.7, which was not that big a miss unless you consider the previous downward revision, which means it dropped from a lower level

* That took something out of the GDP numbers as did the very bad auto sales that I did mention in Friday's podcast

* Apparently the worse-than-expected trade deficit that came out today didn't even factor into their thinking, and I don't know why, because we were expecting $46.2 billion and instead we got $47.1 billion

* That's a pretty big miss, and they took January's estimate which was originally $45.7 billion and raised that to $46.2 billion

* We are still expecting the March number which will be factored into Q1 GDP, so I think the Atlanta Fed is still not low enough

* Remember, too, one of the things that's helping the Q1 GDP is that most of the country had an unseasonably warm winter, because bad weather is factored into the estimate

*


Our Sponsors:
* Check out CigarBid and use my code GOLD for a great deal: https://cigarbid.com
* Check out Vanta: https://vanta.com/SCHIFF


Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy