Schiff: Powell Can’t Address Stagflation
Posted by M. C. on November 15, 2024
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by Tyler Durden
Friday, Nov 15, 2024 – 07:20 AM
At Thursday’s Fed press conference, Powell dodged a question about the possibility of stagflation. Peter sees this as a major gaffe:
He [Powell] kind of says, “Well, our plan for stagflation is to hope there is no stagflation.”
They’ve got no plan. That’s why they hope it doesn’t happen.
Schiff’s assumption is that a Fed plan is not worse than doing nothing.
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/schiff-powell-cant-address-stagflation
Peter caps off a very newsworthy week, in which the decisive Trump victory shocked the media class and another Fed rate cut was announced. Peter analyzes both events, arguing against the unbridled economic optimism of Trump’s supporters and criticizing Jerome Powell’s stance on Fed independence and his alarming lack of concern for a future of stagflation.
Peter starts by highlighting the inconvenient trade-off between taxes and government spending. Trump promises new tax cuts, but these will need to be offset by spending cuts, lest the national debt balloons even further out of control:
Trump would have to maybe have a fireside chat in front of the American public and level with them.
He can say, when I was running for president, I promised a lot of things.
I promised a lot of tax cuts… we really need higher taxes if we can’t get some serious cuts in spending.
And so that’s what we’re going to try. I’m going to ask Americans to pitch in and tighten their belts.
While both the Republicans and Democrats like to take credit for for the country’s economic growth, the reality is that much of this “growth” is an artificial boom induced and sustained by decades of expansionary monetary policy by the Federal Reserve:
The problem was we didn’t have a strong economy. We had a bubble. We had a fragile economy.
In fact, we’ve been blowing a bubble in this economy ever since the 1990s. Greenspan is the architect of this house of cards.
He’s been blowing all the air in and every president going back to Clinton has been hiding behind his bubble and has been taking credit for the fake economic growth that has been a consequence of this ever-expanding bubble.
With the stock market lifted by Trump’s success, Peter argues the best time to switch into US equities is when the aforementioned bubble pops. It’ll be painful in the short-term, but that’s when stocks will be a bargain:
The time to load the boat with US stocks is not when they’re historically expensive. I’m waiting for blood in the streets. I want the collapse to happen…
Now, I know when we initially do that and the economy is in recession and everybody is pessimistic, that’s when I’m going to be optimistic, because I’m going to know that this is the bitter tasting medicine that we should have swallowed a long time ago.
Pivoting to the Fed rate cut, Peter points out that the Fed may have cut rates by less than they would have had Kamala Harris been elected instead of Donald Trump:
Be seeing you


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