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Is Donald Trump The Next Jimmy Carter? – Ep. 241

 
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Manage episode 177109829 series 52398
Content provided by Peter Schiff. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Schiff or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Summary: Donald Trump's promises on healthcare and smaller government appear to be fading behind news of increased military spending, infrastructure spending and compromises on health care and tax reform. This scenario looks far more like Jimmy Carter than Ronald Regan. We continue to get bad economic data, telegraphing that the air is already leaking out of the economic bubbles created over the last 8 years. This bad news may encourage the Fed to walk back their current interest rate hike schedule, which would, if implemented, put a match to growing recessionary trends. It is Good Friday today and most of the world's markets are closed, including the U.S. stock market I want to wish all my listeners happy Good Friday and Easter and to my Jewish listeners happy Passover But let me get to the economic data that came out this morning because some of the government offices are open today I am starting with the Consumer Price Index, which is not bad from my perspective, but will be bad from Wall Street's perspective or the Fed's perspective Although bad is good, in that it will give the Fed cover to not raise rates Because the CPI actually dropped in March my 3 tenths of a percent It was unexpected; it was supposed to be flat And the Core number was supposed to be up .2 and it was down .1 I think this is the weakest inflation number in a couple of years Of course, year over year, we're still above the Fed's 2% target Year over year, CPI headline up 2.4% and the core is up 2.0 But the most recent number being down, may in fact give the Fed cover to walk back the market's expectations for 2 or 3 rate hikes coming later this year But I think the more relevant information is the extremely weak number we got on retail sales I was expecting a weak number I mentioned that in my last podcast, and we got a weak number But not only was it weak, but they revised the February number that was originally weak, much weaker The expectation was for a flat month of March for retail sales Versus the .1% gain that we eked out in February Now, the government came back and said, "No, the February number was actually a drop of .3% So instead of +.1% we dropped .3% And in March, instead of being flat, we were down another .2% So that means for the two months combined, we have a decline of .5% instead of an increase of .1%
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342 episodes

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Archived series ("HTTP Redirect" status)

Replaced by: The Peter Schiff Show Podcast

When? This feed was archived on October 26, 2017 20:37 (7y ago). Last successful fetch was on October 25, 2017 23:07 (7y ago)

Why? HTTP Redirect status. The feed permanently redirected to another series.

What now? If you were subscribed to this series when it was replaced, you will now be subscribed to the replacement series. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 177109829 series 52398
Content provided by Peter Schiff. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Schiff or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Summary: Donald Trump's promises on healthcare and smaller government appear to be fading behind news of increased military spending, infrastructure spending and compromises on health care and tax reform. This scenario looks far more like Jimmy Carter than Ronald Regan. We continue to get bad economic data, telegraphing that the air is already leaking out of the economic bubbles created over the last 8 years. This bad news may encourage the Fed to walk back their current interest rate hike schedule, which would, if implemented, put a match to growing recessionary trends. It is Good Friday today and most of the world's markets are closed, including the U.S. stock market I want to wish all my listeners happy Good Friday and Easter and to my Jewish listeners happy Passover But let me get to the economic data that came out this morning because some of the government offices are open today I am starting with the Consumer Price Index, which is not bad from my perspective, but will be bad from Wall Street's perspective or the Fed's perspective Although bad is good, in that it will give the Fed cover to not raise rates Because the CPI actually dropped in March my 3 tenths of a percent It was unexpected; it was supposed to be flat And the Core number was supposed to be up .2 and it was down .1 I think this is the weakest inflation number in a couple of years Of course, year over year, we're still above the Fed's 2% target Year over year, CPI headline up 2.4% and the core is up 2.0 But the most recent number being down, may in fact give the Fed cover to walk back the market's expectations for 2 or 3 rate hikes coming later this year But I think the more relevant information is the extremely weak number we got on retail sales I was expecting a weak number I mentioned that in my last podcast, and we got a weak number But not only was it weak, but they revised the February number that was originally weak, much weaker The expectation was for a flat month of March for retail sales Versus the .1% gain that we eked out in February Now, the government came back and said, "No, the February number was actually a drop of .3% So instead of +.1% we dropped .3% And in March, instead of being flat, we were down another .2% So that means for the two months combined, we have a decline of .5% instead of an increase of .1%
  continue reading

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