Is the US Banking System a House of Cards Waiting to Topple?
Decades of low interest rates have ruined saving in the US economy, and banks are going to pay dearly for it.
Decades of low interest rates have ruined saving in the US economy, and banks are going to pay dearly for it.
Ryan and Tho are joined by economist Mark Thornton to take a look at why so many economists keep telling us the economy is in great shape.
While unemployment currently is low and the rate of inflation has fallen somewhat, Bidenomics is setting off a boom that is unsustainable. We know what happens next.
Hollywood can create stories from thin air, but when the film industry creates malinvestments, there is a bust in the future.
As the US economy sours, look for a wave of new bankruptcies. The Fed cannot pull any rabbits out of its monetary hat this time.
We should not just be concerned about problems in the American banking system, but also about the proliferation of Eurodollars.
Mark suggests that you prepare yourself for big negative surprises in the economy and additional government power grabs.
Decades of low interest rates have ruined saving in the US economy, and banks are going to pay dearly for it.
Mark explains why an economic Crash Landing is better for workers and savers, and how it would place much of the pain on the rich, politically-connected classes.
Peter St. Onge joins Bob to discuss the contrast in leadership between Xi Jinping and Deng Xiaoping, the dollar as global reserve currency, the Belt and Road Initiative, and Jim Rogers' prediction that the 21st century would belong to the Chinese empire.