CNBC Calls Me Out on Gold Ep. 126

Published: Dec. 22, 2015, 2:20 a.m.

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\\n\\t* Recording this podcast on Monday afternoon; the stock market closed about an hour ago, and the stock market was up over 100 points today, but the more dramatic days happened on Thrusday and Friday
\\n\\t* Despite the initial euphoric increase in the stock market that greeted the Fed\'s highly anticipated quarter-point rate hike on Wednesday the market tanked on Thursday and Friday, down over 600 points
\\n\\t* The most significant part of the sell-offs is that on both days the markets closed on the lows for the day
\\n\\t* The Fed is getting dangerously close to losing what remains of its credibility
\\n\\t* The Credibility Bubble might be the first to deflate in this recession
\\n\\t* The Fed has been saying that the economy would be strong enough for a rate hike by the end of the year, so if they did not raise rates in December it would have been an admission that they were wrong
\\n\\t* The Fed raised rates even though the economic data showed that, based on their own criteria, they should not have done it
\\n\\t* More and more people are questioning whether the Fed has made a policy mistake
\\n\\t* Look at the data that came out since the rate hike:
\\n\\t* On Friday we got the PMI Flash Services Index came out at 53.7 - last month it was 56.5
\\n\\t* The Kansas City Fed Manufacturing - last month was +1 and December was -8
\\n\\t* Today we got the Chicago Fed National Activity, expected to be +.15 for November, instead it came out at -.3 and they revised down the prior month to -.17
\\n\\t* With all the horrible economic data, horrible retail sales, horrible corporate earnings it is obvious that the U.S. economy is heading toward recession
\\n\\t* As the economy slows and the Fed is forced to admit it was wrong, there goes it\'s credibility
\\n\\t* This coming collapse is the culmination of decades of bad monetary policy
\\n\\t* Where we really went off the rails was in the Greenspan era, which sent us off on this trajectory of loose money
\\n\\t* Yellen admitted in her recent press conference that they will still roll over all the maturing bonds and re-investing all the interest on those bonds so the Fed\'s balance sheet will continue to grow
\\n\\t* The bubble economy will blow up in her face, though, because the market will not be able to withstand a sustained correction and it will require unprecedented quantitative easing that will result in failure
\\n\\t* I wanted to discuss on this podcast an Sunday eening article on CNBC, "The Peter Meter"\\xa0 that really took me to task on my gold predictions
\\n\\t* They did not look at any of my many accurate predictions; they focused on the ones that haven\'t worked out
\\n\\t* They singled me out for criticism on an 2012 interview I did with them when gold was at $1,700 and I said it could go to $5,000.\\xa0 I never put a time horizon on my prediction, but this was labled as one of the worst
\\n\\t* Back in 2005 I did an interview with Mark Haynes when gold was still below 500 and it more than tripled from that price
\\n\\t* You can see articles I wrote recommending gold back in 2003 when gold was even below 500.
\\n\\t* It is true that I did not see the near 40% correction in the price of gold because I thought the market would see past the bubbles
\\n\\t* CNBC claims my prediction to be among the least prescient ever made
\\n\\t* Twice in the last 15 years the U.S. stock market lost more than half its value
\\n\\t* Anybody who was on CNBC in 1999 and recommended the stock market, which was about every guest, made a worse prediction than that
\\n\\t* Every guest on CNBC in 2007 and 2008 and recommended the stock market made a worse prediction
\\n\\t* What about all the dot com stocks that went to zero?
\\n\\t* Obviously, CNBC is singling my gold prediction out above these other significantly less prescient predictions
\\n\\t* If you look at all the predictions on CNBC over the years,\\n\\nOur Sponsors:\\n* Check out Rosetta Stone and use my code TODAY for a great deal: https://www.rosettastone.com/ \\n\\nPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy'