TRANSCRIPT

Good morning folks. Welcome to another episode of the sense of things and another week. Lots of things going on,

8 seconds

lots of things in the economy. We are still actively in conflict in the Middle East and it’s a new thing every day it

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seems. On today’s show, Ron’s got some really good stuff about in different industrial revolutions throughout time.

22 seconds

So, he’s got a great slide on that. He’s also got some in investments in industrial decline which I think is

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really interesting industries that have gone down and then look at consumer confidence and some expectations there.

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On my side I really had some interest in seeing how like different Middle Eastern or just middle just conflicts in general

45 seconds

have affected oil prices and how this one kind of fits into that whole mix. So I’ve got a chart on that. got some look

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at different economic things. Everything from new home sales to to retail sales to PPI and an interesting look at the

1 minute, 3 seconds

wonderful world of economics and the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index this week. So stay tuned. We’ll be right back on with you in just a second.

1 minute, 26 seconds

Hey everybody, welcome to the show. Ron, how are you my friend?

1 minute, 30 seconds

Good morning. Doing well. Straight over to Moose is closed. I actually found yesterday there’s a couple of good

1 minute, 37 seconds

websites that give pretty darn close to real time movement ships in the port. I thought it was pretty interesting. I

1 minute, 46 seconds

can’t believe this is the chokeold for the world. Apparently, it has been for decades. We’ve all known that. But how

1 minute, 53 seconds

we haven’t done something about it? How come they haven’t built like a Panama Canal through Saudi Arabia? They have the money.

2 minutes, 1 second

They have the money. God Panama Canal just right through the center just completely.

2 minutes, 6 seconds

Yeah. Just completely. Yeah. Because it is a massive chokeold. The thing that was interesting is the talk now in

2 minutes, 14 seconds

especially Saudi Arabia and some of the other countries is just running pipelines out to the Red Sea and stuff

2 minutes, 22 seconds

like that and blow those up too.

2 minutes, 24 seconds

Yeah. But at least if you run them someplace where they can’t Yes, they can blow them up and get to them, but I think within an within a few more weeks,

2 minutes, 32 seconds

they’re only down to I think down to like 150 missile launchers at this point. a few more numbers.

2 minutes, 40 seconds

Yeah,

2 minutes, 42 seconds

I think I’m just saying they wouldn’t announce the real numbers, whatever they No, I think it’s our estimates of what’s there at this point. There was like 480

2 minutes, 51 seconds

is what we the last I heard was the at the top of it and we’ve wiped out close to about 70% of those. So, they should

2 minutes, 58 seconds

be down around 120 to 130. They’re down to a few barges a day firing off at this

3 minutes, 5 seconds

point, lashing out at everybody around them. So, they’ve managed to just piss off every single country around them at this.

3 minutes, 13 seconds

Yeah.

3 minutes, 15 seconds

It’ll be interesting. It’ll be interesting to see what they do with the Marines that are that are on their way there if they’re going to take over Car

3 minutes, 23 seconds

Island and some of those places to see if they can get some control of the oil facility. Yeah. I don’t know. But I think there’s enough other going on

3 minutes, 30 seconds

in the world. We we’ve got plenty to talk about. What What’s happened this week in history?

3 minutes, 36 seconds

Fairly lighter week, although there are some interesting things. 1905, Franklin Roosevelt marries Eleanor Roosevelt. And by the way,

3 minutes, 45 seconds

it’s a second cousin.

3 minutes, 48 seconds

I always had a a joke because I’m a trivia guy going up to, hey, what was Elanar Roosevelt’s maiden name?

3 minutes, 55 seconds

Roosevelt. Yeah. second cousin.

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I’m surprised she didn’t hyphenate though. Ros 1933 Stud Baker goes bankrupt through

4 minutes, 8 seconds

the depression is when it really weeded out all those really good unfortunately car manufacturers

4 minutes, 16 seconds

that weren’t in mass production like Ford. But yeah, a lot of these really good car manufacturers went under in the

4 minutes, 23 seconds

30s and 40s because they didn’t have the the assembly line and the mass production.

4 minutes, 28 seconds

Yeah, I don’t even know when like Duesenberg went out of business and stuff like that. And Tucker that was that was late 40s early Yeah, I

4 minutes, 38 seconds

think it was late during the war and coming out. It was coming out of the war late 40s early 50s possibly one of the best cars of its

4 minutes, 44 seconds

generation built and it was more of a the best ideas. Yeah, some of the best ideas, the first car with seat belts and

4 minutes, 51 seconds

the lights that now just now are actually being used in other cars, which is funny.

4 minutes, 57 seconds

I had that on my car, an SUV, and it freaked me out the first time that I drove at night and I went to make a turn, I’m like, “Oh my god, are my lights broken?” And then all of a

5 minutes, 6 seconds

sudden, as I straightened out, the lights drained out. I’m like, “All right, that’s Oh, freaking cool.

5 minutes, 11 seconds

I had no idea.” Right. 1933, President Roosevelt legalizes sale of beer and wine, repealing essentially prohibition,

5 minutes, 21 seconds

which was basically the thing that got him elected because Hoover, in addition to just a horrific economy, obviously

5 minutes, 28 seconds

would never commit to that. And then 1932 is when the market hit the bottom. Yeah.

5 minutes, 35 seconds

And they basically knew that Roosevelt there was going to be a change of presidency and beer and wine were to be sold again. The market hit bottom and

5 minutes, 43 seconds

then it went up until 37. We had another recession near a depression and then of course World War II pulled us. Yep.

5 minutes, 52 seconds

1942 a dark point in our history. War it was called I didn’t know this the war relocation authority is established.

6 minutes

That was the Japanese internment camps.

6 minutes, 2 seconds

I didn’t realize I thought we always refer to it as Japanese internment. I never knew that they actually had a group apartment set up as war relocation

6 minutes, 11 seconds

authority and literally anybody that had Japanese descent was rounded up.

6 minutes, 18 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. I think it was 300,000 people. It was basically everybody of Japanese descent on the west coast of

6 minutes, 26 seconds

the United States largely in in California. But yeah, it was just bored.

6 minutes, 31 seconds

great book that I just read for those of you that want to learn a little bit about this time in history. It’s called The Ghosts of Pearl Harbor by Mark

6 minutes, 39 seconds

Harmon of NCIS fame. And it’s actually about the beginnings of what’s called the NIS at that time, Naval

6 minutes, 46 seconds

Investigative Service, that the first Japanese American who was part of that group. It’s all about him. But it’s an

6 minutes, 54 seconds

fascinating to hear the behind the scenes of how all that fell together and how it played out. It was interesting

7 minutes, 1 second

that in the west coast of the United States,

7 minutes, 6 seconds

everybody was rounded up. It wasn’t that way in Hawaii, which there were a lot more percentage- wise of Japanese. And that the reason that they didn’t take

7 minutes, 15 seconds

them to the internment camps is they felt that it would just literally destroy the economy of Hawaii at the time. Think about it. following 911. This would have

7 minutes, 24 seconds

been equivalent of rounding up all Muslims and Islamics in the United Absolutely.

7 minutes, 29 seconds

By the way, I know we did bring this up once before in a prior podcast, but who was one of the most famous people that

7 minutes, 38 seconds

was a child during the Japanese internment? We did George Teai.

7 minutes, 45 seconds

George Teay one manita. It was Pat Marita. I didn’t know that.

7 minutes, 50 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. He was he was a little kid back then, but yeah,

7 minutes, 54 seconds

I didn’t know about Pat Marita. Okay, so 1949, East Germany approves new constitution.

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And if you think about it, it lasted what? 31 years essentially before they brought down the wall. Yeah.

8 minutes, 8 seconds

1957. I love this one. Elvis Presley puts a $1,000 down payment on Graceland.

8 minutes, 15 seconds

The sale price was $102,500. Nice.

8 minutes, 19 seconds

What is it? I know it’s a historic place now and forget about it people the visitation what is that place what’s the

8 minutes, 27 seconds

estate worth a billion half a billion I don’t million couple yeah it’s several hundred million you know and it’s

8 minutes, 36 seconds

pretty good return on its investment yeah I think definitely by the way you see this bathroom this is

8 minutes, 43 seconds

where Elvis died on the toilet check it out here’s the throne room right here where Elvis died.

8 minutes, 50 seconds

1963, Alcatraz closes its doors and becomes a tourist attraction.

8 minutes, 56 seconds

One of my favorite is The Rock. One of my I know exactly where you’re going with this. All time movies. It was a great or look,

9 minutes, 4 seconds

every movie is got bits and pieces that it took from some. But if you just think about the originality of that movie,

9 minutes, 11 seconds

great actors, great script, Ed Harris,

9 minutes, 14 seconds

Nicholas Cage, Sean Conory, what a great movie that was.

9 minutes, 18 seconds

The and the greatest line in the entire movie, The Rock has become a tourist attraction.

9 minutes, 25 seconds

I’ve been here longer than Nelson Mandel. Yeah.

9 minutes, 30 seconds

And then somebody else said, “What in Zeus’s blind ball of your cell?” kind of comes out and says, “Oh, shoot. What did he say?

9 minutes, 39 seconds

Secrets my out.” Great flick. Just a great flick. All right. 1980, another dark moment. Unfortunately, President

9 minutes, 46 seconds

Carter announces boycott of the Olympics. And then the Russians boycotted our Olympics in 1984.

9 minutes, 54 seconds

Yeah. 2008. I not that I forgot about this,

9 minutes, 59 seconds

but I forgot. I knew it was funny. I guess it was right. I knew it was around Easter 2008. Bear because I remember

10 minutes, 6 seconds

talking about it that weekend. Bear’s collapses sold to JP Morgan Chase who also ended up buying or they were forced to buy Washington Mutual, the first

10 minutes, 15 seconds

major catalyst to the great financial crisis. The interesting thing about this is that I wonder if Bear Sterns was bailed out,

10 minutes, 25 seconds

what would have happened? Because this was March, everything collapsed six months later. But I think AIG and Lehman were in much worse shape than Barristers.

10 minutes, 35 seconds

Oh yeah, hands down.

10 minutes, 36 seconds

And I think they were doubling down over the next six months. I There’s still a lot of shady stuff that we’ll never know about.

10 minutes, 43 seconds

Yeah. And some of that stuff like in the in August when there was those meetings literally, okay, who’s going to take what at this point? It was just That was September 15th.

10 minutes, 53 seconds

Yeah. September. Yeah.

10 minutes, 55 seconds

Yeah. Okay. Getting into some fun information. We’ve talked about this before. Oh, AI is gonna kill jobs and this and that. Guess what? They’ll learn something else. They’ll learn AI.

11 minutes, 6 seconds

They’ll move on to something else. AI is already killing programming jobs. Okay?

11 minutes, 10 seconds

So, they’re going to learn something else. They have skills that transferable. So, I thought this was fun and interesting because the industrial

11 minutes, 17 seconds

revolution in the 1800s gave boost and burst to a lot of things. The rails. So

11 minutes, 24 seconds

we always talk about how the rails dominated the stock market. The next slide will show you how rails still

11 minutes, 31 seconds

prevailed. But back I mean look at the chunk of the economy that the rails had because think about it. They had to do

11 minutes, 38 seconds

the infrastructure. They had to build not just the locomotives but the cars.

11 minutes, 43 seconds

They had to build the infrastructure of the stations. everything with being a part of and you think

11 minutes, 50 seconds

these other industries fed and a lot of these other industries needed the rails to sell their goods.

11 minutes, 56 seconds

Yeah. But you think of it too there was no other transportation at that time.

12 minutes, 1 second

Mass transportation at that time. There was no airplanes that could carry anything. There was no trucks that could carry anything.

12 minutes, 9 seconds

you that rails were the only game in town for a long time and ships but interior to let’s say our country there

12 minutes, 17 seconds

was no other means of transportation besides a horse cart to get across the country of course they were massively

12 minutes, 24 seconds

dominant and fast forward 30 years in the future from there the rails were literally going bankrupt left and right

12 minutes, 32 seconds

because we now had airplanes we had trucks we had other alternatives to just the rails

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Yeah, I saw a chart a couple of years ago. Train passenger volume peaked in the early mid 1950s and has steadily

12 minutes, 48 seconds

gone down ever since because the move out to the suburbs obviously roads, cars and trucks as we had just mentioned. But

12 minutes, 55 seconds

but the interesting thing is you’ll see on the next slide, just fast forwarding started 1900. So let’s fast forward 126

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years later. Technology is dominating everything. industrial still there obviously healthcare think about back

13 minutes, 9 seconds

then you they were drinking brown water they didn’t have they weren’t hydrating throughout the day that’s why by the

13 minutes, 18 seconds

time they were 40 the face looked like a road map just crazy but then let’s fast forward to this even if you just look out

13 minutes, 27 seconds

since 1900 essentially rails have still outperformed trucking and airlines over the years we’re still transporting because even If

13 minutes, 36 seconds

you fly it, you got to get it. How do you go from the airport to somewhere else?

13 minutes, 40 seconds

Yeah, you got to put it on a truck, but many times you’re going to Chicago, you got to now put it on a rail because of how heavy it is. You’re going to need 30

13 minutes, 48 seconds

trucks. You put it on rail, then the trucks pick it up as they drop it off.

13 minutes, 52 seconds

So, the it was interesting I saw with this is that the rail still outperformed all the years. And then if you take a

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look since 1996 obviously this was the dotcom bubble but looking at it right

14 minutes, 5 seconds

you just put money into technology you outperform the rest of the market which essentially you could look at if you just put money into the cues.

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Yeah. Yeah. And when you think about the trade the rail lines and stuff they’re still such a major part today because of

14 minutes, 22 seconds

interotal transportation. You bring all these containers in on ships and what is yes there are some out of the ports

14 minutes, 30 seconds

trucks taking stuff out mainly to that area. So maybe it’s California or Texas or whatever but a vast majority of those

14 minutes, 39 seconds

interotal containers are taken off put onto a train and then you know the train takes it into the center of the country

14 minutes, 46 seconds

and then gets to an interotal lot that they pull those off and then put them on trucks and take them out to wherever. So they’re still a major part of the world.

14 minutes, 55 seconds

But yeah, I mean really intriguing though.

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Cross country twice, west twice. And I think we’ve talked about this like there are parts of the country for hours.

15 minutes, 8 seconds

There’s nothing. But you do see freight lines, right? They’re traveling where nobody else is traveling.

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And it is rails are still a humongous part of how we’re doing it. And here’s the other thing, too. Probably, right?

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They’re going to get driverless trains,

15 minutes, 26 seconds

fake conductorless trains. But but trucks will be driverless. I heard I remember talking to somebody 10 years ago and he very involved in the

15 minutes, 34 seconds

trucking. You’re always going to need someone to drive a truck at some point.

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Actually, not right.

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So, it’s just one it’s just one of those things.

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But it’s driverless vehicles are coming and that’s the most logical spot is they can’t get enough truck drivers. our our

15 minutes, 51 seconds

need for them is increasing and you can’t get enough of them to get there. I can see driverless trucks in the future

15 minutes, 58 seconds

and I if we can ever get past the massive amount of union opposition to it, we should have operatorless ports

16 minutes, 8 seconds

and things like that like they are in other parts of the world.

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I know I think Austin is a test city. I know Phoenix has been for a couple of years with Whimo. They just approved Amazon coming in with their Zuks car which looks There’s no steering wheel.

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There’s It just looks like it’s a cab. I think four people get in it and it’s like a little shuttle. Yeah. So, they’re looking to do that. So,

16 minutes, 30 seconds

the reality Whimo’s all around. I’ve It was funny because I was downtown because they’re not up in the area where I live,

16 minutes, 36 seconds

but downtown I just happened to be downtown on an appointment and I pulled up to a stop sign and then next thing I

16 minutes, 43 seconds

I saw something come up next to me and I you can just tell when something’s moving in your peripheral vision. and I looked over and it is the Whimo and

16 minutes, 51 seconds

they’ve got those lightars that are running on the sides of them and so that’s what I caught out of the corner of my eye. So, it’s the first one I had

16 minutes, 59 seconds

ever seen in person. I’ve seen them on the news every night just about. But yeah, people are using them everywhere here. So, it’s intriguing to me to see that’s the future.

17 minutes, 9 seconds

So, here we are. The conference board always has great numbers but horrible predictions. But they called the recession. You and I thought there was

17 minutes, 16 seconds

going to be a recession in 23 or 24. It never happened. Um didn’t say that we didn’t have pockets of bad spots in the economy. But I thought that this was

17 minutes, 24 seconds

interesting. If we take a look at the last 20 years, right? If you’re following expectations were trending down, right? So coming out of the great

17 minutes, 33 seconds

financial crisis, even though the market and a lot of the economy was still lagging behind, the expectations were things are going to get better. Now,

17 minutes, 42 seconds

since then, other than COVID, the present situation has been better than expectations. Just people are just bearish. And on the right chart, I’ll

17 minutes, 51 seconds

let you comment in a second here. I thought this was interesting just going back since co checking out where consumer confidence is. And our

17 minutes, 58 seconds

generation right now is has the least amount of confidence in what’s going on the economy. And I think that’s because a lot of the people we’re dealing with

18 minutes, 7 seconds

are within 10 or 15 years of retirement and they’re not happy about what we see over the next 5 to 10 years.

18 minutes, 14 seconds

Yeah. I think that the interesting thing to me about this is I think with the prevailance of

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social media, the overabundance of media that we have in this country that is just by nature just negative. They the negativity sells. positivity doesn’t.

18 minutes, 34 seconds

So, it’s just negative. The old adage with the news, if it bleeds, it leads.

18 minutes, 39 seconds

It It’s this almost just constantly negative view of everything that’s out there,

18 minutes, 47 seconds

I think is leading to this lack of consumer confidence. But if you look at like retail sales and other things,

18 minutes, 54 seconds

that’s not it’s not translating into behavior, buyer behavior. People are spending more money as a result of that.

19 minutes, 4 seconds

Yes, they may be more negative, but they’re still spending more money. So, I you like I said, we’re probably the most overly social media country in the

19 minutes, 13 seconds

world. I’d venture to say I was loving the this this morning they talked about the happiness index and once again

19 minutes, 20 seconds

Finland is the happiest country in the world. We are like number 23. Take them over. Yeah. Exact.

19 minutes, 29 seconds

The one thing that gets me is do you know what is the silent generation is

19 minutes, 36 seconds

silent generation was they so silent generation is the ones that are right before the baby boomers. So they’re that

19 minutes, 44 seconds

ones that 1946.

19 minutes, 46 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. So they were not they’re right after the ones who fought World War II. The greatest generation. So they’re a really small

19 minutes, 55 seconds

generation in there in between the greatest generation and the baby boomers. Okay. What do you got?

20 minutes, 1 second

Yeah, they’re sometimes called shadow boomers, too.

20 minutes, 6 seconds

Shadow boomers. Okay. I haven’t heard that one.

20 minutes, 9 seconds

Yeah. So that’s I’ve got a little chart on my wall that shows these different generations, but yeah, they’re and they call them the silent generation because they’re the ones that just put their nose to the grindstoneone and worked.

20 minutes, 19 seconds

And they’re very much like the silent gener the greatest generation of just be patriotic, work, do your stuff, and don’t say anything.

20 minutes, 28 seconds

All right, let’s let me quickly crank into mine here and I’ll share some of the economic data that we have for this

20 minutes, 36 seconds

week. First off, once again, the government shutdown that keeps on giving. We’re still we’re still PPI information from February at this point.

20 minutes, 46 seconds

So, we’re at least catching up. And I think this is the final PPI report from the government shutdown era. So we got

20 minutes, 54 seconds

two of them this month. So this should be the last one unless we have some other kind of idiotic government

21 minutes, 1 second

shutdown that affects this. So this kind of spooked the market earlier this week.

21 minutes, 6 seconds

PPI was expected to be down to.3%. It was.5 prior came in at 7. Everybody got

21 minutes, 14 seconds

spooked. But then the reality is I started looking at it and I’m like okay everybody says that it’s X food and

21 minutes, 22 seconds

energy that’s the important part and X food and energy it was only up 0.5 it was within the consensus range and it

21 minutes, 30 seconds

was less than the prior month so you take out the volatile stuff if that’s what the Fed wants to work with we are a

21 minutes, 38 seconds

little bit higher X food and energy year-over-year at 3.9% so it’s not anything that the world needs to be ending about but we just need to be

21 minutes, 46 seconds

aware of it and it’s very likely that PPI will go up a little bit especially on the the energy side with the conflict

21 minutes, 54 seconds

that’s going on and we’ll talk about that talk about oil prices in a minute retail sales once again delayed for the

22 minutes, 2 seconds

government shutdown came in a little lighter than expected 2% x vehicles and gas month over month it was up.3 so

22 minutes, 11 seconds

vehicles have been down really especially Used vehicles have been down quite a bit, which quite frankly is not necessarily a bad thing because they

22 minutes, 20 seconds

were just ridiculously high prior. New home sales. This one was a I don’t think the news really made much of a deal of it, but this actually was not good.

22 minutes, 31 seconds

Prior 745 that was revised down to 712,

22 minutes, 36 seconds

which is pretty light to begin with. The consensus this time was 728, came in at 587. So this is the one that dominated the headlines this morning.

22 minutes, 45 seconds

Yeah. And this is a not good because this is what really drives our economy is the trickle down effect. If you don’t

22 minutes, 52 seconds

buy if you don’t build new homes then you know the cost of housing goes up. If you if you don’t have new homes being bought, the Home Depots of the world,

23 minutes, 4 seconds

everybody struggles because there’s so much of a trickle down effect there. Not to mention realtors and everybody else.

23 minutes, 9 seconds

This is a not good trend that we want to see flip around a little bit. Jobless claims this week.

23 minutes, 16 seconds

I just looked it up because they were talking about how mortgage rates ticked up and I hadn’t looked at it in a little while. It’s ranging between 610 and 635.

23 minutes, 26 seconds

It’s not that is not good for housing. Now, it really needs to be in the fives.

23 minutes, 31 seconds

Even if it’s 5.99, it’s over six is a number that people just they get it in their head and it’s even though it’s not

23 minutes, 39 seconds

talking about cancellations, mortgages on the trending up again because they think prices are coming down. Not good. Not good.

23 minutes, 48 seconds

And a lot of this is that fear of inflation is pressing into the 10-year Treasury which is pushing that up and that affects mortgage rates and once

23 minutes, 56 seconds

again trickle down effect. So something that we need to really get our hands around. Jobless claims came in way less

24 minutes, 3 seconds

than what was expected or not way less but less this week. Once again trending in a good direction. Hopefully it’s been

24 minutes, 11 seconds

hovering around this 213 to 215 range for a month and a half, two months now.

24 minutes, 17 seconds

So not seeing any big spike ups on the jobless side, which is good. This one I thought was hilarious because I was

24 minutes, 24 seconds

looking at the consensus outlook below and this is the read from Monday from all the geniuses in the economics world

24 minutes, 33 seconds

as Empire manufacturing which Empire Empire State Manufacturing was down a little bit slower growth seen in the

24 minutes, 40 seconds

index barely positive at 5.5 in March versus 16.3 in February came in at 18.1

24 minutes, 48 seconds

so you guys don’t know what the heck you’re talking about. And I think it’s actually I think it’s more because if you look at some of the other feds,

24 minutes, 58 seconds

Empire State’s been trending down for quite a while or it’s been just barely there. And that’s more just what I think

25 minutes, 6 seconds

is more policy in the state of New York than anything that’s systematic of problems with manufacturing in general.

25 minutes, 15 seconds

The other manufacturing reports have actually been very good. Richmond’s been really good. Everything else, you know,

25 minutes, 22 seconds

once again, I we’ve said it multiple times about economists.

25 minutes, 28 seconds

They can be wrong half the time or more and still keep a job, which is amazing to me.

25 minutes, 34 seconds

All right, last but not least, I wanted to because I was trying to get my head around, okay, what with the bounce up

25 minutes, 43 seconds

from 60 to 100 or 60 to 90 with oil prices, how is this kind of in relation to other oil price shocks in the past?

25 minutes, 55 seconds

So looking at some over the last 60 years, the worst of which was 1973 Arab oil embargo. The price of oil went up 300%.

26 minutes, 6 seconds

Interestingly enough, the price of oil was like $8 and it went up to $18 or

26 minutes, 14 seconds

something like that or it was like $5 went up to $18 which we would laugh at today. We see a move of that much in a

26 minutes, 20 seconds

day here. The Iranian revolution 1979 oil prices went up 130 to 165%. During

26 minutes, 28 seconds

the Gulf War, 100 to 170. 2022 Russia Ukraine oil prices went up 30 to 60%.

26 minutes, 37 seconds

We’re hovering at 40 to 70%. Right now,

26 minutes, 42 seconds

in relation, yes, it’s a big number because we’re talking 90s and hundreds,

26 minutes, 47 seconds

but it’s not really gone up as much as we would have expected. And if you watched last week’s show, we talked

26 minutes, 54 seconds

about where even where the Gulf right now, the Persian Gulf and the Straits of

27 minutes

Hormuz, that’s 20% of oil production and ships are getting through at this point. They’re starting to trickle through.

27 minutes, 10 seconds

Yes, it’s 20%, but I think that’s going to start to change as we go a little bit farther into this. But you’re seeing

27 minutes, 18 seconds

prices not spike through the roof, which you know,

27 minutes, 23 seconds

you got to look at the difference in the standard of living. Back then, healthc care was more reasonable. You didn’t

27 minutes, 29 seconds

have to pay for Wi-Fi and cell phones and all the other stuff that we have today that we didn’t have back then.

27 minutes, 37 seconds

Cable, streaming, add all that into the budget. You didn’t have that back. Yeah.

27 minutes, 42 seconds

And obviously, what was the average salary? 15 $20,000 a year the average see that’s well below p poverty line

27 minutes, 51 seconds

today I think 3200 grand yeah you can buy a house for 30 grand and it was a really nice house

27 minutes, 59 seconds

at that we didn’t Yeah have McMansions back then you had normal average yeah no mansion

28 minutes, 8 seconds

bothers me a lot last week we talked about all the the delinquencies car loans and in credit cards and mortgages.

28 minutes, 18 seconds

Look, we’ve been saying it for a while. Just another brick on cracked ice here. Yeah.

28 minutes, 22 seconds

And I don’t know if the catalyst is going to be this war or not, but I was looking at the debt clock. One of my favorite sites. I looked at it for the

28 minutes, 30 seconds

first time in a long time last week. I think we’re about to breach 38 trillion.

28 minutes, 35 seconds

I’ll see if I can bring it up real quick. It’s just Here it comes. 39 trillion. I’m sorry.

28 minutes, 41 seconds

Holy crap. 30 that we just breached 39 trillion. 39008. Yeah.

28 minutes, 49 seconds

It’s unsustainable.

28 minutes, 50 seconds

Where does it stop? Yeah. I mean, and they say the debt per citizen is 113,000

28 minutes, 57 seconds

and change. The debt per taxpayer is 357. Good. How do we cut this in half? Yeah. How do we just stop it going up?

29 minutes, 6 seconds

And as far as cutting it in half, how do we just stop it from going up? I just want to stay at stop. Just if you watch

29 minutes, 13 seconds

that debt clock, it’s just literally you watch numbers just ripping off nonstop as you go. I’m looking at it. I’m getting dizzy.

29 minutes, 21 seconds

Yeah. Me drama me.

29 minutes, 24 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. And it’s it I it’s just where does it stop? I at some point and honestly it’s not any better around the

29 minutes, 33 seconds

world. That’s the thing. I wish I could say it’s a unique a US problem, but it’s promise watering down our dollar that we

29 minutes, 41 seconds

will lose reserve currency at some point, especially if we can’t forget about slow it down, reverse trend.

29 minutes, 48 seconds

Yeah. But the scary thing is it’s been interesting this year. The dollar has strengthened really significantly

29 minutes, 55 seconds

this year. It’s what’s hurt gold prices and stuff like that. It’s that’s because some European countries,

30 minutes, 1 second

including France, are not buying oil in US dollars. They’re pegging it to the one. Yeah. Not good.

30 minutes, 9 seconds

Yeah. Nope. Totally agree. All right. I’m going to tell you what.

30 minutes, 13 seconds

I’ll make a deal with you. Between now and next podcast, we’re going to solve all these problems.

30 minutes, 20 seconds

There we go. Yep. I’ll start on half of it. You start on the other half, and we’ll get done. I’ll tell you what, you work off the debt problem because I’ve

30 minutes, 27 seconds

had no luck with that in the last couple of years.

30 minutes, 31 seconds

Let me take that. You figure out how we’re going to make $39 trillion to offset. You There’s only two ways to do it. One,

30 minutes, 39 seconds

cut spending and increase taxes. There’s the only two ways to reduce it. That’s it. That’s it. Yes, we could ship out more,

30 minutes, 46 seconds

create more taxation. What happened to tariffs will help bring that? No. No.

30 minutes, 52 seconds

Yeah. You got to decrease spending and increase taxes. That’s it.

30 minutes, 56 seconds

But the problem is with the laugher curve, when you do that, you actually come in with less revenue in the long run.

31 minutes, 4 seconds

Okay? So, we have less revenue. How else are we going to reduce and get rid of this debt?

31 minutes, 11 seconds

All you can do is grow. All you can do is one, stop spending like maniacs, but two, you’ve got to man you’ve got to

31 minutes, 19 seconds

balance out your taxes and build an economy based on growth. Like I said this six months ago, no,

31 minutes, 26 seconds

they need a mandate in the Congress. You have to have a balanced budget every year. Never going to happen.

31 minutes, 31 seconds

Absolutely. Every state Yeah. Every state in the country or Yeah. Every single state has a balanced budget

31 minutes, 38 seconds

amendment. the federal government just we do whatever we want until they till they get their feet put to the fire and

31 minutes, 46 seconds

the problem is where do you cut money because you cut money from anything then it’s okay these are they’re taking money away from us it’s got to come from

31 minutes, 54 seconds

somewhere they have to give up something the mandate for a balanced budget has about as much substance as a fart in the wig yes

32 minutes, 2 seconds

doesn’t mean anything and it has about as much chance of passing as term limits in the Congress Yeah,

32 minutes, 11 seconds

forget it. All right. All right. We will we’ll solve that by next week.

32 minutes, 15 seconds

So, you know what you’re working on. I know what I’m working on. Folks, we’ll see you guys back here the next week.

32 minutes, 21 seconds

And thanks for joining us. Have a fantastic week.