In Episode 150 of Cents of Things, Jeff Kikel and Ron Lang break down the widening gap between how Americans feel about the economy and what the data is actually doing: the new Fed chair’s “deal with your own stuff” posture, why this AI-driven market isn’t a repeat of 1999, the picks-and-shovels case for data-center infrastructure, the cracks showing up in manufacturing and housing, and the 79,000 jobs already tied to AI displacement. If you invest, run a business, or just want to understand the disconnect between the headlines and the numbers, this one’s for you. ▶️ Subscribe for weekly economic and market breakdowns — and drop us an upvote if this helped. ⏱️ CHAPTERS 00:00 Intro 00:54 Iran’s 14-Point MOU: “Vague and Ambiguous” 02:46 This Day in History (June 18) 09:21 Inflation Ticks Up & the New Fed Chair’s Message 11:50 Oil Drops ~30% & the Strait of Hormuz 12:24 Consumer Sentiment Hits a 70-Year Low 13:37 The $400 Problem & Buy Now, Pay Later 14:14 Record Earnings: Why This Isn’t 1999 15:07 Data Centers & the Picks-and-Shovels Play 16:34 Cracks in the Manufacturing Data 17:40 Housing Stuck Until Mortgage Rates Fall 18:40 Home Depot, Lowe’s & the “Money Pit” 19:52 Pending Home Sales & the Retail Sales Surprise 21:57 Leading Indicators & the “K Economy” 24:50 Take AI Out of 3 Years + 79,000 Jobs Lost to AI 26:51 Will AI Create Net Jobs? Robots Are Coming 28:1 #CentsOfThings #Investing #Economy #StockMarket #FedWatch1 Wrap-Up & Sign-Off 📌 ABOUT Cents of Things is a weekly conversation with Jeff Kikel and Ron Lang on markets, the economy, and the money stories behind the headlines — no jargon, no hype, just two guys making sense of the numbers. Disclaimer: This content is for educational and informational purposes only and is not investment, tax, or financial advice. Do your own research or consult a licensed professional before making financial decisions.

TRANSCRIPT

14 seconds

Hey everybody, welcome to another episode of the sense of things with Jeff and Ron. We’ve got another week ahead of

21 seconds

us here where we are covering all kinds of crazy stuff going on today. Of course, we’ll have this day in history.

29 seconds

Ron’s got some great stuff on consumer sentiment, which is actually at its absolute lowest point in over 70 years.

36 seconds

I’m going to cover some economic data once again that may refute that what they say and what they do. We also had

43 seconds

the leading economic indicators come out, which is always one of the things I look at to see where we’re going. So stay tuned. We’ll be right back on in

51 seconds

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

56 seconds

Good morning. Doing well. We survived the SpaceX IPO and it’s down again today. So, we’ll see where we are here

1 minute, 3 seconds

after a year. And we got something signed with Iran, but most people are not happy about it. I read the 14

1 minute, 10 seconds

points. You want to talk about vag ambiguity. Holy crap.

1 minute, 15 seconds

It is. Yeah, it’s not a signed agreement. It’s just anou. So, it’s a it’s basically an agreement to talk about stuff. So, you know,

1 minute, 23 seconds

just as good as taking a lady out on her first date and telling you I love her.

1 minute, 27 seconds

Yeah. Yeah. True. Yeah. It’s true. It’s the nature of this whole thing. And it’s all going to come down to what Iran, not

1 minute, 36 seconds

what they agree to, but what they actually do. And I think that’s going to be the whole thing. What it does seem like is there’s some conditions in there

1 minute, 44 seconds

that say, “Okay, you’ve got to do this before you get any money or we stop blowing the crap out of you.” So

1 minute, 52 seconds

hopefully they’ll be able to negotiate a good deal out of this over the next 60 days. history is any barometer of them

1 minute, 59 seconds

keeping their word. Yeah. No. I have no hope. And it’s not going to happen within 60 days either. So good stuff.

2 minutes, 5 seconds

And they definitely left themselves a dead man switch where oh if if the Israelis and the the Hamas Hezbollah

2 minutes, 15 seconds

they are fighting then we can just get rid of this whole thing. Okay. They’re going to keep fighting because Hezbollah is not going to stop lobbing rockets

2 minutes, 22 seconds

into Israel and Israel has a right to defend itself. So, tough luck. That should have absolutely nothing to do with Iran.

2 minutes, 29 seconds

It does not. It does not. And we’ll be talking about this same conversation two months from now. Also, probably for the next 60 days.

2 minutes, 38 seconds

All right, here we go. Actually, I got to tell you, when I first started putting the slide together, there wasn’t a lot of interesting things. And then things picked up pretty good. Okay.

2 minutes, 46 seconds

1775, US Army is founded. Whoa.

2 minutes, 51 seconds

1775, Congress votes to have George Washington lead the Continental Army.

2 minutes, 57 seconds

Now that we had an army, we needed somebody to lead it. Of course, 1776, I did not know this.

3 minutes, 4 seconds

Delaware declares independence. They succeeded from our 13 colonies.

3 minutes, 9 seconds

1892, siblings murder becomes first crime solved with fingerprint evidence in Argentina. I actually did read part

3 minutes, 17 seconds

of this article. It was actually very interesting if you think about any level of technology they had back then. Yeah.

3 minutes, 23 seconds

1903 Ford Motor Company incorporated.

3 minutes, 27 seconds

1917 in the beginning of World War I, the Great War, the US Congress passes the Espionage Act.

3 minutes, 36 seconds

Yeah.

3 minutes, 37 seconds

1942, because I’m a Beetlemaniac, I had to put it in there. Paul McCartney is born, turning 80.

3 minutes, 43 seconds

84.

3 minutes, 46 seconds

So my god, it’s been a long time since he’s saying when I’ll be 64. That’s true. Yes.

3 minutes, 52 seconds

1947, Bugsy Seagull, organized crime leader is killed. And by the way, I actually am indirectly once twice

4 minutes, 1 second

removed related to him. Okay.

4 minutes, 6 seconds

My my aunt was married to his nephew. So I don’t know how that necessarily works in a broken brain family, but there is a connection.

4 minutes, 15 seconds

There is a little bit. She said she met him once. Okay.

4 minutes, 19 seconds

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg executed for espionage. We’ve talked about this before. It was proven many years later when it was declassified. Julius

4 minutes, 28 seconds

definitely with a couple of other people were passing secrets. The wife had no clue and essentially she was executed. I saw a couple of documentaries on this.

4 minutes, 37 seconds

Just the whole thing is super sad.

4 minutes, 40 seconds

She was just Yeah. She was just death by association.

4 minutes, 44 seconds

100%. And the sons were taken away from their parents. They were adopted, given new names and they were both

4 minutes, 51 seconds

interviewed. It was just a super sad thing. I couldn’t imagine.

4 minutes, 55 seconds

1972 Watergate burglars arrested and hence every scandal we put gate after it. Yeah.

5 minutes, 3 seconds

1967.

5 minutes, 5 seconds

Nice. Honorary Pop Fast Festival reaches its climax in the summer of love and then the next year was the basically year of turmoil 68 the year I was born.

5 minutes, 16 seconds

So what are you going to do?

5 minutes, 18 seconds

1974 going along with the Watergate President’s Men published one of the greatest movies of all time

5 minutes, 25 seconds

best written best acted. It was just incredible. And I just thought it was interesting, right? It from the time the

5 minutes, 32 seconds

burglars were arrested to the time that Nixon resigned in August of 74, this was

5 minutes, 39 seconds

public. Two years. Two years to bring down a presidency. And if it wasn’t for Mark Felt, the second in charge of the

5 minutes, 47 seconds

FBI, we would never have known about this. And if because he was I think we talked about this a couple weeks ago. If

5 minutes, 54 seconds

he had been made the FBI director director, we’d have probably known nothing about this. So, Exactly. 100%. 100%. 75 being a movie guy.

6 minutes, 4 seconds

Jaws. And I got to tell you, it was years since I saw this. I saw it again about four years ago. I loved it. I

6 minutes, 13 seconds

probably seen it probably another five or six times since. It’s it doesn’t but when you hadn’t seen it in so long. Uh just what a great movie. And then if you

6 minutes, 21 seconds

ever watch the the making of this movie every day should never have been made because the shark didn’t work. I mean they had so many problems.

6 minutes, 30 seconds

Bruce had issues. So that’s a large reason why they didn’t really show him that much. That’s the funny part. It the thing that made the movie the best was

6 minutes, 39 seconds

the fact that the stupid shark didn’t work and they ended up not really putting him on film a lot. So, it was a lot of stuff without him on the screen

6 minutes, 46 seconds

which made the movie created mystery.

6 minutes, 49 seconds

Yeah. 76 NBA merges with the ABA. And I tried to have I wanted to have time to try and find it, but there’s actually a

6 minutes, 57 seconds

story, I can’t remember which team it was, but they made a deal with the NBA when they merged because they were an ABA team that when they merged,

7 minutes, 7 seconds

they made a deal that they would get a percentage of the media rights in perpetuity. Wow.

7 minutes, 14 seconds

So, this family collects an unbelievable check every year. And I maybe next time I will I’ll research it. I’ll get it

7 minutes, 22 seconds

because and stupidest deals in history.

7 minutes, 25 seconds

Yeah, it’s probably the Philadelphia 76ers because you had It wasn’t really surprising.

7 minutes, 32 seconds

Yeah, because they were the most powerful team with Dr. J and the whole Well, remember, hold on a second. Dr.

7 minutes, 38 seconds

Jay was on the Nets. He became available. The Sixers got him from the Nets. The Nets were in the ABA. Got it.

7 minutes, 46 seconds

1994. I remember watching this live. OJ Simpson leaves police, which you got to think about, if this was any other person, they would have

7 minutes, 53 seconds

ran this thing off the road a lot earlier than let him go to the house. That was just an insane thing.

8 minutes

Strangest strangest thing I’ve ever seen.

8 minutes, 4 seconds

And in 2012, I don’t remember this, Nick Wenda, the flying walks across Niagara Falls on a tight rope. I don’t remember that.

8 minutes, 12 seconds

Yep. And he wasn’t the first guy to do it either. There was a French guy back in the early 1900s that had done it. So,

8 minutes, 19 seconds

it wasn’t like he was the first guy to ever do it.

8 minutes, 23 seconds

Interesting. And lastly, recent history, the submersible Titan implodes on its way to tour the Titanic rad wreckage.

8 minutes, 31 seconds

I could not imagine my last moments on that because you would you wouldn’t remember them. That’s for sure.

8 minutes, 37 seconds

Everything disintegrated. They went down. They were able to go down and see the wreckage. I don’t think they found any body parts or maybe some clothing.

8 minutes, 46 seconds

Yeah, the Yeah, they were crushed by it.

8 minutes, 48 seconds

There were still parts of it left, big chunks of it, but the there’s a great documentary on this that Josh Gates did

8 minutes, 55 seconds

on Discovery Channel about it because he was they had asked him to go down on this thing and he was they did a little

9 minutes, 4 seconds

test dive and he was like, I am not getting on that thing. It’s that’s a death trap. And he was right.

9 minutes, 11 seconds

Yeah. And actually, James Cameron came out, too, cuz he’s gone down so many times in in his own submarine, and he said he knew it wasn’t safe. All right.

9 minutes, 21 seconds

Anyway, all right. Here we go. So, some interesting things here. Inflation is ticking up. Kevin Walsh had his first press conference yesterday. Sounded

9 minutes, 29 seconds

interesting. We’ll see what actually gets done. And I don’t know if it’s so easy to change a hundred years of the way doing things even though things have

9 minutes, 38 seconds

been modified. But inflation is ticking up and the market yanked back on a string and

9 minutes, 44 seconds

then yo-yoed back up today based on not more rate cuts but one to two rate hikes

9 minutes, 52 seconds

before end of the year. And I find that to be incredibly interesting. I don’t know. How do you feel? I think the I think the best part that came out of

10 minutes

yesterday, which I think is what caused the market to flip out, is worse. I guess the best way to explain it was

10 minutes, 8 seconds

deal with your own stuff. We’re not going to sit here and be the ones that the world revolves around the Fed and

10 minutes, 15 seconds

you need to take your own look at what the economy is doing. And I like that. I like that approach of you know what,

10 minutes, 22 seconds

we’re not going to do all this forward thinking. this is what we think interest rates are going to do and all that.

10 minutes, 28 seconds

We’re going to take it as it comes, which I don’t the market I think has been has been I guess it’s been just like oh okay whatever the Fed does then

10 minutes, 36 seconds

that’s what we decide and I think it flipped everybody out a little bit that we’re going to actually have to do things on our own for a change and think

10 minutes, 43 seconds

for ourselves which is you take a look at inflation right forget about postcoid this is almost

10 minutes, 50 seconds

average twice as high as the prior 10 years. Oh yeah. Yeah. Not good.

10 minutes, 56 seconds

But a lot of that and I would say probably 30 to 40% of that is because of the war and and the price of oil which

11 minutes, 5 seconds

has come down 30% in a matter of couple weeks. So it’s not going to be right away. I think inflation’s going to stay

11 minutes, 12 seconds

high for the rest of the year. But I think what I read from the very short statement as well as very very short

11 minutes, 19 seconds

press conference was we’re not necessarily raising interest rates this year. We’re going to take a look and see

11 minutes, 26 seconds

approach. And there for the first time I finally hear a Fed chairman say the obvious thing. Yeah. And gas

11 minutes, 35 seconds

prices are up. Oil prices are up. That’s causing a lot of this. We need to see how this comes down as a result of it.

11 minutes, 42 seconds

So I I that is the one thing I like.

11 minutes, 44 seconds

Yes, I don’t like to see inflation up, but I think it will correct itself with just what we’ve seen. We’re at 74 this

11 minutes, 51 seconds

morning on West Texas Intermediate, 78 on Brent at this point. We were at close to 100 just a little over a week and a half ago.

12 minutes

Yeah. 7325. Yeah.

12 minutes, 2 seconds

Yeah. It’s not the 60s, but it’s getting there. And hopefully it’ll get down to 5560 when there’s some finality. I think in the meantime, it’s going to be grossly volatile. All right.

12 minutes, 12 seconds

And we’ll see if the we’ll see if the Iranians open up the straits tomorrow.

12 minutes, 17 seconds

I think the straits will be open. I think it’s more about the fees and the enriched ranium, but that’s a conversation for another time. All

12 minutes, 25 seconds

right. So, here we go. Consumer sentiment 70-year low. The University of Michigan has been highly criticized over

12 minutes, 34 seconds

the last many years because a lot of people didn’t know this. I heard about this 2010 that they actually released

12 minutes, 42 seconds

their numbers to paid subscribers essentially 10 to 15 minutes before it’s released. A lot of people are not aware

12 minutes, 49 seconds

of this. When it was all of a sudden these the news networks free and fair markets. This has been around for 20 25 years. How they’re just finding out

12 minutes, 57 seconds

about it now I have no idea. But I actually knew about it. Somebody had told me about this in 2010. But anyway, here we are at basically almost a

13 minutes, 5 seconds

70-year low in consumer sentiment, which is just amazing. Is that because of high consumer prices across the board

13 minutes, 14 seconds

from the prior slide? Because if they’re invested in the market, you would have found some of this to level out. What do you thought?

13 minutes, 22 seconds

Yeah, I think and we’ll see a little bit of it when we look at retail sales. It’s just like I said, it’s intriguing to me

13 minutes, 29 seconds

that the consumer says one thing and they do something completely different.

13 minutes, 34 seconds

Like I’ve said, let’s go back to the stat. 70% of America doesn’t have $400 in the bank account for an emergency purchase. So, how many of them are in stock?

13 minutes, 44 seconds

But they got credit cards. They got Oh, they got credit cards.

13 minutes, 48 seconds

They’ve got a firm and all the other ones that if they don’t have credit cards, they’ve got a firm where they can buy stuff on payments or on layaway

13 minutes, 56 seconds

basically at that point. So yeah, it’s just they say one thing, they do something different. And I think we we

14 minutes, 4 seconds

I don’t know how to read the consumer sentiment anymore. It’s almost becoming a contrarian indicator for me at this point.

14 minutes, 11 seconds

Usually it is on the extreme top and bottom, but this is a good segue to the next slide. While consumer sentiment is low, freaking earnings are going through the roof.

14 minutes, 20 seconds

Yep.

14 minutes, 22 seconds

And a lot of this is AIdriven and tech again. Didn’t do isn’t this not what we heard from 96 to 99 where it was all

14 minutes, 30 seconds

driven? But the interesting thing was back then this that would have been the revenue chart, not the earnings chart.

14 minutes, 36 seconds

That’s precisely correct. This is the mother’s belt of earnings.

14 minutes, 39 seconds

Yeah, that’s the difference when people go but it’s just 1999 and 2000. Yeah, but those were companies that they were basing everything on their revenue and

14 minutes, 47 seconds

not looking at future revenue. Honestly, these are real earnings. Now, some of this I still think there’s a little bit

14 minutes, 55 seconds

of juking and jing going on with some of these earnings and the AI side where they’re doing a lot of these cross things and this I’ll invest in you

15 minutes, 4 seconds

because you buy stuff from me and those are that money hasn’t been spent yet.

15 minutes, 10 seconds

Yeah. And but the reality is and I see this from our portfolio that I run for

15 minutes, 17 seconds

clients. We’re up a lot this year and it’s because we focused on the data centers. And the data centers in if you

15 minutes, 24 seconds

focus on not the people that own the data centers, but you focus on the the picks and shovels, those companies are

15 minutes, 32 seconds

doing phenomenally well because this is the largest amount of investment in any infrastructure that we’ve seen since the

15 minutes, 38 seconds

railroads. So it it is an amazing I would say since the dawn of the internet but then yes then you could go back to the railroads.

15 minutes, 46 seconds

Yeah. I would say the other one that was somewhat similar to this in current times was the real buildout of telecom

15 minutes, 54 seconds

and the the cell phone networks and all that early 2000s. And we all know how that ended. Most of the people that

16 minutes, 1 second

owned those networks went out of business or were merged into others because they’d spent all the money and somebody else could buy it super cheap

16 minutes, 10 seconds

and then run it. That’s why Verizon’s done extremely well. It’s why T-Mobile’s done extremely well. They ended up buying out the people who built up these

16 minutes, 19 seconds

huge networks. So, I think that’s the future. But at least for the near future, I think anything that is a pick

16 minutes, 26 seconds

and shovel in this area is going to be an interesting place to have some money invested. All right, let me let me pull up my stuff here. We’re going to whip

16 minutes, 35 seconds

through this relatively fast. Once again, I always try and look at some of the weird and unusual things on the

16 minutes, 42 seconds

economic calendar. And of course, we had earlier this week, we had Empire State Manufacturing Index. That’s actually the

16 minutes, 49 seconds

consensus. The prior was 19.6. six consensus was 12.9 or 12.5 and it was down to 5.7. So

16 minutes, 57 seconds

I think part of this is okay we’re trying to absorb some of this into the economy and I think some of

17 minutes, 5 seconds

these areas are pulling back a bit. Now you look at Philly Philly Fed was right on where consensus was. It was actually better than the prior. We’ll have to

17 minutes, 14 seconds

look at where Richmond and Dallas and some of these other ones come in. But I think it’s intriguing to me to see New

17 minutes, 21 seconds

York or Empire State starting to show a little bit of cracks in there. So, it’s something we need to keep an eye on.

17 minutes, 28 seconds

Industrial production was actually down as well. So, once again, I don’t know.

17 minutes, 34 seconds

Business equipment spending is part of AI. Um, I don’t know exactly where all this falls. It’s something we need to

17 minutes, 41 seconds

keep an eye on, but it’s once again we’re seeing some cracks in something that had been just rocking along pretty well in a lot of these cases.

17 minutes, 50 seconds

Manufacturing and housing has just been struggling period.

17 minutes, 54 seconds

Yeah. And it’s struggling even more at this point.

17 minutes, 58 seconds

Look, I look, we’ve been saying it for a while. Until the 30 year not only gets under six, but really sub five5, this is going to be a stagnant industry.

18 minutes, 9 seconds

Yep. and and stays there. When I talk to my realtor friends and people are just petrified to make a decision at this

18 minutes, 17 seconds

point, they’re they’re it’s I have to move, but I’m not going to make the move right now because I or I want to move,

18 minutes, 25 seconds

but I’m not going to make the move because I’m worried about interest rates or I’m worried about the economy or I’m worried about my job and everything

18 minutes, 33 seconds

else. So, I think that’s part of that consumer sentiment is is trickling out into some of these other areas where the big purchases are happening.

18 minutes, 40 seconds

But but here here’s here’s the converse to that. You would think, okay, people aren’t selling their house, they’re going to put money into their own house.

18 minutes, 47 seconds

Home Depot, Home Depot and Lowe’s are basically in a negative trend. But that you got to remember back too, you go

18 minutes, 56 seconds

back in time to to early pandemic, people put a lot of money into their

19 minutes, 2 seconds

houses and you had to know that was going to be, okay, my house is fixed up.

19 minutes, 9 seconds

I don’t really need to do anything. So, you had that huge bunch. If you look at during the pandemic, that huge bunch up

19 minutes, 16 seconds

of Home Depot, Lowe’s, any of those home type companies. Yeah. they were phenomenally doing well. Now they’re not

19 minutes, 25 seconds

because you had that cycle of people doing that. And if people aren’t moving, then there’s no reason to fix up the new house that you’re moving into.

19 minutes, 33 seconds

But you know what, Jeff? You own a house. I own a house. The house is a money pit. It never ends. You keep doing stuff.

19 minutes, 40 seconds

I know. I know. But people will put it off. I think right now they’re not doing the major big purchases and they’re not

19 minutes, 48 seconds

moving. So it’s interesting. Yes, I agree. Mine is a money pit as well. So, I hear you. Every house I’ve ever owned has been a money pit. All right. Pending home sales.

19 minutes, 57 seconds

Interestingly enough, they actually popped up month over month, 3.8%. I’m not sure if I totally believe this.

20 minutes, 5 seconds

And it was way above consensus. And I’m not so sure I totally believe this, but maybe it’s a sign that we’re starting to

20 minutes, 14 seconds

come out of the doldrums a little bit here. Last but not least, leading back to our conversation about consumer

20 minutes, 22 seconds

sentiment, retail sales month over month was supposed to be 0.5, it was at 0.9.

20 minutes, 29 seconds

So way on the top end of the consensus range, a big surprise today. And once again, what they say and what they do.

20 minutes, 36 seconds

Now, part of retail sales here could very well be that goods prices are up.

20 minutes, 41 seconds

And that’s it’s not necessarily people are buying more. It’s just they’re having to pay more for what it is. And I think that’s part of this big popup

20 minutes, 50 seconds

here, especially with the inflation numbers we’ve seen over the last couple weeks. And last, but not go back. Go back. Yeah. Yeah.

20 minutes, 58 seconds

So, the problem with the retail sales, right, typically the summer is a little bit slower, right? Because people are vacationing. They’re not going out. But

21 minutes, 6 seconds

retail sales, if you just take a look at consumer staples, the sector, flat to negative over the last year.

21 minutes, 13 seconds

Yeah. So people are spending but they’re spending on vacations and hotels are doing unbelievable. They’re not spending

21 minutes, 21 seconds

on goods unless the only thing I could think of this is sales not profits. So are their margins being I don’t know what the deal is here.

21 minutes, 30 seconds

You can see in the little consensus outlook here spending looks robust with support from rising goods prices. Okay.

21 minutes, 36 seconds

So people are having to pay more. It doesn’t mean that they’re necessarily buying more. They’re paying more for those goods. So okay. Yes, retail sales

21 minutes, 44 seconds

is up, but that’s because they have to pay more. And so they’re measuring retail sales as a dollar amount, not

21 minutes, 52 seconds

necessarily as a percentage of increase in actual good purchases. So, you know,

21 minutes, 59 seconds

you you read it however you want, but it’s not declining, but it’s at least, let’s say, holding its own. It’s not declining.

22 minutes, 7 seconds

Last little piece of the pie. One of the ones that I follow on a regular basis is leading economic indicators. It yes,

22 minutes, 15 seconds

it’s been on a big decline here. We’re still on a trend upward. If you look at the trend part, we’re still way above

22 minutes, 22 seconds

where we were back before the first or the previous big recession that we had.

22 minutes, 27 seconds

Still hanging in there. It’s just being where it’s at. Interestingly enough, you look at the numbers for the month of May, and really the only thing that

22 minutes, 36 seconds

drove anything on leading economic indicators was the stock market’s just been off to a major run here. If you

22 minutes, 43 seconds

look into the non-financial components, basically everything is flat to nothing at this point. Nothing’s moving any

22 minutes, 51 seconds

direction, which is of course not having any major effect on any of the last six months numbers here. average consumer

23 minutes

expectations for business conditions still negative. And I think this goes in with what Ron talked about when it came to the consumer sentiment on that side.

23 minutes, 10 seconds

It’s just people are very negative about what’s going on and they’re going to continue to be negative at this point.

23 minutes, 16 seconds

And the stock market just keeps on chugging largely. It my my hero in the investment business was always Peter Lynch and Peter said it the best.

23 minutes, 26 seconds

earnings always or prices always follow earnings. So if earnings are going to continue to be up, prices are going to be up in the stock market at that point.

23 minutes, 35 seconds

It’s the Yeah. Go back to the first chart.

23 minutes, 37 seconds

The So when we brought this up in the past, whether I did it or you did it, I’m sorry. The first LEI chart on the top. Oh, okay. I’m sorry. Yeah.

23 minutes, 44 seconds

Yeah. So the interesting part here is the the royal blue line.

23 minutes, 51 seconds

Yep. Yep. is the what I’m trying what I’m trying to say is that it’s still negative and it’s

23 minutes, 58 seconds

been negative since mid 20 early mid2021 when essentially the market peaked. So

24 minutes, 5 seconds

we’re still the now they always said when typically it crosses down over the black line we should have a recession

24 minutes, 13 seconds

within what 12 to 18 months. We didn’t have necessarily a recession. So, I always hated the expression they’ve been

24 minutes, 20 seconds

talking about the quote unquote K economy. What does that look like to you? That looks like a K. Yep.

24 minutes, 28 seconds

And the K line is lowering consumer indicator. I don’t care where the stock market is. We are just seeing basically

24 minutes, 36 seconds

sentiment and negative consumer indic indicators. Eventually, we’ve been I look, I’ve been saying it with you. We’ve been doing this over three years.

24 minutes, 43 seconds

We never had a three-year anniversary party, my man. But we’ve been doing it three years and we’ve been saying this is just another cinder block on cracked

24 minutes, 50 seconds

ice. So think about it. Take out AI for the last three years. Where would we have been? Yeah.

24 minutes, 57 seconds

With the market. Pull that out. Pull that out. Where where would we be?

25 minutes, 2 seconds

Forget about a recession. It’s just a matter of a pullback in the market. We would be 10 10 15 maybe 20% less than

25 minutes, 9 seconds

where we are right now. Not good. And I inside the I didn’t pull up the unemployment numbers today because they

25 minutes, 18 seconds

were Yeah, they were right about where expectations were. I think they said 225 and it was 226. But one of the things I

25 minutes, 26 seconds

heard on the news on the way in as that number was hitting the tape was that 79,000 of those jobs were direct affect

25 minutes, 35 seconds

by kind of positions being eliminated because of AI. Where does that continue?

25 minutes, 41 seconds

I think AI is going to be something that is going to revolutionize the industry or revolutionize the

25 minutes, 50 seconds

country and the world, but there’s going to be some pain that happens as a result of it. Think back to

25 minutes, 59 seconds

it’s a bad explanation, but think back to people that work for buggy whip manufacturers back in the early 1900s

26 minutes, 6 seconds

when cars were coming in. Yeah. you still kept doing it, but at some point there was really no need for the massive

26 minutes, 14 seconds

amount of buggy whips or people that made wagons and the things that whatever the old things pulled around by horses, it things change. People lose jobs.

26 minutes, 25 seconds

People have to change what they’re doing. And once again, I I’ve said it and I’ve beat a dead horse, but if you

26 minutes, 31 seconds

are in a job today and you are not on your own, not because your employer says to do it, but on your own exploring

26 minutes, 39 seconds

things around AI, you may end up becoming somebody who’s just not going to have a job, unfortunately.

26 minutes, 48 seconds

Very quickly, and we’ll wrap up with this. I am not as smart as Jensen Wong, but I did read an article and I saved it

26 minutes, 55 seconds

that he agreed with me. I don’t think he heard the podcast that AI will eventually create net jobs, not necessarily being negative.

27 minutes, 4 seconds

Totally agree. Yeah, I totally agree.

27 minutes, 6 seconds

But listening, yeah, it’s going to take people that it’s going to take companies to say, “All right, we’re going to retrain our

27 minutes, 13 seconds

workforce in this as we integrate it in.” It is going to eliminate repetitive jobs. I think at some point in the very

27 minutes, 22 seconds

very near future, especially if gez Elon Musk has anything to do with it, robots are going to eliminate a lot of

27 minutes, 31 seconds

repetitive jobs. I could see I’ve seen what if you’ve not seen it, just go Elon

27 minutes, 37 seconds

Musk robots on YouTube or something like that and see how good those things really are.

27 minutes, 44 seconds

Listen, I will I will buy a robot tomorrow if it’ll clean my house. Mop the floors, do the kitchens, do the bathrooms. I will do it tomorrow.

27 minutes, 53 seconds

I already have my iroot. It’s out there doing the My floor has never been cleaner except when it gets stuck under

27 minutes, 59 seconds

the wine rack or it runs out of juice halfway across. Maybe it was thirsty.

28 minutes, 5 seconds

I know. And it runs out of juice halfway across the floor and it’s just sitting in the middle of the floor dead when I come home. So, other than that, it works

28 minutes, 14 seconds

amazingly well. And I will at some point want to afford an Elon Musk robot to clean my house for me. I’m right there with you.

28 minutes, 22 seconds

I hear you. Until next week, my man.

28 minutes, 24 seconds

All right, brother. Thank you. And folks, make sure that you hit the subscribe button and make sure that you give us an upvote. And we’ll see you guys back here the very next time.

Sync to video time