'Much worse than the 1970s': Historian Niall Ferguson has a warning for investors

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 938

  • @lucagreco1787
    @lucagreco1787 Год назад +199

    I wonder if people that experienced the 2008 crash had it easier because this market conditions are driving me to insanity, my portfolio has lost over $26500 this Nov. alone my profits are tanking and I'm don't see my retirement turning out well when I can't even grow my stagnant reserv.

    • @lucaswilliams9992
      @lucaswilliams9992 Год назад

      @Abu.chowdhury I’m new to all this, heard it's a good time to buy and basically I've just got cash sitting duck in the bank and I’d really love to put it to good use seeing how inflation is at an all time-high, who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up.

    • @raredreamfootage
      @raredreamfootage Год назад

      By portfolio I'm assuming you mean the "worth of your public stocks. If so, I would say focus more on the operational performance of the companies who represent those stocks than the paper value of the stock market.

  • @gerhard7323
    @gerhard7323 2 года назад +324

    Love economics because nobody really knows anything.

    • @dragonflydreamer7658
      @dragonflydreamer7658 2 года назад +13

      They know exactly what they are doing, The problem is some times people and revolutions get in the way only to start the process all over again.
      First by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property.

    • @markleblanc172
      @markleblanc172 2 года назад +4

      Basically

    • @radar0412
      @radar0412 2 года назад +12

      Actually we're intentionally keeping you in the dark. But I wasn't supposed to tell you that.

    • @gregorysagegreene
      @gregorysagegreene 2 года назад +1

      Read my post above ... it takes a lot more work than the economists think.

    • @jiahan3849
      @jiahan3849 2 года назад +2

      Actually Niall Ferguson knows a lot more than most top economists. The reason? Economics is 1000 times more difficult than physics or chemistry.

  • @chrisbluebird5037
    @chrisbluebird5037 2 года назад +100

    Transfer of wealth usually occur during market crash, I've been looking up strategies and apparently both bull and bear market condition provides equal avenue to accrue massive gains, and a news article particularly mentioned a 54 year old that made $280k in 8weeks, how do I learn these strategies, my portfolio has been stagnant for months.

    • @joshspring7686
      @joshspring7686 2 года назад

      You have to get a financial-advisor/broker to aid you diversify your portfolios to include commodities, inflation-indexed bonds and stocks of companies with solid cash flows, as opposed to growth stocks where valuations were based on future potential earnings,

    • @miawhitlock9140
      @miawhitlock9140 2 года назад

      @@joshspring7686 Had a good run during my first year in the fin-market, I assumed I had a hang on it. However, things changed during the pandemic, and I needed to diversify into safe assets, so I approached a coach who devised a structure that matched my goals, and in my first year working with her, I made a whopping $695k,
      which I hope to scale to a million before the end of the third quarter.

    • @pigsbark4173
      @pigsbark4173 2 года назад

      @@miawhitlock9140 that's impressive!, I could really use the expertise of this advisors , my portfolio has been down bad....who’s the person guiding you?

    • @miawhitlock9140
      @miawhitlock9140 2 года назад

      @@pigsbark4173 credits to Jessica Meador Jones, one of the best portfolio manager;s out there. she;s well known, you should look her up.

    • @mesutserim1595
      @mesutserim1595 2 года назад

      @@miawhitlock9140 I curiously looked Jessica Meador Jones online and researched her accreditation. She seem very proficient, I wrote her detailing my Fin-market goals.

  • @tek6423
    @tek6423 2 года назад +59

    I can envision double digit inflation. I’m 68 years old, I was a young family man trying to get my first mortgage back then (early ‘80’s). 9% adjustable mortgage, that jumped up twice into double digits. It took us years and years to recover from that. The upside was that we learned to live frugally. That is really important. Really. Learn to cook at home, drastically reduce dependence on restaurant food. Drugs, gambling…… really? Plenty of other ways to have fun. Find a reasonably priced fitness place, convenient to where you live, and exercise on a regular basis. Oh…. Here’s the key. Either don’t get married, or, find the right mate and DON’T get divorced. Invest in sensible ETF’s and diversify. Many of the personal finance sites I read stress buying and holding rental properties. Might be good, but I have seen and heard so many nightmare stories. That’s enough….good luck.

    • @nikolazunic6580
      @nikolazunic6580 2 года назад +1

      Haha divorce - that one falls under go woke and go broke

    • @annaplot2073
      @annaplot2073 2 года назад +1

      I am already learning to live frugally😅 no takeouts, picking cheap brands for home, etc I hope it doesn’t get too bad though. And though i am a girl, i am not planning on having kids. Don’t want to end up not knowing how to feed a kid. I guess the white demographic part of the planet is going to shrink even more.

    • @clemfarley7257
      @clemfarley7257 2 года назад +1

      Tommy. Great post.

    • @quaidcarlobulloch9300
      @quaidcarlobulloch9300 2 года назад +1

      🎉 but some drugs are medication and can improve your life in all measurable outcomes

    • @PERF5
      @PERF5 2 года назад

      @@quaidcarlobulloch9300we will have to switch from the daily cocaine to Adderall/Ritalin for some time 😡

  • @IAMBETTERTHANYYOU
    @IAMBETTERTHANYYOU 2 года назад +183

    It is gone, we lived through the zenith of our time.The corrupt government will take down this country like what happened to Rome. My condolence for anyone approaching retirement you may have concerns over whether your pension pot will stretch to cover the rising costs of living. Bad energy policy, bad foreign policy, bad regulatory policy , and insane fiscal policy.

    • @TruckeeFam
      @TruckeeFam 2 года назад +3

      50 and retiring early. I'm really concerned abt the future in all aspects of where we all going, in this breath finances ; how to stay afloat. I'm thinking about investing for the first time in the capital-market but how can i achieve all that given that the market has being a mess most of the year?

    • @MIchaelGuzman737
      @MIchaelGuzman737 2 года назад +5

      @@TruckeeFam I can relate to that on firsthand. I began with "THERESA MARY CHAMBLEE" whom is a fiduciary financial-advisor and my gains were guaranteed. In such instances, I would always recommend hiring an expert to guide you through unpredictable markets and simply provide you with indicators and tactics for determining when to join and exit the market.

    • @Americanpatriot723
      @Americanpatriot723 2 года назад

      @@MIchaelGuzman737 Please how can i reckon with such skillset? I'm seeking for a more effective investment approach on my savings, putting it to work because its getting killed due to inflation

    • @MIchaelGuzman737
      @MIchaelGuzman737 2 года назад +3

      @@Americanpatriot723 You can glance her name up on the internet .she's renowned and has quite a following. So it shouldn't be a hassle finding her

    • @Americanpatriot723
      @Americanpatriot723 2 года назад +2

      @@MIchaelGuzman737 Theresa really seem to know her stuff. I found her online-page, read through her resume, educational background, qualifications and it was really impressive. She is a fiduciary who will act in my best interest. So, I booked a session with her.

  • @slovokia
    @slovokia 2 года назад +58

    No matter how bad things get, Davos men and women will always be sitting in nice settings, eating good food and either making plans for the rest of us or being interviewed about those that do.

    • @MySteamChannel
      @MySteamChannel 2 года назад +10

      Yep, the likes of you & I would not get a seat in front of that beautiful lake😋

    • @yyaa2539
      @yyaa2539 2 года назад +9

      A good summary of my feelings

    • @DrHughMonguscoque
      @DrHughMonguscoque 2 года назад +4

      and Jackson Hole

    • @maryrose4712
      @maryrose4712 2 года назад +4

      And flying in and out in their private jets and preaching about the climate.

  • @richardrose7382
    @richardrose7382 2 года назад +137

    If I may add a slightly pessimistic note; it seems to me that quite often throughout history, politicians have distracted populations from internal unrest and mistrust of government, by getting into “good little wars” and everyone is either “with us or with them”. A distraction from problems that are very often created by their own politicians actions. And during war, privations and currency correction, can be addressed with impunity

    • @richardrose9943
      @richardrose9943 2 года назад +7

      You stole my name

    • @Emilthehun
      @Emilthehun 2 года назад

      This is 100% accurate. The reason behind all this China talk is the distraction. Unfortunately ordinary people don't seem to see through the fog to realize that it's our own politicians policies that got us where we are right now.

    • @titusp9488
      @titusp9488 2 года назад

      what you are saying is the sad truth ... Putin over estimate his ability to take Ukraine and Biden want this war for his political believes (righteousness) ... no one wanted the peace ... except for those living in Ukraine (not the politicians).

    • @weekendatbernies2265
      @weekendatbernies2265 2 года назад +7

      Oh, it’s that on quantum steroids at this point. Buckle up

    • @JD-my5ek
      @JD-my5ek 2 года назад +3

      Have you thought that maybe it’s the internal unrest and distrust that causes the wars rather than vice versa?

  • @royprovins7037
    @royprovins7037 2 года назад +78

    If they went back to calculating inflation the way they did in the 70s we would be at double digit inflation now

    • @ericp4573
      @ericp4573 2 года назад +1

      Easy

    • @aliasoma
      @aliasoma 2 года назад +4

      Yes, someone said it would be about 12%.

    • @josephpeeler5434
      @josephpeeler5434 2 года назад +2

      Yep.

    • @josephpeeler5434
      @josephpeeler5434 2 года назад

      @@aliasoma If you go to Shadowstats, they use the government's pre-1998 CPI. They have it at about 14%. That matches my experience more than the govt's current bullshit numberm

    • @gerhard7323
      @gerhard7323 2 года назад

      Today's 10% inflation in the UK would be closer to 18% by 1970s calculations.
      Lies, damned lies and statistics etc.

  • @ericmalcolm3467
    @ericmalcolm3467 2 года назад +23

    TRADING HAS NOT BEEN GOING WELL WITH ME, I HAVE INVESTED A LOT OF TIME AND FAILED, I TRADED ON MY OWN BUT EACH TIME I KEEP LOOSING MONEY. I DON'T HAVE GOOD STRATEGIES TOWARDS THE MARKET. PLEASE CAN SOMEONE PUT ME THROUGH ON THE RIGHT PATH.

    • @DiegoCarlossouza4
      @DiegoCarlossouza4 2 года назад

      I came here to learn how to trade after listening to this video I'm still confused, I'm a newbie and I'm open to ideas.

    • @Chadjenkins868
      @Chadjenkins868 2 года назад

      The best strategy to use in trading is to trade a professional who understands the market quite well, that way maximum profit is guaranteed. Because I have learned along the way of my investment that research and analysis are important, note that experience is more needed, than luck when it comes to the financial market.

    • @dauglasfumes7440
      @dauglasfumes7440 2 года назад

      Yeah you're right, most times it amazes me greatly the way I moved fro an average lifestyle to earning over $62k per month, utter shock is the word. I have understood a lot in the past few years to doubt that opportunities abound in the financial markets, The only thing is to know where to focus.

    • @Kelvin.luther.007
      @Kelvin.luther.007 2 года назад

      @@dauglasfumes7440 Wow buddy, that's more than a mouthful of profits you're making. How do you achieve this feat consistently? You must be a genius in trading.

    • @dauglasfumes7440
      @dauglasfumes7440 2 года назад

      @@Kelvin.luther.007 Anyways not actually, what I know about trading almost on zilch lol. I make huge profits on my investment since I started trading with an Expert, her trading strategies are top notch coupled with the little commission she charges on her trade.

  • @missadda8890
    @missadda8890 2 года назад +7

    Relax folks Brandons at the wheel.

    • @marcoAKAjoe
      @marcoAKAjoe 2 года назад +3

      He's slowly swerving us out of the lane

    • @AudiTTQuattro2003
      @AudiTTQuattro2003 2 года назад

      ...at least he knows proper English. No wonder you like Trump.

    • @susanrocksvold534
      @susanrocksvold534 2 года назад

      @@AudiTTQuattro2003 We Support an Alfa Male, he's a Lion. Jojo MaGoo was installed like a Toilet on Pennsylvania Avenue. There's no stopping US. With or without Trump the MAGAGENDA Platform will continue, simple as that!

  • @mythwaker1961
    @mythwaker1961 2 года назад +11

    Heading for recession the UK has been in one for 6 months. Great interview and he is spot on

  • @stevemar8027
    @stevemar8027 2 года назад +56

    How about we measure inflation now the same way we did in the 70’s? If we did, we would already be at 14-18%…

    • @failedfishermanBC
      @failedfishermanBC 2 года назад +2

      No we have expenses like Netflix, home wifi, meal kit subscriptions, etc. So the way to measure HAS to change - it can not stay the same and still be relevant.

    • @stevemar8027
      @stevemar8027 2 года назад +2

      @@failedfishermanBC huh? They still had food, gas, and homes, etc. in the 70’s. If we take housing alone, we no longer factor in home prices in the cpi !? Instead we use owners equivalent rent, which is a highly underreported number due to the way they survey rent and it makes up a full 33% of the inflation number. If we used actual home sales and accurate rent increases, we would be at double digits alone. This doesn’t even factor in the other ways the current measures understate current inflation vs. 70’s measures.

    • @anothercitizen4867
      @anothercitizen4867 2 года назад +3

      This appears to be a talking point that people of a particular persuasion are encouraged to post.

  • @09Silverbull
    @09Silverbull 2 года назад +5

    Top 10 facts that the Federal Reserve & Central Banksters will never admit:
    1) USA has a fiat currency.
    2) Fiat currencies fail 100% on Earth.
    3) Most fiat currencies fail at 30 years.
    4) USA’s fiat currency is over 51 years.
    5) Hyper-inflation is inevitable.
    6) Currency debasement is inevitable.
    7) Debasement = All cash worthless.
    8) U.S. dollar = Leper w’ most fingers.
    9) U.S. deficit is untenable.
    10) U.S. currency debasement looming.

    • @Borat_Kazakh
      @Borat_Kazakh 2 года назад

      Wow, sounds so scary!! I'm going to buy crypto and gold. Those always do really well!!! Explain to us why the dollar is now the strongest currency in the world? Leave out the conspiracy theories and sloppy science.

    • @09Silverbull
      @09Silverbull 2 года назад

      @@Borat_Kazakh #8

    • @johnnysupreme5718
      @johnnysupreme5718 2 года назад

      @@Borat_Kazakh "we'll print as much money as we want and if you point out it's ridiculous you're a conspiracy theorist"

  • @rob44441000
    @rob44441000 2 года назад +5

    In 2009 Warren Buffet was saying that we will have inflation worse than 1970's.He also was saying about US bankruptcy

  • @mack-uv6gn
    @mack-uv6gn 2 года назад +102

    He’s the guy that tells you what happens after it happens. He doesn’t know what’s going to happen anymore more the anyone else.

    • @freeroamer9146
      @freeroamer9146 2 года назад +9

      If only we had more that told us "what happened" after it happened! 😐

    • @jctai100
      @jctai100 2 года назад +4

      Wasn't he one of the few that warned about 08-09 financial crisis?

    • @tvm73827
      @tvm73827 2 года назад

      Why are these guys constantly taking China’s side instead of America’s re an independent country, Taiwan? Just like when Russia thought it could just walk into Ukraine, the West needs to protect independent nations that are targeted by dictators like Xi and Putin.

    • @mack-uv6gn
      @mack-uv6gn 2 года назад +3

      @@jctai100 yeah probably after it started. Economic cycles are going to happen, so all you have to do is take side and wait and eventually you will be right. 😂

    • @mack-uv6gn
      @mack-uv6gn 2 года назад +1

      @@shayjohnson5830 🤣

  • @cuddyb9631
    @cuddyb9631 2 года назад +123

    We are already in the big crash, Inflation is a catastrophe. To bring the stock market to a halt, the FED will have to pull all the stops. The unfortunate issue is that other markets are being decimated. If you want to stay green, you have to rely on a lot of diversification. Currently up 14% and being careful. Still a better deal than leaving it in a savings or checking account yielding 0-1 percent interest.

    • @carter3294
      @carter3294 2 года назад +3

      People believe their currency has the worth it does because they have no other option. Even in a hyperinflationary environment, individuals must continue to use their hyperinflationary currency since they likely have minimal access to other currencies or gold/silver coins.

    • @viviangall1786
      @viviangall1786 2 года назад +4

      @@carter3294 You are right! I diversified my $100K portfolio across various market with the aid of an investment advisor, I have been able to generate a little bit above $300k in net profit across high dividend yield stocks, ETF and bonds during this red season.

    • @Steyne968
      @Steyne968 2 года назад +2

      @@viviangall1786 How can I contact this adviser of yours? because I'm seeking for a more effective investment approach how good is this person at portfolio diversification, particularly with regard to digital assets?

    • @viviangall1786
      @viviangall1786 2 года назад +5

      @@Steyne968 My advisor is ’Nicole Ann Sabin’ In terms of portfolio diversity, she's a genius. You can glance her name up on the internet and verify her yourself, she has years of financial market experience.

    • @skyak4493
      @skyak4493 2 года назад +1

      If you want real certainty -DON'T TRUST SOURCES CLAIMING OUTSTANDING RESULTS ON SOCIAL MEDIA!!!!
      Spambots create threads faking popularity! Don't trust any financial advisor that isn't registered with legal authorities in your country!!!!

  • @tommichael1533
    @tommichael1533 2 года назад +1

    Nice suit, nice view, he has a net worth of 500K.
    Why would you listen to a word this guy has to say about investing??
    FFS I have more in tangible gold and silver than this guy, not much but more.

  • @oneeleven9832
    @oneeleven9832 2 года назад +4

    Niall our vaccines don’t work either 🤦‍♂️

  • @janebishop5885
    @janebishop5885 2 года назад +1

    Don't mention a shift in the strategic ambiguity on Taiwan without mentioning China's failure to abide by its agreement on Hong Kong.

  • @yyaa2539
    @yyaa2539 2 года назад +19

    When you drop an apocalyptic statement and then you go to cool down on a peaceful beach for super rich

    • @jakethomas1829
      @jakethomas1829 2 года назад +1

      We just watched Don't Look Up, and just like the movie, our government says Don't Look Up, at the impending global event.

    • @glennkeppel9836
      @glennkeppel9836 2 года назад

      I thought the exact same. Rich fuckers in lovely suits telling us that we're stuffed and then it's off home in the super yacht for pre dinner drinks.

  • @TheTruthSeeker756
    @TheTruthSeeker756 Год назад +1

    Pessimism hasn't worked out too well the past year has it? Stock market boomed.

  • @bobchannell3553
    @bobchannell3553 2 года назад +3

    He thinks they're heading for a recession in Europe. I wonder how he figured that one out. lol

  • @kozani101
    @kozani101 2 года назад +3

    The stocks are all down 30-70 percent dont lookat the dow or nasdaq

    • @R3tr0v1ru5
      @R3tr0v1ru5 2 года назад +1

      Many growth stocks down 75-90%+

  • @sang3Eta
    @sang3Eta 2 года назад +6

    1969 Hong Kong flu pandemic.
    1971 US default on gold backed dollar.
    1973 Vietnam war ends.
    1974 Oil shock.
    1981 Interest rates peak at 20%.

    • @tomspeed3354
      @tomspeed3354 2 года назад

      yep and after boom, boom and boom

    • @kirstinstrand6292
      @kirstinstrand6292 2 года назад

      1981 Aids explosion.

    • @Dedicated_.1
      @Dedicated_.1 2 года назад

      @@tomspeed3354 that’s over 10 years of price and geopolitical instability, not insignificant

    • @michaelplunkett8059
      @michaelplunkett8059 2 года назад

      Add the 1978 Iranian oil shock.

  • @dilibau
    @dilibau 2 года назад +7

    So we headin’ into Cold War 2…

    • @omar2k11
      @omar2k11 2 года назад

      Not trying to sound inflammatory but I've thought this and kind of realized that we've been in a currency war here for a while... and now Janet Yellen wants to price cap russian oil....

    • @R3tr0v1ru5
      @R3tr0v1ru5 2 года назад

      We've never come out of the first one.

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 2 года назад +29

    Wonderful discussion but we must NEVER interrupt such a guest like this one. Let him stay on his subject and continue to talk and teach us. Thank you. A great program and otherwise a good interviewer. RS. Canada

    • @microfarming8583
      @microfarming8583 2 года назад

      This is all by design. Welcome to the Great Reset.

    • @shivasrightfoot2374
      @shivasrightfoot2374 2 года назад +1

      It would have been nice to see him interrupted and asked to address points like the fact the interest rates are now no where near what they were prior to the crisis in '73, we are coming off a decade of near zero inflation and are still below the inflation trendline from 2000-2008 even after the recent inflation, oil prices are below what they were prior to the invasion, and that the US is now an oil exporter and the largest world producer.

    • @amenbrother8818
      @amenbrother8818 2 года назад

      @@shivasrightfoot2374 Absolutely right! Americans learned from Paul Volker not to be like Arthur Burns. Inflation was deliberately stoked by the worst Fed Chair ever, Jerome Powell, who doesn't even have an economics degree. If Putler uses nukes everything is going to change anyway.

  • @damianchang6439
    @damianchang6439 2 года назад +46

    Niall appears to be talking sense, you only have to listen to what Michael Burry, Ray Dalio are saying by autumn when Europe and other countries around the world head into winter will feel the ripple affects of Russia turning off the gas supply this the war, unemployment, record high interest rates will all lead to global recession that will make 2008 look like a walk in the park. The markets are governed by human sentiment and that never changes history proves as much. Could be wrong but history demonstrates this.

    • @tde4792
      @tde4792 2 года назад +8

      Ray Dalio lost a lot of credibility with his "China is the future" stance

    • @VenturiLife
      @VenturiLife 2 года назад

      @@tde4792 Globalist thinking that led us into this disaster.

    • @dougm659
      @dougm659 2 года назад +7

      “Record high interest rates “? You must be very young….I remember rates north of 15% and I don’t see that happening any time soon….

    • @ΟδυσσέαςΚουσανδας
      @ΟδυσσέαςΚουσανδας 2 года назад

      No record real interest rates in sight

    • @ΟδυσσέαςΚουσανδας
      @ΟδυσσέαςΚουσανδας 2 года назад +1

      Not even nominal

  • @avgonyma1
    @avgonyma1 2 года назад +3

    Not just what he mentions, but the energy crisis (because most Eu nations can't meet the load demand by their own production). The electricity prices are skyrocketing, ans not just because of speculations, but real reasons (the changed weather and dimmer heat accounts for pretty empty water reservoirs).
    This (if nothing else) will push the Eu in recession.
    Chinese construction bubble just popped and will, due to the size of the country, spread to other countries.

  • @DKK
    @DKK 2 года назад +2

    Hahaha the deal from 1972, yeh China broke that long ago

  • @radar0412
    @radar0412 2 года назад +7

    China has Nukes. That's a Dealbreaker for anyone who likes War. Our Political leaders don't like Nuclear War because they can't get reelected if everyone's a burnt piece of TOAST! 😂😂

  • @EFandF
    @EFandF 2 года назад +120

    Trying to make sense of cryptocurrencies can be a bit overwhelming for investors. < It's a nascent but promising asset class built on technology that has the potential to disrupt a wide range of industries. For investors, what's probably most attractive is the possibility of life-changing returns. Don't worry, you're not late to the crypto party. We're likely still in the very early innings, leaving you with lots of time to put money to work and learn about this burgeoning market. If you're new to crypto then my advise is that you trade with the guidance of an expert. I have learned from alot of especially from my mentor Leandro Strategy, who taught me how to make trade and increase my portfolio to 19 btc lately.

    • @henrymorrell2426
      @henrymorrell2426 2 года назад

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    • @mariesherry8631
      @mariesherry8631 2 года назад

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      @nancygrifin7169 2 года назад

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    • @bennerhernandez763
      @bennerhernandez763 2 года назад

      I agree with you, the stock market is profitable, but crypto trading is the most profitable i ever trade in, I reached my goal of 10 BTC in trade earnings, Setting realistic goals is an essential part of trading.'''

    • @wellingtonschamber8687
      @wellingtonschamber8687 2 года назад

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  • @freeroamer9146
    @freeroamer9146 2 года назад +9

    Our vaccines don't work either, and our elderly have unfortunately been vaccinated! 😐

    • @kirstinstrand6292
      @kirstinstrand6292 2 года назад

      Thanks, now I won't comment on the same hoax.

    • @freeroamer9146
      @freeroamer9146 2 года назад

      Notice how the semantics is changing. There's a lot of explaining that needs to be done (gradually)! 😐

  • @altgenesis
    @altgenesis 2 года назад +3

    Depression coming. How is anyone going out to a restaurant or buy a car or buy a home or buy that latest iphone when they are struggling to put food on the table and heat their home. and pay the increased taxes. Major depression coming. And then the looming radioactive cloud being threatened from the Nuclear Plant in Eastern Ukraine that is being shelled by Ukraine. Massive layoffs coming. Bell-weather is Amazon laying of 100 thousand workers ahead of Christmas. Major pain coming, never mind thousands of Europeans freezing to death and millions of people starving to death this winter and worse next year with lower crop yields because their stupid Governments are shutting down fertilizer use and stealing farmers land. You ain't seen nothing yet.

  • @SenorTucano
    @SenorTucano 2 года назад +2

    I’m surprised anyone listens to Nial Ferguson given his track record

  • @usazar
    @usazar 2 года назад +34

    Ferguson is great. However, these are speculative predictions, we should take them seriously but not as Gospel.

    • @cocorna3282
      @cocorna3282 2 года назад +2

      COMPARE HIS WORDS to every Democrats projections and he looks like Nostradamus

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 2 года назад +1

      @@cocorna3282
      You mean because Nostradamus never made any useful accurate projections.

    • @didierdenice7456
      @didierdenice7456 2 года назад

      Stopped listening Fergusson as soon as i heard "my friend, Larry Summer" !
      we are here in the very corupt circle of the Clinton, Obama, Klaus Schwab and Economic Forum, Great Reset (allowing the US NOT to pay back its enormus debt to other countries !) and One World Government...
      All those have been the architects of our coming disaster !

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 2 года назад +1

      @@didierdenice7456
      Which conspiracy poison did you swallow?

  • @johnnykidblue
    @johnnykidblue 2 года назад +3

    So....basically, we're screwed?

  • @trafficguy8872
    @trafficguy8872 2 года назад +14

    He’s not pretentious or arrogant he’s telling the truth it’s going to get much worse.

    • @kirstinstrand6292
      @kirstinstrand6292 2 года назад +1

      HAHA...any of us could have said that. As if no one knows, already!

    • @paulawagstaff686
      @paulawagstaff686 2 года назад

      Of course it is. Absolutely 100% certain. You watch !!!

    • @coreyham3753
      @coreyham3753 2 года назад

      Long overdue for a significant correction.

    • @coreyham3753
      @coreyham3753 2 года назад

      Long overdue for a significant correction.

    • @tobybrown1179
      @tobybrown1179 2 года назад

      Look how much money has been brought into existence in the last few years, of course it will get much much worst

  • @ch0293
    @ch0293 2 года назад +2

    We're in a mess war that may take years to finish as both sides can invest as much so only this alone will generate a very negative impact during the time, besides with the sanctions, Europe mostly highly dependent on Russia gas will start harder pollutants like coal and the dwindling fossil fuel agenda is paused, they'll invest alot of money back on fossil's fuels to generate cheaper energy, or the whole West unite to invest 90% on renewables funds which is impossible with a conflict nearing world war 3, high military expenses and corruption. If there's a peace agreement its still possible, but that is lacking empathy, Russia the invader has to pay.
    Europe will have to bear with high inflation for some time as the energy crisis won't finish soon so we're going to get alot poorer as the bills will keep rising much faster than wages
    If the climate temperature keeps rising as it is and probably will since we're causing more emissions than before. Droughts, lack of drinking water, and losses on crops will get common so food stocks would vanish soon and inflation would burn.
    When it gets to that point it'll be like a blame game and the worse will happen
    Thetruthcontesthetruthoflifethepresent..

  • @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC
    @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC 2 года назад +21

    I see a lot of youngster investors in the comments that will get a big surprise with painful learning lesson. Too bad they didn't live through the 1966-1981 period to be able to capitalize on the massive correction about to happen.

    • @atmavictu2995
      @atmavictu2995 2 года назад +1

      yeah economy is the same as the in 1966….you had internet and e-commerce and mobile phones and self driving cars…

    • @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC
      @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC 2 года назад +6

      @@atmavictu2995 You're not understanding the regular falls & severe corrections of stock markets....that's why you will learn an important message the hard way. Your thinking is way-off-base: Advanced Technology (beyond 1966) has absolutely nothing to do with...and does not hold up a synthetic, inflated, bubble high P/E and propped-up market ripe for a super hard correction. Wall street (and myself) will happily take your money from the unknowing, unaware and you.

    • @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC
      @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC 2 года назад +1

      @Ian Well, said. I was actually very impressed at how much power (money) the millennium and young investors have....after the 20% market correction we had from Jan to June this year they actually bear bounced it all the back (up 15%) to only a 5% correction. While that could be the PPT being active... I believe there was some serious money coming back in with all the young investors using the same charting tools...to buy, buy , buy.
      When you're buying stocks...it's good to check and see who the sellers might be...if it's JPM, Morgan Stanley and any/all the big stock holders unloading slowly...you really don't want to be buying using your charting tools showing green-go signals.

    • @atmavictu2995
      @atmavictu2995 2 года назад

      @@LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC I have been hearing apocalyptic PermaBears for over 40 years now, you are all the same...meanwhile I have stocks that went up 30-40 folds. You should see a shrink, yours is a pathological psychological disease than can be cured.

    • @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC
      @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC 2 года назад +4

      @@atmavictu2995 lol, I'm not a apocalyptic permabear...I've calculated and can actually see a 60% stock market correction...then I'll get back in....simple as that.

  • @Hotel_Chuck
    @Hotel_Chuck 2 года назад +1

    Jesus is coming soon.

  • @tempus1253
    @tempus1253 2 года назад +3

    The 1970's was a s...t time. Two gruesome recessions (1971-73 & 1977-78), 25,000 conscientious objectors forced to work for no pay as "volunteers" because hospitals refused to hire them, the gasoline shortage crisis of 1977-1978 and the freezing of wage buying-power entering its 10th year (1968-1978). And U.S. employers were gearing up to automate and outsource jobs leading to a 50-year long "Long, Slow Depression."

    • @AcmePotatoPackingPocatello
      @AcmePotatoPackingPocatello 2 года назад

      Pfffft your fibbing about the 1970s.
      Perhaps if you lived in Greece

    • @tek6423
      @tek6423 2 года назад

      I do not recall any “conscientious objectors” being forced to work anywhere for no pay. Tough times indeed, but that part does not ring true.

    • @AcmePotatoPackingPocatello
      @AcmePotatoPackingPocatello 2 года назад

      @@tek6423
      1970s were NOT TOUGH.
      COMPARED to the low wage, pisspoor healthcare, the 70s were a GOLDEN AGE

  • @petejames1326
    @petejames1326 2 года назад +1

    in the late 70's gold went from $100 to $850, this time it will AT LEAST go from its US$1,000 lows to US$8,500 AT LEAST and this time the world is much more in debt and in much WORSE shape than in the late 70's, just buying gold, eventually you will kick yourself you didnt buy more when it launches and very quickly runs to US$2500 and onto $3000 even with more FED rises.

  • @callummilburn8204
    @callummilburn8204 2 года назад +31

    Niall Ferguson does not make accurate prophecies. He just brings up good points. This doesn't mean we may hit a cluster fuck. Just not the one he predicted.

    • @elanxx
      @elanxx 2 года назад +5

      When the Ukraine war started he said it would only last 10 weeks :)

    • @aquaworldresort4581
      @aquaworldresort4581 2 года назад +1

      I agree with you! Inflation is retreating.

    • @IamMonikaDLC
      @IamMonikaDLC 2 года назад +3

      Agreed 1000% , it's basically going to be the direct opposite of what he's saying which arguably could be just as bad till we sustain on our own two feet. The thing he's right about is there definitely will not be a soft landing.

    • @philmckay9973
      @philmckay9973 2 года назад

      Yeap

    • @skyak4493
      @skyak4493 2 года назад +3

      Historians have learned that they need to insinuate lots of disasters to hold a job. The alternative career path is "would you like fries with that?"

  • @brianoleson9224
    @brianoleson9224 2 года назад +2

    isnt it so obvious there is a real threat for a great depression? this is nothing like 1970s those were the peace and love days we had a historic pandemic the likes of which nobody alive today has seen assets are higher then even 2008 income to affordability and world war 3 talk on the news

  • @RedEyeFish1
    @RedEyeFish1 2 года назад +43

    He said it right on ...You cannot have fix inflation without a recession... same as you cannot fix a leaky pipe without turn off the water..patching it will only works for the short term.

    • @apothe6
      @apothe6 2 года назад

      What if it's supply side, and those factors are easing

    • @praveenspike
      @praveenspike 2 года назад

      Exactly, as he said Powell might be the reincarnation of Paul Volcker just made my day. ROFL

    • @michaeldelisieux
      @michaeldelisieux 2 года назад

      At the point we ALL are at, it's just prepare, if possible, for impact!

    • @TheTruthSeeker756
      @TheTruthSeeker756 2 года назад

      I favor a soft landing rather than tanking the economy into the ground

    • @freeroamer9146
      @freeroamer9146 2 года назад

      Common sense, a rare commodity. Unheard of in the absence of fathers!

  • @j673-e3n
    @j673-e3n 2 года назад +1

    The US supports Taiwan because its foreign policy is determined by its arms industry lobbyists based in Washington. Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine. etc. Their fundamental objective is instability, tension and localised war. To be fair they have been very successful.

    • @mebsrea
      @mebsrea 2 года назад

      Look to Moscow if you want someone to blame for the war in Ukraine. The US warned of it and tried to prevent it, but Putin is willing to engage in mass murder for personal “glory”.

  • @keto6789
    @keto6789 2 года назад +3

    This guys probably shorting the market and wants it too crash so he can't get richer

    • @EricTheBody
      @EricTheBody 2 года назад +5

      I’m poor and I’m shorting the market.

    • @keto6789
      @keto6789 2 года назад +2

      @@EricTheBody I'm poor and I'm 50% cash buying stocks as they get cheaper. If we hit 3400 I'll be buying then more at 3200. Then I wait.

    • @EricTheBody
      @EricTheBody 2 года назад

      @@keto6789 I kind of trike this new era of retail investing. It makes me feel a little more in control. (Barely)

  • @shivasrightfoot2374
    @shivasrightfoot2374 2 года назад

    The US is literally the largest oil producer of crude in the world now as well as a major exporter of crude. This is different from 1973. Increasing oil prices will also stimulate some sectors of the US economy, ones that have been especially neglected during COVID shutdowns (when energy producers had been delaying maintenance and repairs due to incredibly low oil prices). The Arab producers participating in the 1973 strike currently account for about three times as much oil as produced by Russia. In 1973 these Arab countries would have had an even higher proportion of oil production. Immediately upon the start of the embargo in 1973 oil increased in price by 150% and eventually increased 460%; in comparison oil increased about 33% after the start of the Ukraine conflict at its absolute height but has since August 31 been trading below prices on February 23, being currently about 15% cheaper than immediately before the conflict; oil prices today are almost exactly what they were three years ago in September 2019 prior to COVID.
    Inflation is still below trend from prior to the 2008 financial crisis despite the recent uptick. We are coming off a decade of near zero inflation. In the 1970s we had just quit the gold standard and had been plagued by inflation for years. Interest rates on 10-yeat T-bills were near 7% in Dec 1973 on the eve of crisis, they were 2% on the eve of the Ukraine invasion. Furthermore, the fall in house prices is not accounted for in CPI inflation data but does represent a significant disinflationary pressure.
    I would take a bet against Niall's position here.

  • @themasterrogerdelgado
    @themasterrogerdelgado 2 года назад +39

    Economists are like meteorologists. They're more wrong than right and nobody holds them accountable. Niall is a well spoken weatherman.

    • @americanexpat8792
      @americanexpat8792 2 года назад +9

      Niall is a guy that can't get enough of himself.

    • @titusp9488
      @titusp9488 2 года назад +5

      FYI - Ferguson here is no economist ... as much as he likes to pretend to be one. He is just a one man talk show - who likes to toot his own horn as much as possible. He is a "historian" ... note that he is not much of one ... a revisionist for the British empire (forgetting American got its independence from the BRITS)... but he got kicked out of UK and now he is sing the song for the "US Empire". In reality it is quite amazing how much Americans love his ideas ... while no one worth anything of value would not take him seriously.

    • @michaelkolanis2032
      @michaelkolanis2032 2 года назад +2

      @@titusp9488 This sounds very personal. Do you bear some kind of personal grudge? On the economy, the problem is way too much liquidity that central banks created. As for Taiwan, that's a guessing game. And although China may be experiencing problems, so is the USA, Europe and Asia generally.

    • @johnricercato740
      @johnricercato740 2 года назад

      @@titusp9488 Brilliantly silly remark. Where to start? Firstly, anyone a liberal disagree with is not by definition ‘ not to be taken seriously’. Ferguson is a highly credentialed historian (Oxford and Harvard) and has branched out into economic history. Secondly, as liberals are only capable of dealing with simple Manichaean dichotomies, they have no understanding of nuance: the British Empire had bad and good aspects - as many former colonies recognise. ‘Revisionist’ as used by you merely means that Ferguson doesn’t subscribe to the whole liberal narrative about empire. Next - he wasn’t ‘kicked out of the UK’. Your final sentence is risible sophomoric nonsense, translatable into ‘he writes things I fervently disagree with, so he is a nonentity’. Don’t you realise how puerile you sound?

    • @titusp9488
      @titusp9488 2 года назад +2

      @@michaelkolanis2032 , well don't know him personally but do stand against his imperialistic ideas. American soldiers died in defense of liberty and freedom not for imperialism / suppression of others.

  • @Logofat_Valassky
    @Logofat_Valassky 2 года назад +1

    Most people do not care where their money work when they sleep, so why would they think about '70s? Your briliant book Mr. Ferguson is teaching about a crucial shortage in education in field of history when we think about those highly payd quark matematicians. So even more likely similar behavior can be awaited in case of a nominal politician or businesman.

  • @bernardscheidle5679
    @bernardscheidle5679 2 года назад +11

    Things may get worse before they get better! And China's best days may be over, with harder days ahead. Time to bring the factories back to America, but first dump Trump.

    • @jaydean5243
      @jaydean5243 2 года назад

      Yeah, but who got us here ?

    • @omnipotentone5628
      @omnipotentone5628 2 года назад +3

      Who got us here? Trump ignoring Covid, that's who.

    • @bernardscheidle5679
      @bernardscheidle5679 2 года назад +1

      @@jaydean5243 Republican conservative business theory got us here. Bush 41 gave us NAFTA, then Bush 43 gave Most Favored Nation Trade Status to China. Big biz GOP gambled that giving all our jobs and manufacturing base to the world would convert the Communists into capitalists. Didn't work, China now makes everything, their leader is now elected leader for life by Communist Party, our factories are shut down, our unions are gone, we get minimum wage, corporations control our Senators and our laws, you get opioids and food stamps to ease your pain, and people actually believe Trump, who owned TWO casinos that failed, will fix everything so fast our heads will spin.

    • @AudiTTQuattro2003
      @AudiTTQuattro2003 2 года назад +1

      Literally, about a third of the US voting population wants to re-elect a dictator in training named Donald Trump, and most economists and business professionals act like everything is normal.

    • @paulawagstaff686
      @paulawagstaff686 2 года назад

      Both Trump and Boris SAID for 6 months Covid was a Hoax, Trump also said it would be over by November (election) I was watching from New Zealand. SHOCKED

  • @runeoveras3966
    @runeoveras3966 2 года назад

    Buy TSLA stock. They are going full speed disrupting many of the biggest markets, (transportation, energy, labour market ++) and should be the biggest company within 2-3 years
    They have on average increased their revenue by 75% last 12 years, and will AT LEAST 10x next 10 years.
    (Then do another 10x before 2040).

  • @johncarder819
    @johncarder819 2 года назад +3

    The higher level of debt is DEFLATIONARY. If inflation grows, the value of that debt declines. The decline was inconsequential in the 1970s, but it is huge today.

    • @r64g
      @r64g 2 года назад +1

      Inflation makes debt *easier* to service. Higher level of government debt in particular creates the *impetus* for inflation. Governments want the inflation because they can always tax a percentage of nominal GDP to service the debt - the bigger the nominal GDP (regardless if there's any real growth) the better.

    • @johncarder819
      @johncarder819 2 года назад

      @@r64g, that was true in the 1970s, and while it is still true, there's a difference now. There is much more debt now than there was. When inflation rises, the value of that debt declines, reducing the money supply. That, by definition, is deflationary.

    • @r64g
      @r64g 2 года назад +1

      @@johncarder819 By this flawed logic, the government can simply add debt to 1000% GDP and spend our way into economic nirvana without ever having to worry about inflation. Why hasn't anyone done it already?

    • @falkpatt
      @falkpatt 2 года назад

      @@r64g like Zimbabwe

  • @20centswortht91
    @20centswortht91 2 года назад

    The real story is about who controls Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Limited (TSMC; also called Taiwan Semiconductor) .. they make the chips that both the CCP and USA and everyone else desperately want and need !!!

  • @thelastbison2241
    @thelastbison2241 2 года назад +49

    Finally, someone telling the truth instead of lying.

    • @grip2617
      @grip2617 2 года назад +3

      How do you know?

    • @mellie9633
      @mellie9633 2 года назад +2

      NF always tells us how bad things really are or going to get. Start storing tinned food and dry goods and buy lots of water!

    • @beowulf1312
      @beowulf1312 2 года назад

      @@grip2617 How do you know, what you don't know?

    • @pakpala1
      @pakpala1 2 года назад +2

      He has been wrong so many times.

    • @thelastbison2241
      @thelastbison2241 2 года назад

      @@pakpala1 It doesn't matter if he is right or wrong. The process matters and the possibility at this point in history is a reasonable assumption. Impossible to always see the future clearly, but there are also points where the future is clear and other points when alternative history is possible. It might not be as bad as he mentions, but the things he says should be clearly considered. He is not making things up. I hate nothing more than historians giving up their inheritance from Thucydides and just making things up. Enough people in the news do that already.

  • @eddieobrien1411
    @eddieobrien1411 Год назад

    The consistent poorest state in USA is Mississippi. Economists,as reported in The Times,are now predicting the UK will be poorer,in terms of income and wealth in the broad sense. Furthermore 10% of the population hold nearly 50%of UK wealth,and wealth inequality increasing is about the only safe bet sadly…what a mess we have created

  • @luckyluke1503
    @luckyluke1503 2 года назад +5

    Inflation is actually above 16% in America. They just don’t look at Inflation the way they used to like in 1970’s.

  • @nickyyap1663
    @nickyyap1663 2 года назад +1

    Don't be stupid. A smart investors know what to do if there is a recession or an economy uptrend. Alway be ready for a recession and be ready for an uptrend. If you don't know, don't invest, OK

  • @gerhard7323
    @gerhard7323 2 года назад +5

    Bognor really is beautiful at this time of year isn't it.

  • @frbs2255
    @frbs2255 2 года назад

    These guys chilling in lake como. LOL. Monday morning quarterbacking. It's all about supply chains moving. Less great reset more great relocate. Taiwan as the cuban missile crisis is BS.

  • @thelastbison2241
    @thelastbison2241 2 года назад +5

    If it is worse than 1970s, I rather be the US than any other country. The dollar is reaching all level high compared to everything else. The US will outbid any other seller on essentials (if they are able to export it to the US) and everyone else will have to fight for whats left.

    • @chrishart8548
      @chrishart8548 2 года назад

      But what will the US offer if knowone wants dollars anymore. Because you won't be able to buy anything with them because the US don't produce anything.

  • @rwnorris24
    @rwnorris24 2 года назад

    Professor Ferguson,
    Did you receive my tweet from early this summer?
    Sincerely,
    R.W.N II

  • @chrissalley9468
    @chrissalley9468 2 года назад +5

    Americans really aren't prepared for what's about to happen. We actually believe that nothing bad can happen here but we are about to get a rude awakening

  • @marktyler2068
    @marktyler2068 Год назад

    Always interesting. A few notes: China claimed it would honor Hong Kong's autonomy and has not. Having broken that promise somewhat brutally, no one, including China, should expect anyone to honor China's word on anything - for example the Uighurs are not slave labor etc. Much of our production money should be spent closer to home for many reasons - hopefully Mexico will be a big winner.
    This is not the 1970s: Oil no longer has the same stranglehold on western economies. In many ways recent government spending is stimulus in the tradition of the New Deal; specifically investment in alternate energy sources (a technology required for geopolitical reasons as well as climate change). It could make the situation different from the 70s. A country's debt is relative and the US is definitely not alone - so perhaps that is not as scary as it seems.

  • @afterdark6822
    @afterdark6822 2 года назад +9

    The current economic state is closer to the 1940's than the 1970's.

    • @naguoning
      @naguoning 2 года назад

      I feel more like 1930s (China in particular is bursting after lots of crazy growth) and we seem to be headed to war with Russia/China as the equivalent of Germany/Japan... vs the democratic states of Western Europe/UK/Japan/USA/Aus/Taiwan etc

  • @DB-MH11
    @DB-MH11 2 года назад +1

    Winter is coming

  • @thewisestman1
    @thewisestman1 2 года назад +8

    Sorry guys. It's not brilliant foresight to see that what is happening now is far worse than what happened in the 1970's. For starters, in the '70's the shock was the increase in oil price that fueled inflation. This time we stopped the world economy in it's tracks. And this is just as a starter. Put in the war, the hugely changed world trading conditions and balance of power and you don't just have an inflationary crisis - you have a game changer for capitalism, a collapse of the house of cards that's been teetering since 2008, a toppling of the world order and the certainties that we have all enjoyed for the whole of our lives.

    • @R3tr0v1ru5
      @R3tr0v1ru5 2 года назад

      Free markets are the solution. Big government (Fascism and Socialism) caused this problem.

    • @hoponasu5870
      @hoponasu5870 2 года назад

      @@R3tr0v1ru5 but this is organised crash - war on western values, privacy, middle class ! Canada exellent example. Only Mexico, India & Swiss are doing ok.

  • @AFuller2020
    @AFuller2020 2 года назад

    This ain't the 70's, you couldn't buy a job back then, even fast food.The Russian GDP is the size of South Korea, this is more fear and doom.

  • @turbofanlover
    @turbofanlover 2 года назад +3

    I'm just sitting back with a big bag of popcorn and a big bag of cash...waiting for the carnage. I feel really sorry for anyone who still has the bulk of their life savings in the markets.

    • @zedtradertoronto158
      @zedtradertoronto158 2 года назад

      I think you might be in a good position when things reach the bottom. When is that?

  • @stserge
    @stserge 2 года назад

    Such an unprofessional interviewer keeps interrupting such a brilliant mind! 🤬😡😨

  • @robertreynolds6072
    @robertreynolds6072 2 года назад +5

    A lot of inflation is supply side. Reduce supply, demand too high, price goes up....this is the energy crisis and the supply issues from China being in covid lockdowns. Raising interest rates would be catastrophic in this situation.

    • @akp167
      @akp167 2 года назад

      You can’t blame supply for inflation because supply cannot be changed by policy in the short term. Demand managers have a duty to lower demand to match supply. Interest rates must be raised.

    • @robertreynolds6072
      @robertreynolds6072 2 года назад

      @@akp167 Mickey Mouse economics.

  • @SchmitaEclipses
    @SchmitaEclipses 2 года назад

    Good point. We had Vietnam War and now we gave Russia Ukraine War. This could be some kind of 50yr cycle

  • @robertcox14
    @robertcox14 2 года назад +12

    Dear boys, please increase "compassion dynamics" leading to cooperative actions. It isn't ALL a competition, it isn't a game to beat everybody else. It's called "living together in harmony."

  • @ethanz3837
    @ethanz3837 2 года назад

    All the talking has always been unnecessary. Printing = Inflation. End of story. A child knows this.

  • @peters972
    @peters972 2 года назад +5

    70s were great for gold, real estate, and oil, the new oil is lithium refining

  • @allthingspropheticministry
    @allthingspropheticministry 2 года назад

    A recession? This is ether a dumb guy or just Nieve. We are in a trapped, manipulative financial system intentionally being destroyed!

  • @skfanfanfan
    @skfanfanfan 2 года назад +24

    This is the best interview I saw this year. Both the host and guest are superb. Thank you.

    • @yyaa2539
      @yyaa2539 2 года назад +2

      The host and the guest ??? the view is superb 👌

  • @nyfishing9065
    @nyfishing9065 2 года назад +1

    We did it joe !!

  • @davidcoard1978
    @davidcoard1978 2 года назад +5

    Can't do a Volker with global debt levels so high. Roubini stated its delusional to expect a recession that is not severe.

  • @videofuel
    @videofuel Год назад

    Don't look for answers to this guy if you think we should have a better way to deal with supply side shocks today as opposed to 40-50 years ago especially knowing what happened in the 70s.

  • @Leto2ndAtreides
    @Leto2ndAtreides 2 года назад +6

    It's interesting that Taiwan is currently important for its chip manufacturing so that neither the US nor China can tolerate the other party having full control of it. Although it appears that China is moving towards independence on that front.
    Anyway, as far as I know of it, the US military doesn't think that Taiwan can be defended. So provoking the Chinese on that subject is just dumb.
    There's no real good in treating China as an enemy anyway. Trying to hold onto power by keeping others down is a dangerous long term strategy... Always better to invest more in self improvement. Plus, assuming that the US did end up weaker than China some day, enmity would hardly have been a good thing to set up before that kind of future.
    As it is, we really need to work together internationally, to get the global economy moving back onto the right track... Preferably think less in terms of "countries" and more in terms of "what benefits people and humanity".
    Take the Ukraine war for example: Is there a commitment to the welfare of the Ukrainian people, or is it about "defeating Russia"? The way it's going, Ukraine could end up another Afghanistan... Because we don't truly think about people when determing our goals.
    Sanctions and giving Ukraine weapons aren't really a way to fasttrack peace and stability in that region. The sanctions may not even really be hurting Russia all that much vs the harm they're doing elsewhere (strange as that is)

    • @fc2790
      @fc2790 2 года назад

      As a person from Taiwan, 24 million Taiwanese just want to be left alone and not invaded by China. China defines what is a PROVOCATION. and China keeps changing the criteria. If you want to believe in what China wants, you are simply stupid.

    • @MichaelHayes_s6
      @MichaelHayes_s6 2 года назад +1

      Unlike Afghanistan, I think the people in Ukraine are benefiting hugely from US help. I suspect most Ukrainians would choose the path of fighting back and pushing Russia out.
      Peace in the region is not an option on the table, not in the short term. The atrocities committed by Russia so far make that clear.

    • @mebsrea
      @mebsrea 2 года назад +1

      The only “peace and stability” that Ukraine will see if Russia is not stopped is the peace of the grave, as the documented mass atrocities carried out by Russian forces and Russia’s own genocidal anti-Ukrainian rhetoric make clear. Giving control over the world’s energy, food, and fertilizer supplies to a regime that has shown itself to be a ravenous imperialist power with a clear list of planned future conquests would be utterly irresponsible. The price of resisting Russia today is far lower than it would be after another five or ten years of appeasement.

  • @ThisIsGoogle
    @ThisIsGoogle 2 года назад +1

    Shut up CNBC.

  • @ChalrieD
    @ChalrieD 2 года назад +13

    His perspective on this matter is relevant to be sure.

    • @JoeVirella
      @JoeVirella 2 года назад

      Yeah totally ignoring all of the deflationary factors. Population decrease, globalization and artificial intelligence.

  • @braddeicide
    @braddeicide 2 года назад

    The only disaster we can have is hyper inflation because every single event is "fixed," by printing.

  • @PP-oz2oj
    @PP-oz2oj 2 года назад +5

    Fed talks differently than have acted, hence the stickier inflation. Fed has been talking and talking and that’s it.

    • @josephpeeler5434
      @josephpeeler5434 2 года назад +1

      The Fed needs to normalize rates. They must unload trillions of treasuries and MBS off their balance sheet. The dollars received from the sell must be extinguished.

  • @VoteLaborOut
    @VoteLaborOut 2 года назад +1

    Can we do another episodes on how accurate experts have been before and after COVID-19? thank you.

  • @williamfeldner9356
    @williamfeldner9356 2 года назад +5

    The worlds best economic business historian……

  • @EchadLevShtim
    @EchadLevShtim 2 года назад

    Lmao. Stop selling off on fear propaganda. Crashes offer up buy ins at 52 week lows.

  • @gerhard7323
    @gerhard7323 2 года назад +24

    I think I'm correct in saying that the world isn't actually producing much more than it was in the 1970s, but the only thing that's changed is the growing debt that's been attached to it.
    Really, in many ways, the last 50 years have been a great swindle and I'm sure that history will come to see it that way in good time.

    • @DrRock2009
      @DrRock2009 2 года назад

      Yup. Allow the world population to increase, scam the wealth off the people and now eliminate the people…😡

    • @peterkratoska4524
      @peterkratoska4524 2 года назад +5

      One person's debt is someone elses asset. 75% of US debt is private sector savings (and no shortage of buyers). The current inflation is the supply shock. We did stop much of the world economy for covid - which is unprecedented. I have plumber friends who can't get 2inch abs elbows. Myself having run a print business for decades I'm seeing unprecedented shortages of paper. The ports are still backed up. Its like the shift to household goods from military after ww2, there was major inflation then too.
      Oh and the world is producing far more than in the 70s. (I was around then too).

    • @athena3865
      @athena3865 2 года назад +2

      The world isn't producing much more than it did in the 1970's? Even the world population has more than doubled since then..... In the 1970's I didn't have a laptop, yes...the one I'm typing on, and that's just for starters....Were you around, then? Are you math challenged?

    • @gerhard7323
      @gerhard7323 2 года назад

      @@peterkratoska4524 Take a look at Macrotrends World GDP growth rate 1970 - 2022.

    • @gerhard7323
      @gerhard7323 2 года назад +1

      @@athena3865 Take a look at Macrotrends GDP Growth Rate 1970 - 2022.

  • @JayValmire
    @JayValmire Год назад

    He keeps saying the same thing. I mean every recessions and stock market drops the usual doom and gloom people come out. Prediction of the economy from history is not a good predictor. History never repeats exactly the same.

  • @intractablemaskvpmGy
    @intractablemaskvpmGy 2 года назад +18

    Niall Ferguson is one of the trustworthy authorities that should be heeded. Many academics are full of themselves, but NF takes an honest and objective look at history and current events.

    • @jupiterjames4201
      @jupiterjames4201 2 года назад

      Hes a perma-bear. Him an Nourielle Roubini kept rambling the same doom outlook throughout the greatest amd longest bull market in american history. They lost all credibility long time ago.

    • @luckyluke1503
      @luckyluke1503 2 года назад +3

      Not really. He works for the Rich and says whatever they want. I remember him arguing for this Century being China’s century and couple of Years later he went back on his words after the backlash from that.

    • @repealsection230forbigtech4
      @repealsection230forbigtech4 2 года назад

      @@luckyluke1503 Thanks, you took the words out of my mouth, he's a sold out shill for people that invested Communist China and the elite that sold everyone out to turn China into the world's factory while his people (oligarches) collected most of the profits

  • @airforcemax
    @airforcemax 2 года назад +1

    *¡watched at 2:30 pm Pacific DayLight Savings Time on Friday, 2 September 2022!*

  • @MURipp
    @MURipp 2 года назад +4

    Sorry Niall, but I‘d really like to hear you acknowledge your alarmist C19 predictions that turned out to be completely wrong which have heavily impacted government response very early in the pandemic and had a very very large negative impact on economies around the world.

    • @robert8884
      @robert8884 2 года назад +2

      That's a different person, I think you're talking about a prof Neil Ferguson who had the extreme figures.

  • @mayormccheese6171
    @mayormccheese6171 2 года назад +1

    So much of this could have been avoided if the USA just finally got over its Russia Derangement Syndrome.

    • @zedtradertoronto158
      @zedtradertoronto158 2 года назад

      What is America's "Russia Derangement Syndrome"? How can America get over it? What could have been avoided?

    • @mayormccheese6171
      @mayormccheese6171 2 года назад +1

      @@zedtradertoronto158 giving Russia the NATO free zone it had been calling for for the past 20 years and not pushing right up to its borders.

  • @BStrapper
    @BStrapper 2 года назад +12

    When I saw the title referring to "an historian making a financial analysis"....
    I immediately concluded that this guy is probably a Brit...
    Britons with the most amplified RP accents often massively overestimate themselves, their skills, competences....and the power and importance of their country...
    At one point we will have a harsh recession, and in fact a recession has already started ...
    no big prediction...
    Want financial advices? you better listen to the folks who made billions in finance, Tudor jones, Buffet, Munger and many others ... not the talking heads who write in financial newspapers.
    The same guy wrote a book stating that Britain should not have entered WW1. He ignore that had Germany won WW1 and taken over Europe, Britain would have been the next domino to fall soon or later. That is exactly why the pre-ww1 British government decided to enter the war, oh surprise... Ferguson thinks that he is more clever than they were.

    • @thomasdooley5904
      @thomasdooley5904 2 года назад +4

      I don’t think you understand WW1. Perhaps you need to go look at it again. Germany did not start it and were not the main belligerent.

    • @BStrapper
      @BStrapper 2 года назад +2

      @@thomasdooley5904 "Germany did not start ww1"!!!!
      "Germany was not the main Belligerant" !!!!
      You must have been sleeping very deeply during your history classes...

    • @bertieschitz-peas429
      @bertieschitz-peas429 2 года назад +1

      @@BStrapper The slav's started it and they might well start another...

    • @Orson2u
      @Orson2u 2 года назад

      My ancestor was a bodyguard to a certain Austrian Noble in Sarajevo in the summer of 2014. Could his failure to protect this Royal heir have anything to do with the start of The Great War? Oopsies.)

    • @bertieschitz-peas429
      @bertieschitz-peas429 2 года назад

      @@Orson2u The Habsburgs weren't that bothered by the assassination of Franz as he shit the bed by marrying beneath his station but the serbs would not let the Austrian police join in the official investigation which was a political sleight that could not go unanswered.

  • @AntonioFerreira-mx1er
    @AntonioFerreira-mx1er 2 года назад

    Hahaha...just hit the nail . Delecting a comment does not avoid the truth being spreaded. You guys are just a grain in the sea of digital content

  • @phils5650
    @phils5650 2 года назад +5

    In a commercial environment when a borrower has more debt, and there is higher risk associated to the borrower, the lender raises rates to acknowledge the increased risk associated with the debt. In the last 15 years the govs have embarked on massive overspending and creating deficits and debts that are unserviceable, and throughout this 15 process of accumulating this unserviceable debt, the fed has reduced rates instead of raising rates. This has essentially fuelled and encouraged more unserviceable debt. The motive of creating unserviceable debt could be the introduction of cbdcs to offer a resolution to the ensuing mess.

    • @timothyrday1390
      @timothyrday1390 2 года назад

      I agree with everything you write, except that the main driver of creating unserviceable debt is the political class and their never-ending quest for more power and wealth. They are at the core of the fiscal and monetary systems, so they benefit the most from large infusions of cash. It's not surprising then they always make pitches to the general public, "if we don't spend an exorbitant amount to solve x problem now, we will be worse off in the distant future." They are so full of themselves, that many actually believe their own propaganda and have lost sight of their own greed. You can see the giddiness in their demeanor in the media when faced with a new "crisis" because it reinforces their sense of self-importance. The current inflation crisis can be traced back to early 2021 when the new government passed the "American Rescue" stimulus of trillions in new spending after the fundamentals of the economy had already recovered (I, and many others, had predicted it would cause inflation back then, but we were ignored by the political class). They have continued to push for trillions in new spending since because that is all they are programmed to do in the detached reality in which they have ensconced themselves.

    • @phils5650
      @phils5650 2 года назад +1

      Hi. Timothy. Yes there an be no doubt that the drivers of this debt fuelled situation is the desired wealth transfer to the globalists. The public think the money spending is necessary as the causes all seem virtuous. But under proper scrutiny these excess expenditures were not based on science or economics. And the resultant debt fuelled situation has just facilitated the wealth transfer by the old pump and dump strategy. Interesting times.

    • @timothyrday1390
      @timothyrday1390 2 года назад

      @@phils5650 Yes, agreed. But to your point, some of the smarter and more forward-thinking among the oligarchy see that their access to the gravy train under its current structure cannot continue indefinitely, they have therefore latched on to co-opting the most promising technology to "reset" the next iteration of the system for their own power/enrichment. It is a fundamentally parasitic approach, and one that will be difficult to thwart by the common masses (especially if the elites continue to succeed in dividing and subverting societies along the way).

  • @ajsctech8249
    @ajsctech8249 2 года назад

    Why the obsession with all forms of growth.Its so boring, the only tool of economists is this automaton style growth obsession.Its just so unimaginative and boring

  • @deltasquared7777
    @deltasquared7777 2 года назад +12

    A brilliant analysis by Niall Ferguson. The factors underlying the current economic crisis are qualitatively quite different from former configurations, and it makes no sense to think that applying remedies that have resolved the situation in the past will be applicable to the current situation.
    In particular, in the present circumstance am not convinced that the FED's current policy of raising interest rates will be effective in reducing inflation, but will instead contribute to spiraling it upward.

    • @deltasquared7777
      @deltasquared7777 2 года назад +1

      If the only tool you know of is a hammer, and the only possible thing you know to do with a hammer is to pound nails down, then everything becomes a nail.
      Perhaps economists should become aware that all hammers are not sledge hammers and that many hammers come with a claw end that can be used for extracting nails, and they should start looking for how to use this other end of the hammer.

    • @drscopeify
      @drscopeify 2 года назад +1

      I think he is very wrong. Niall Ferguson does not understand the geopolitics of Asia, he is not aware that if Taiwan falls to China, Japan and Korea are now split off from the rest of Asia, they will have no access to Australia, New Zealand and the rest of SE Asia. China wants to force nations to it's side and create a new world order where they dominate nations in their sphere, if Taiwan falls China wins so the USA cannot and will not surrender Taiwan it's Taiwan or nothing. This is not about the USA changing policies form the 1970s it is about a situation where if Taiwan falls to China, Asia then falls to China. It's as simple as that.

    • @deltasquared7777
      @deltasquared7777 Год назад

      Taiwan can not "fall" to China. Taiwan is, has been, and will remain a part of China.
      Unlike the US hegemonic agenda, China has no expansionist interest in dominating Japan, New Zealand, or the rest of SE Asia.

  • @anthonycecil8299
    @anthonycecil8299 2 года назад +1

    the seventies were wonderful, a big change in attitudes with the objective of freedom in many ways I hope this one turns out as well :-) Tony