Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley

The Fed is a Fraud: How to Survive the Coming Financial Reset

51 min
Feb 23, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Ryan Hanley and Carol Roth discuss the K-shaped economy, Federal Reserve policy, and financial inequality in America. They explore how monetary policy has created divergence between asset holders and working-class individuals, and examine strategies for personal financial resilience amid potential economic disruption.

Insights
  • The K-shaped economy reflects a fundamental divergence where asset holders benefit from Fed-induced asset inflation while wage earners face rising costs of living, creating two distinct economic realities
  • Young generations face unprecedented desperation due to student debt, unaffordable housing, and loss of institutional trust, driving risky financial behavior like crypto betting and prediction markets
  • The Federal Reserve's money-printing policies since 2008 have created non-merit-based inequality by inflating asset values without corresponding productivity gains, devaluing labor and savings
  • The U.S. faces a debt spiral where rising interest rates increase deficit financing costs, requiring more debt issuance, which pushes yields higher—a cycle that may force continued monetary intervention
  • Precious metals like gold serve as a hedge against currency devaluation and should comprise 15-20% of portfolios as central banks globally shift away from Treasury holdings toward gold reserves
Trends
Central banks worldwide reducing Treasury purchases and increasing gold reserves as de facto reserve currency hedgeShift from delayed gratification wealth-building to high-risk gambling strategies (crypto, prediction markets, meme stocks) among younger generationsGrowing disconnect between headline economic metrics and lived experience of middle and working-class AmericansErosion of institutional trust driving skepticism toward government, corporate, and financial institutions among younger demographicsRising use of buy-now-pay-later services and credit-based consumption among financially stressed consumers unable to afford basic goodsPotential global financial reset driven by dollar reserve currency status erosion and shift toward commodity-backed systemsIncreasing focus on personal asset ownership and equity compensation as hedge against currency devaluationPolitical and social instability linked to financial stress and perceived unfairness in economic system outcomes
Topics
K-shaped economy and wealth divergenceFederal Reserve monetary policy and money printingStudent loan debt and education cost inflationAsset inflation versus cost of living inflationPrecious metals as currency hedge (gold, silver)Cryptocurrency and prediction market gamblingBuy-now-pay-later financial productsU.S. national debt and deficit spendingInterest rate policy and Treasury yieldsGenerational financial desperation and risk-takingCurrency devaluation and purchasing power erosionCentral bank independence and government fiscal policyGlobal reserve currency status and dollar dominanceInstitutional trust erosion and social contract breakdownPersonal financial resilience and portfolio diversification
Companies
Federal Reserve
Central banking institution whose monetary policy decisions directly drive asset inflation, currency devaluation, and...
U.S. Government
Fiscal policy decisions and deficit spending enable Fed monetary intervention; debt-to-GDP ratio exceeds 120% with in...
GLD (SPDR Gold Shares)
Gold ETF discussed as accessible alternative to physical precious metals with tax and liquidity considerations versus...
People
Ryan Hanley
Podcast host discussing economic trends and interviewing Carol Roth on Federal Reserve policy and financial resilienc...
Carol Roth
Former investment banker and author discussing Fed policy, K-shaped economy, precious metals hedging, and small busin...
Kevin Warsh
Trump's nominee to replace Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve Chair; discussed as potential policy shift indicator
Jerome Powell
Current Federal Reserve Chair whose tenure and potential replacement by Kevin Warsh is discussed regarding monetary p...
Donald Trump
Referenced for nominating Kevin Warsh to Fed and signaling intent to 'run things hot' with nominal market growth targ...
Milton Friedman
Economist cited for K-percent rule concept of tying money supply growth to GDP metrics as alternative to current Fed ...
Warren Buffett
Referenced as example of delayed gratification wealth-building over decades, contrasting with younger generation's de...
Quotes
"The necessities of our life have become so expensive that if you are in the middle and working class, that you are very likely on that downward slope of the K, you're having a very different experience."
Carol Roth
"When you just start adding dollars that nobody earned, that didn't add anything to the system, that didn't create an investment, then all it does is just create more dollars that are chasing the same amount of goods and services and makes the fruits of your labor worthless."
Carol Roth
"If any of us went into our bank accounts and added a bunch of zeros and went out and used that money to buy things, even treasuries, they would call it fraud, when the Fed does it, they call it monetary policy."
Carol Roth
"There's this desperation that if they don't hit these big bets, a big poly market, a big coin that blasts off or something like this, right? If they don't build some AI app that goes to the moon, that they're screwed."
Ryan Hanley
"Gold has a 5,000 years social contract. We've seen gold as a backer of our financial system for pretty much like the last thousands and thousands of years. And it really is only since 1973 that this weird fiat bubble kind of started to percolate."
Carol Roth
Full Transcript
You're supposed to be having things like a smartphone that has a computer, you know, basically in your pocket, a super computer in your pocket, and nice shoes and access to, you know, in abundance of choices. That's supposed to be luxuries. That's supposed to make you feel like you don't have to worry about money, but the necessities of our life have become so expensive that if you are in the middle and working class, that you are very likely on that downward slope of the K, you're having a very different experience. What the f*** is a K-shaped economy? Why is this such a problem and why are all the smart people that I listen to, like this is like the number one thing that's coming out of their mouth? Because I don't know any regular people that know what a K-shaped economy is, but it's seemingly the really smart people are talking about it a lot. So can you maybe start with just the layman's version of what a K-shaped economy is and then we can get into why this is something that seemingly is so important right now? Yeah, I think everybody knows what a K-shaped economy is. They just may not know the term for it, but they're definitely living through it. And if you think about the letter K, right, you've got this divergence, you know, one part of the K is going up into the right, the other one is sloping down. So it depends on who you are. You know, that's sort of your economic experience. If you are an asset holder and you have a portfolio and you have a house, you've got a high-paying job, you've actually done very well over the last several years. We keep seeing that inflation in assets, you know, taking hold. And so at least on a nominal basis, not adjusted for inflation, but just the number that you see in front of you, it appears like things are going very, very well. If you are somebody who is not an asset holder or maybe just has a small amount of assets, but primarily you're dealing with the day-to-day costs of living, you're dealing with rent and mortgage, you're dealing with maybe the cost of education, food, travel, whatever else. You're having a very different experience in this economy. Things are not going well, they're just seeming more expensive to you and you're not participating in the inflation of assets piece to offset your feelings about that. And so it's really a struggle and it's kind of a bit of a difficult thing to get our heads wrapped around because you're supposed to be having things like a smartphone that has a computer, you know, basically in your pocket, a super computer in your pocket, nice shoes and access to, you know, an abundance of choices. That's supposed to be luxuries and that's supposed to make you feel like you don't have to worry about money. But the necessities of our life have become so expensive that if you are in the middle and working class, that you are very likely on that downward slope of the K, you're having a very different experience and it's been a struggle. And you know, that has sort of reverberated through political choices, the overall environments, personal bound on sheets in terms of the amount of debt that individuals are taking on. And so, you know, you can say things are great or this or that from a very macro standpoint, but you really do have to look at those numbers and realize the experiences of individuals are very different in the economy. Yeah, it has felt to me like there's a disconnect between the market and real life. And this seems to be the disconnect that I find when I'm listening to different individuals who are talking about the economy or whatever, like they'll be the world, the market's better than it's ever been. It's going up. You know, there's 15 different stats that you can quote that make it sound like everything's going great. And then as a single dad with two kids, I go to the grocery store and it used to be $110 a week in groceries and now it's $250 in groceries for the same number of bags. And you come home and you're like, well, I'm blessed in that. That doesn't break the bank for me, but it's noticeable. And you know, like, and now I look back and I'm like, how does the, the, the, you know, single mom, single dad make in $65,000 a year. That person, they don't get to do work on their car or they're putting off a health bill they have or they're not paying for medicine they need because they have to pay groceries to get it in their home. And it's that, I think that's what I see a big struggle with or I personally struggle with. I look at my investments, but then I look at my cash flow and I'm like, these two things don't seem to be mashing up together. Yeah, I comment every time we go out to dinner to my husband, you know, you sit down, you order, you know, at a nicer restaurant, a couple of burgers. He has some beers. Maybe you have an appetizer. I get a Caesar salad and all of a sudden the bill comes and it's $170 before tip. And you say to yourself, how does the average person who's working in this country go out and enjoy not even an extravagant meal, just, you know, what a few years ago would have been a basic meal and has now just absolutely become unaffordable for many people. Or if they do want to take part in it, that they're putting it on credit cards or, you know, in the case of shopping by now, pay later things like that and ruining their credit, they're not building wealth, they're accumulating debts and they feel like they can't get ahead. I mean, one of the things about money and prosperity is it's supposed to take away the financial stress that we feel in today's reality for most people, even if you do have enough money for some of these everyday luxuries, you're still still feeling the crush of that cost of living. And it is permeating through everything you do. And by the way, not to get, you know, sort of woo, woo, and psychological, but it does cause real issues, you know, causes more divorces that causes the stress that leads to health care issues, money and worrying about money is a real issue given sort of how people used to be able to run their lives just a short time ago. It really is a stark wake up call. Yeah, I called it the other day and I hadn't really thought about this. It just came out of my face. I was talking to someone and I was called at the YOLO economy, right? Like, by now, pay later. Like, this is something that's boggled my mind is these prediction market, the prediction market stuff. Yeah. How there is, but how we had a decade of conversation around gambling online and these states limped into it. And it's just like, oh, you want to do the same exact thing, but now it's a contractor. You know, and now it's just, oh, go right ahead. Bet as much as you want on random things that happen in life. And we're not even going to have a debate over this one. And look, I'm, I'm not trying to curb capitalism or whatever, but the fact that there's, we've just gotten to a point now where there is an entire seemingly multiple generations now. And the millennials, I really struggle with them. Gen Z to me seems like my impression of them has been that they're actually hard working and a little more grounded individuals, except they have walked into an absolute shit storm of what it means to like, mature into life. And now they're, you know, I was just talking to a guy a couple weeks ago on the show where this is, this is kind of where I want to get your perspective on is like, there's almost this desperation that if they don't hit these big bets, a big poly market, a big coin that blasts off or something like this, right? If they don't build some AI app that goes to the moon, that they're screwed. They have no chance. And they're just, they're just living in destitution until one of these moments is such an interesting observation and very different from, you know, what we've always been taught, right? Delayed gratification is the way that people historically have been successful and where they have earned wealth. People who are quote unquote overnight successes often took 10, 20, 30 plus years to become an overnight success. Warren Buffett did really start accelerating and leaning into that, you know, big money status until he was in his sixth, but we have these young people. First of all, who are paying just an absolute insane amount of money for education. I call the US government the largest predatory lender on the planet because they're taking people who are teenagers and they're giving them five and six figure loans with no underwriting. There's no underwriting attached. And by the way, there's no ability to, you know, use a bankruptcy court to discharge that debt in every other loan. So they're walking into making these decisions. They can't even buy cough syrup, but they can go and they can make these decisions. And basically it's been a wholesale wealth transfer from the younger generation to college administrators. And I've been going to teachers. It's not going to things that improve the education is just going to administrative bloats. So you get people who are coming out of school and right as we're, you know, discussing this, I saw a stat that college graduates earnings on average are down something like eight or nine percent year over year for something where the price keeps going. Up and up. So they're not getting in some cases any meaningful return on their investment. It's saddling them with tons of debt right out of the gates. And so it becomes very, join Midnight Casino and discover a whole new. With hot slots, jackpots, live casino roulette and blackjack at the ready. Come and play your way. Get 100 free spins when you spend 20 pounds on eligible games. Watch Midnight Casino or download the midnight app today midnight casino done better. You decide. New customers only restrictions and TNC supply. 18 plus be gumblerware.org. For cold, you're not only to address that debt, but to then start investing in those assets, the things that continue to inflate based on monetary policy and government policy. So no wonder the young people feel like they're so far behind. And then that desperation kicks in while I'm seeing all these other people on Instagram living fake lives. It looks like everybody is doing these wealthy things because it's not about delayed gratification anymore. It's about faking a lifestyle and pretending that I'm living large even though I've done nothing to earn it. And so there's this pressure to try to make these huge bets. And instead of building wealth slowly, they feel like they have to lay it all online, make the huge bets. You go all in on crypto and meme coins and prediction markets and things to try to not earn money productively, but to gamble. And that is not a winning strategy to be financially secure, although I completely understand where the pressure for that is coming from. And I do think it's something that we need to address on all fronts. The got all of your answer and then some for some reason it dropped loves. I asked my question. Maybe it thought I was going to, the universe knew I was going to ask a stupid question. Maybe that's a good one. I get, you know, if I were 22 or 23, like I understand it because it's, because you're looking at the world and you're going, OK, I can't trust any institution that my parents could have trusted, right? I can't trust the executive branch. I can't trust Congress. I can't trust any kind of business institution, large corporate. It just feels like they're all trying to f me in the A and I have no shot and I have no idea who to trust. And then if I try to play it straight, like my parents did, I'm screwed. I have no way of getting ahead. I'm going to be saddled with debt. Life is way too expensive. So if I'm going to be screwed anyway, why not just while out and try to place all these bets because, hey, maybe one of them hits and my life turns around and I can actually hit that escape velocity and catch the part of the K curve that's that's pointed up. I mean, it's sad. Like it really makes me sad, but I 100% understand the mentality and actually as a part of me, it's like, I, you know, considering where I came from, which was literally nothing. Like, that's probably the game that I would have played at their same age if I was growing up right now. Yeah, it's funny. I also came from very little, you know, I paid for my own college. I came out of school with $40,000 of college debt, which was obscene at the time that I came out of college, you know, now it's, you know, sort of part for the course. So I understand the mentality too. Fortunately, I had a father who was very financially savvy. He didn't go to college. He was an electrician, but he, you know, very much instilled the, you know, you don't take on debt. You know, you do everything very conservatively and that's generally served me quite well. But I do understand, you know, that housing is so expensive. Education is so expensive. As you said, it's a lack of trust. And the other thing that's going on in the zeitgeist that we haven't really touched on is that it seems like the people who do the right thing keep getting slapped in the face and the people who skirt the system keep getting rewarded. We see all of these frauds and these NGOs and these people who are basically taking advantage of the system. We see criminals who are, you know, getting let out on the street. You know, if I, you know, step into the street the wrong way, I'm going to get, you know, take it for J-walking, but somebody who's punched people out in downtown Chicago 74 times, well, we should just let them off the hook. So the incentive to play by the rules has kind of that social contract has been broken because you keep seeing time and time again. Oh, you can open up, you know, daycares in Minnesota and make millions of dollars even though you don't have any kids or you know, you can watch your friends kids and they can watch yours and everything's a scam. Everything's a fraud, which is something that happens during bubbles when there's a lot of money in the system. And so people aren't being rewarded for doing the right thing. And so it becomes more difficult to go down that path. You don't have enough people saying, hey, yes, you should do it. You should, you know, get rich slowly. You should do these things and it is going to work out for you. And so I completely understand the mentality as well. Do you think that there was a time when people basically played it straight and now we're just there's more nefarious activity or do you think now we're just seeing the nefarious activity that has always existed in the system forever. We're just able to see it more because of citizen journalism and the internet and, you know, just, you know, getting, getting someone like Trump in who for better or for worse, you know, good decisions, bad decisions has kind of shaken the system and there's been some rotten apples that have fallen out. So I think the larger the system and the more money in the system, the easier it is to hide things like fraud and waste and abuse. And so of course it's always been there's always somebody trying to get around the rules, but given the size and the scope of government of, you know, these various institutions and our lives and the amount of money that is running through them, I think it's easier to get away with. But going back to something like the prediction markets, I mean, the incentive there to make a bet on something that you can control the outcome of is insane. I mean, it's basically like legalized insider trading. Basically what Congress does, right? Like, oh, I'm going to influence the outcome and I'm going to make a bet on that. And so we're saying, hey, here's a legalized way for you to manipulate the system for you to participate in the fraud. And then everyone goes, it's great. You know, and every telecast and football game and TV show is now sponsored by one of these entities that wants you to come in the system and do it. Oh, and by the way, if you're super successful, they're going to find a way to kick you out of it because they don't want you to actually be successful. But that is the lure, the draw. And we see it time and time again, whereas somebody has placed a big bet on something and then you find out later that there's been some level of shenanigans that person knew it was going on or they could actually influence the outcome and they're the ones making the big bets to get the big pay days. So is the lesson here? Don't play it straight. Like, is the lesson like screw it? Like, let's all just kind of try to hose each other as much as possible, get ours and survive. Like are we back? Like, there's part of me and again, you said you didn't earlier, you said you didn't mean to get all like, woo, woo, you can get below there if you want. It's okay on this show. You know, there's part of me. It's like, this feels very much like Wild West, like, you know, when I think of like the Dark Ages or Ancient Rome, like you kind of know, like if anyone was ever looking out for you today, it feels like nobody is looking out for you. And you kind of, I mean, obviously you have to have your relationship with, you know, with God or whatever if you have something spiritual. But like outside of that, you kind of have to like go get yours or someone else is going to find a way to screw you. I mean, that is a sentiment that I've heard from people, like, you know, I'm 45. I've heard that from some of my friends who I would have never thought would even toss that out as a joke. And they're like, I don't know, man, like, I don't know how to get ahead. I'm making $200,000 a year with three kids and I have literally no, like, I'm, I'm, I run out of money every month. He's like, I don't know what to do. He's like, how do I, like, how much more can I make that's going to get me over the edge where I'm not at zero at the ever, you know, I thought I was ahead of the game here. And it's kind of a wild thought when you think about it. Yeah, it's a horrible thought that people have to resort to it. And again, I'm not judging it. I completely understand it. I think it's a bad path to go down for several reasons. One is because there's always a flip side. And so if you go after it and it doesn't work, the downside is going to put you so far behind that it's going to be a hole that's very difficult to climb out of. I also just think that, like, in a time where everybody's kind of going crazy and there is all of this fraud and corruption, like, there's never a better time to connect with your core principles and to be a good person. And you know, when you are getting ready to leave this earth whenever that may be, you're not going to say to yourself, oh, I wish I would have game to the system and had, you know, an extra sack of cash lying here next to me that I'm going to, you know, die holding. Like that's not going to do anything for you, but you are going to think about your relationships and your family and being a good person. And are you leaving that legacy behind which, you know, arguably is way more valuable than our currency that continues to depreciate in value. So, you know, I'm somebody. One of the things that I think is, I've always appreciated is that, like, by the time I had kind of gotten to my early 30s, I really knew myself well. I knew what my core principles were and I have not deviated from them. I'm somebody who tries to stick to those principles and to be a good person and to be a good friend and a good wife and a good family member and try to be helpful in all of those things. And so, yes, I understand the desperation of looking around and going, you know, how, you know, I'm being left behind. But that's your own perception. That's your own keeping up with the Joneses. And I, as I said, I'm not judging. I understand that. But that is not going to bring you peace and life because when you get that money, then you're just going to then compare yourself to the Joneses, the next level up. It's, you know, a rat race. And I forget the quote, maybe it was Lily Tomlin who says, you have a problem with competing as a rat in a rat race is even if you win, you're still a rat. So you have to keep that in mind. You don't, you don't want to be the rat. You want to say, okay, you know, what are the things I can do to lessen the stress and the pressure of these money issues in my life? But at the end of the day, does it change my life if I don't go on this vacation or if we, you do a staycation or a close to home thing instead of going to Disney or whatever it is, the trade-offs you make, you don't focus on the memories and the relationships and the things that you can control and don't be so, you know, kind of pushed by the outside world, not saying to not, you know, continue to work hard and hustle and make the smart investments, but also don't drive yourself crazy in the process. Yeah, I think that's wonderful advice and just to be clear for the audience, I am not advocating for a demonic lifestyle of cheating the way through. I don't think, I don't think anyone, well, there's really three people who took it that way, but they were going to take it that way. No matter what we said, they were just going to be like, they told me, they said, go for it. I heard Carolyn Ryan, they're like, you know what? Just screw it, we're just going for it. That's right, that's right. And I, I just, it's very interesting, it just, I find these things as data points, right? And when you, you hear, sometimes when certain individuals say things that feel very out of context for them, it like rattles you a little, you know, because you're like, I wouldn't have expected that person, even if they're not serious to voice that kind of concern, but what it does is it starts throwing alarm bells up. And it's one of the reasons in 2026, I've very much dedicated this show more towards economic, related marketplace, these types of topics, because, you know, going through 2025 and coming in, you know, when we talked about the economy, when we talked about business investing, these types of things kind of pulling your way out of this, this desperation, if that's where you find yourself, even, you know, I think we all kind of lived that quiet desperation of certain extent, but, you know, if you're above the threshold of, of what is natural or normal, you know, there's just so much information out there and so much of it is absolute and garbage. And sifting through it is very difficult. And one of the places that I find so many people either have this skewed view or just a really hazy view is the Federal Reserve, right? And we have all this, you know, there's tons of news. Obviously, Trump just nominated. I'm going to, I know his last name is Warsh. What's his first name? Kevin Warsh. Kevin Warsh, Kevin Warsh. And, you know, now Powell's on the outs and is it, you know, independent? Is it not independent? And most people don't even think that it's just a building down in Washington. Like they don't even realize that it's a completely independent body. So can you kind of lay out what is going on with the Federal Reserve? Why is, why is this transition from Drone Powell to, you know, Kevin Warsh or whoever ends up getting brought in if he's not, he's Trump's nominee, obviously? Why is this such an important time? Why, why is the role the Federal Reserve play so important to everyday life? Like I think people think it's, it only impacts like big business or investments, but it really comes all the way down to everyday individuals. Oh, boy, I thought we were going to make people feel better. And now I'm going to make them feel worse again. Okay, so sick. Let's first that again. So let me just kind of give a little bit of perspective. So I'm somebody who started on Wall Street out of college 30 some odd years ago. And so I've seen a lot of shifts and changes in terms of what drives things. And when I started out as an investment banker as somebody who helped companies raise capital, as somebody who did mergers and acquisitions, who focused on the markets 24, 7, when I tell you that we never talked about the Federal Reserve. They were not that important. They would pop up every once in a while when there was a crisis like in October of 87 and whatnot. They pop up every once in a while to kind of write the ship or a vulcar after we went off the gold standard, raise rate, like just once in a while, but it wasn't like now a spectator sport where everyone's like, what are they going to do with the next meeting? Are they going to raise their target interest rate or lower their target interest rate quarter of a percentage point? Like nobody cared. It wasn't something that we focused on. The problem is that they really changed the game in terms of their interventionist policy during the Great Recession financial crisis. And this is where they started doing the printing money out of nowhere. Literally taking a digital ledger that they have and just adding money to it and using that money to go out into the market and buy things like Treasury and mortgage securities to help loosen up the economy and to get it going after the crisis. And when you create money out of nowhere, it's a problem because you have to remember that money in addition to being a store of value in a unit of account and a medium of exchange, that it's a proxy for productivity, right? That it's something that you, that they give you as a certificate, an IOU acclaim when you earn, when you go out and you do work and you earn something and you're like, okay, well, instead of me trading with you and then you trading with the next person to help facilitate that exchange, they're giving you this IOU. But it represents a claim on the work that I've done or the investment that I've made. When you just start adding dollars that nobody earned, that didn't add anything to the system, that didn't create an investment, then all it does is just create more dollars that are chasing the same amount of goods and services and makes the fruits of your labor, so to speak, worthless. And so that's really what happened starting with the great recession financial crisis and then expanding their after, it went nuts again during COVID and thereafter, and they've just now added so much money to the system that they have, you know, A, not only let the government get away with having huge deficits and not spending within their means, but they've also created non-marital based inequality. I have no problem with capitalistic inequality, right? That if you have Michael Jordan or Beyonce or the people who are at the top of their crafts, making millions and billions of dollars versus somebody who's not quite as good, I do not care about that inequality, but when it's being driven because the Federal Reserve is printing money that pushes up the value of assets at the expense of the cost of living of everyday Americans, I do have a problem with that. And that really has been the driver of this K-shape economy, what it is that we've talked about in all of this divergence. It's part of the reason, a large part of the reason we saw the massive inflation during the Biden administration in addition to his stimulus checks, but them being on standby and allowing this to happen is sort of the enabling factor, so it's government policy and Fed policy hands in hand. Now, we are at a point, fast forward to today, where our fiscal foundation is a absolute disaster. We have debt that exceeds the GDP of our country, so our debt to GDP is north of 120%, that's something that like you might see in an emerging market in crisis, and we haven't collapsed because, you know, up until this point, we've had the world reserve currency, we have the world's trading currency, we have a huge economy and markets, and so that's been able to kind of hold it together, but at times things go sideways and the Fed needs to intervene in that. We're running deficits that are, you know, right now I think it's close to the 6% of GDP range. Well, that's a level that you would see during a crisis, a recession, a war. You don't see that when we have an expansionary economy, we win a growth economy, because if you think about it, the economy grows, the government takes in more money that should shrink the deficit, but we're seeing the opposite happen, we're seeing these massive deficits, again, something that happened under the Biden administration, because they didn't want to go through a recession, and so they just spent more to paper over it, create the appearance of growth, and then you still have this huge deficit. And at the time that we have all of this going on, given our massive debt load, and the fact that we have lots of debt that continue to need to be refinanced, we are now having the interest rate on the national debt, or excuse me, the interest payments on the national debt, to the amount that we're servicing for that national debt, kind of like if you have a credit card, the amount that you owe, and you have to pay on your credit card, our debt payments every year are now exceeding the country's expenses on defense. So the defense of our nation is now second to our interest expense. So we are in this crazy, crazy situation, and the problem becomes that, you know, because of our tenuous financial situation, and a bunch of other things that are going on in the world, there aren't as many buyers that are coming in to buy our treasury securities, what we issue, to issue more debt into the markets, right, to pay for these deficits. And so there aren't as many buyers who are just buying them because they always have to, you know, things like central banks around the world. They're getting sick of us and our shenanigans. And so right now everybody who's buying that is price sensitive. So they're looking at things like potential inflation, and you know what's going to happen in the economy. And plus the supply and demand, because every time we run a deficit, that puts more supply of bonds into the market. So supply and demand, right? So our interest rate keeps going up, even when the Fed cuts what their target rate is, that's for short dated securities, something like a month or a couple of months. But for the longer end of the curve, the yield curve, things like 10 year and 20 year and 30 year treasuries, the market is making those decisions. And so regardless of whether it's Powell or Worsh or whoever, there's sort of beholden to what the market is saying, which is why we've seen the yield on the 10 year, you stay stubbornly high even though they continue to cut their target interest rate. So my concern in this, you know, overall situation is that we're going to be put into a situation where the reality is continue to push up that yields that we have to pay on our interest. And that means our interest costs go up. And if our interest costs go up, that means our deficits go up. And if our deficit goes up, that means we have to finance more debts, which means we have to put more debt into the market, which does what? It pushes up the yields because now we have additional supply in the market. So it ends up in this crazy debt spiral. So the reality is at some point here, there's going to be no choice. Unless we want like the world's global markets to blow up, we're going to end up seeing the Fed, probably with the Treasury, whether it's directly or through one of their things that they call something else. We're going to see them do the same thing. And we're going to see them continue to print money. And we're going to see them continue to suppress the interest rates. And it's going to do the same thing that it's done. It is going to continue to devalue your dollars, take away your purchasing power from the labor that you've put out from the investments you've made. And we're going to continue to see this widening of the haves and have nots, which is not a good thing for our country. And it's one of the reasons why over the past several years, I've told people to hedge themselves with precious metals like gold so that they can at least keep some of that purchasing power intact while we have this broader scenario going on. That was a very long answer to your question. I'll be incredible. But that's what I wanted. And just as a corollary, all you sons of bitches that were making fun of me because I've been telling you that I buy gold and bury it in my backyard who's laughing now. Go check your AP max account and tell me who's laughing right now. No, that's an inside joke on the show. But I do have gold buried all over the place. So I just want to wrap one idea here at the Federal Reserve. I've read the creature from Jack O'Lyland. I've spent time. So yes, what is the logic leap that I just struggle with is we issue bonds. And then we have this entity which was created solely for the most part, solely to buy those bonds, right? So which then creates the money supply, which is all just at this point, just digital numbers. We're just putting another zero in an account. There's not actually nothing is changing, guys. Gold isn't going from one place to another. No one's printing off bonds and shipping them to a building somewhere. Like it's literally just, oh, we take a couple of zeros and you take a couple zeros and everybody's happy. And why do we even need them? Like, why don't we just, if it's just zeros and bank accounts, why don't we just put another zero in the White House's bank account and go, hey, we can spend more money now? Because it just seems like an extra step that's unnecessary, which then my kind of skeptical mind says, this is a scam. How do I not see it like that? Is there a legitimate way of looking at it? Or is it just actually a big scam? Well, first of all, I'd just like to point out if any of us went into our bank accounts and added a bunch of zeros and went out and used that money to buy things, even treasuries, they would call it fraud, when the Fed does it, they call it monetary policy. So just putting it out there. Yeah, the whole thing is a bit of a head scratcher. I think if we've seen how dysfunctional Congresses, the executive branch, the fact that we have no continuity in our government, to the extent that we want somebody to have the Fed powers, you wouldn't want it to be the government, you'd want it to be an entity that at least has some idea of what's going on financially and is not entirely political. I'm not saying that they're not political. I'm just saying entirely like you wouldn't want the congressman from, you know, like I'll just pick myself like, you know, like the House representative from my district in Illinois who's like 87 years old to be like in charge of monetary policy. It's insane. Now, we have to go back and say, okay, what is it that the Fed does? You know, there's the given mandate from Congress, which is stable prices, which obviously they failed miserably at and stable employment. And I will just argue that kind of based on where we are fiscally, that their tools kind of don't matter that much in either places. You have somebody who, you know, is supposed to help control the money supply because, you know, as there's more productivity, there has to be decisions on, you know, how much more of those claims get out into the market. Many economists, including Milton Friedman, had something called the K-percent rule, which is basically you just tie the increase in the money supply to a metric that makes sense, you know, whether it's the GDP or some other metric for growth. So there are different ways that you could get around that. You can have, you know, the banks lend to each other, even if you needed some sort of, you know, cash and settling up and setting market rates. Like they could do that in a market fashion. So the only reason you need the central bank today is to make sure that the system that has been created globally doesn't completely collapse and implode. So it's a system that never needed to be in place and has created all kinds of issues and hardships. But the idea that we could just completely pull the plug on it one day and not have massive consequences, especially like for the US right now, given our fiscal situation and what likely needs to happen, if we let the market decide, you know, what the real cost is of financing the government, like we're pretty much done tomorrow. So it's one of those things, it's horrible. We should start to remove more and more of their powers. But, you know, even though like the kind of, you know, anarchist in me is like, let's just blow the whole thing up anyway. You know, it's just, it's not, it would be a really bad outcome. And so I do think that there's probably something that happens that leads to different kinds of financial global resets. And, you know, I think we're going to see things like gold become more of a de facto reserve currency. And as we start to extract ourselves from this fiat system, which is going to be a painful scenario if we can and assuming Congress can get their act together, which is highly unlikely in terms of spending, then we could talk, have like a legitimate conversation as, you know, do we need all of this plumbing in the system? And the reality is that once the dollar's already losing some of its status, I mean, it's still, you know, the top non-precious metals-based reserve, it's still used and a ton of global trade. But that is continuing to shift and change. And there's active pushes to continue to shift and change that. But as the dollars become less important, if we start seeing things like trade wars being fought with capital wars, meaning all of the countries that are invested in our bond as stock markets start to pull money out of those markets. And the dollar becomes less and less important, then, you know, the whole financial sector itself, which is a huge sector, you know, one of the top sectors, you know, in terms of our GB becomes less important. And then again, we can kind of have the discussion about central banks. But this is not like, you could change certain things about Medicare, healthcare, whatever, you know, kind of overnight. Like the central bank, I think, is a much more complicated animal that has their tentacles and they're evil and awful, but it exists. And so we have to be realistic about how it is that we're going to, you know, kind of get it out of the system without just creating, you know, a worse situation than if they were actually there. Well, the good news is as long as we have the biggest bombs as Kedafi and Maduro learned, they kind of have to keep paying for oil and other things in dollars, or they just... Well, but that's the problem. Just take you out. Well, the problem is that I don't know that we do. And we are dependent upon China for a lot of the manufacturing of componentry as well as rare earth elements, whatever they go into our defense sector. And that's one of the reasons why the situation is so tenuous and to the lab person who doesn't kind of, you know, focus on all of these different things going on and see how they're interconnected. Like you're going, what are you even talking about right now? But there's a lot of things going on in the global and, you know, overall financial order that are shifting and changing based on the realities of what our financial system has been, where we stand now, and things like, you know, commodities who owns them, who owns manufacturing. And it's why the Trump administration, frankly, has been focused on things where people are like, why are you focused on this? It's because it's all tied into keeping, like you said, the biggest bombs and that, you know, that threat in place, because if we don't have that, then things shift pretty significantly and once again not in our favor. And probably pretty quickly. I want to be respectful of your time. I know you have to run. I have one final question. Take this wherever you want to go. You are an enormous advocate of small business, of the everyday business professional and entrepreneur. You have two books that you've written on the topic. We've had you on the show twice before to talk about those. It's one of the reasons why I'm such a big fan of your work and having conversations with you. You know, you don't have to go super deep because we could talk about this for an entire episode. But for that person who's heard this, who's listened to you and says, okay, Carol, well, what the, do I do? Like, how do I survive this? Like, is it, do we have to start looking at things like gold and copper and platinum or is it crypto or how do I, even in a small sense, start to put some bets in place that if things do go really wrong, I have a chance of kind of making it through. What are just some places to look? And I know what time can change. Like, but take as far as you want. But where would they start looking? What are some of the things that can help these people have a little bit of peace of mind if shit goes haywire? So, you know, obviously this is not financial advice. Yeah, not really. I can only tell you what I am doing. And, you know, obviously, I'm in a different financial position than other people who may be watching. I understand that. So this is just kind of, you know, my thoughts and do what makes sense for you. But the reality is, as I said, you know, you go out and you spend your life in your hours and you earn. I think that that is going, the purchasing power you have is going to continue to deplete. And from my standpoint, you know, I have been advocating for precious metals, particularly gold. Silver up to a point. I'm now out of silver because of the price shifts. I've done extremely, extremely well. So not unhappy about that. Might enter in again. But I've seen that more as a trade at today's levels than I have as, you know, I have a little bit of it, but, you know, most of that's gone. But gold has a 5,000 years social contract. We've seen gold as a backer of our financial system for pretty much like the last, you know, thousands and thousands of years. And it really is only since 1973 that this weird fiat bubble kind of started to percolate. So I just see that things always kind of go back to where they were before. We're seeing central banks around the world instead of going into treasuries, and instead of going into some of your US assets are starting to go into gold. And I think it's going to be very meaningful for the United States. You know, I expect that they will probably do a re-evaluation at some point in time. So again, just my insight, but I think that, you know, gold, my perspective on it, is it doesn't go up in price. It just maintains its price, but the dollar goes down. And so if you're trying to hedge out against your dollars, you want to have some of your portfolio. It used to be like 5 to 10 percent of your portfolio. I am personally, we're pushing towards 20 percent right now. Just because we think that's what makes sense in today's day and age. And it's expensive. So dollar cost averaging is great. Every week you put a little bit or every month, you put a little bit in and whatever the price is. Some months or weeks it's going to be higher and some it's going to be lower, but over time you're going to have get that average price of where it's been. And you're not going to wait and see it move up, you know, many more legs and go, oh, I wish I would have gotten in. Or if it falls down, you're going to continue to capture it at a lower price. So you can't time the market on things. So I think that's an easier place to go. It's challenging because, you know, if you buy precious metals, you are paying a spread on that. And if you buy it, you have to find a place to hold it and you have to make sure that it's authentic. If you buy GLD, there's always a differential that's the the ETA, paper ETF between the spot price of gold and GLD and sometimes it runs above and sometimes it runs below. But it makes it easier to get in and out of. I'd be very careful selling because you are taxed at a collectibles capital gains rate instead of a regular capital gains rate. So you've got to have- Yes, soldered on the black market, guys. Don't sell it to anybody. You've got to, but the whole point is for me is to just hold it. Right? It's the anchor to my dollars. Now, I'm also invested in the market because I do believe that the stock market needs to continue to go up. The president has told you that he's going to run things hot. This is going to be on what's called a nominal basis. So the headline number, not adjusted for inflation on a real basis, adjusted for inflation. It probably is not doing well. In fact, the S&P has not kept up with gold. It looks really ugly if you look at the charts of the stock market compared to gold. But again, that's why you have that in your portfolio. But just to keep up on a nominal basis, the one part that we have to worry about with stocks is that there is a ton of international money that's in the markets. And at some point, that money is probably going to get drawn out for their own crises and maybe throw it into gold or whatnot. And that's going to have a downward effect. But again, I think that they're going to use tools like fed tools and whatnot to pump it back up. Because if the stock market goes down, both directly and indirectly, the government will collect less money on a headline basis and that will explode their deficits and that will tip off a crisis. So they know they need to continue to push that up. If you've seen recent posts from Donald Trump, he's saying Dow 100,000. And again, while he's not, you know, I wouldn't say that's an accurate prediction. And necessarily he's telling you, I'm going to run this hot. And so, you know, they keep hinting towards this. So I would believe them. So I do think that, you know, in the long term, it makes sense to have stocks. But again, pricing may get all over the board. So, you know, if you do it on the regular, you keep that dollar cost averaging. You do something broad like the S&P 500. So you get that breath of exposure. You know, that may be the way to play it and just have a diversified portfolio. If you have the opportunity, if you work for a company and you have the opportunity to get equity, you believe in what you're doing and you can get some ownership. And what you're doing, I think that's another great way to participate. Everybody always wants the cash, but they don't want that ownership, that participation. And given where we are in the financial cycle. And also the fact that, you know, you get rich with assets. You know, try to get if you can, try to negotiate yourself a piece of the company, some stocks, some options. A lot of companies are happy instead of paying you those dollars to give away, you know, a little bit of a claim. And I don't think enough people take advantage of that, but that's another good thing if you believe in the company that you work for and have that opportunity. Carol, I appreciate the hell out of you. I know there's going to be a lot of people that want to go deeper into your world and follow along. Where's the best place for them to do that? So I have a free economic newsletter. We talk about the things like we talked about today. And layman's terms plus a couple of funny things every time I send it out. And that's at CarolRoth.com slash news. And I am cross social media, but it's been most of my time on. I still call it Twitter. You can call it active, call it every once. And I'm at Carol.js Roth there. And as you mentioned, I've got three different books. Most recent is funny enough called You Alone Nothing, which talks about a lot of the topics that we talked about today. From a prediction standpoint, from several years ago. So you can see that I tend to be spot on about you're looking ahead and seeing where we are. Yeah, phenomenal. You will know nothing to phenomenal book. Guys, if you want to understand this stuff, I couldn't recommend it enough. And if you want to hear the conversation that we had, go back. I think it's about a year and a half, two years. You were last time you were on the show. And we did a deep dive. Appreciate you. Thank you so much. And tremendous follow on X. I say X, but I tweet. So I kind of still live. I don't know how that works. But tremendous follow. Appreciate you. Thank you so much. And have a great day, Carol. Thanks you as well. Join Midnight Casino and discover a whole new world. With hot slots, jackpots, live casino roulette and Blackjack at the ready. Come and play your way. Get 100 free spins when you spend 20 pounds on eligible games. Search Midnight Casino or download the Midnight app today. Midnight Casino Dumbair. You decide. New customers only. Restrictions and TNCs apply. 18 plus BeGumbleAware.org.