by ilene - September 17th, 2009 12:59 pm
What do you think of this? Peter Schiff’s announcement on MSNBC.
Peter Schiff was a guest on a recent TDI podcast – Listen Here.
Tags: Peter Schiff, Senate
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by ilene - September 4th, 2009 2:48 pm
Courtesy of Jesse’s Café Américain
Peter Schiff has not always been correct, most notably on the decoupling theory of foreign markets with the US, and the desirability of their equity markets, at least so far.
It is the case, of course, that the US lagged emergence from the Great Depression as compared to a number of overseas economies, for a variety of reasons on which we have speculated in the past.
Will this happen again? Perhaps, we cannot know. But the US is ‘ground zero’ for the Wall Street debt fraud and bubble economy based on the dollar reserves.
The decline in the value of the dollar does seem like a very high probability, as well as the stagflation which this will produce. On this point Mr. Schiff seems most insightful, especially compared to the commentators on financial television.
(hat tip to Denver Dave for the link)
Tags: Commodities, Dollar, Gold, Peter Schiff
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by ilene - August 19th, 2009 9:06 pm
Courtesy of Joe Weisenthal at Clusterstock
Euro Pacific Capital chief Peter Schiff showed up on Fox Biz to discuss Warren Buffett’s doom-mongering in the NYT today. Schiff tries to thread the needle, saying that Buffett is right that the dollar will collapse, but wrong to think that the bailouts and stimuli we’ve done so far were necessary.
See Also:
Buffett: US Government Debt Increasing 1% Of GDP Per Month
Buffett: Debt Mountain Could Turn America Into A Banana Republic (BRK)
Peter Schiff Ambushed On MSNBC (VIDEO)
Tags: debt, Money, Peter Schiff, U.S. Government, Warren Buffett
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by ilene - June 14th, 2009 11:43 pm
For a free subscription to Phil’s Stock World, click here (it’s easy, no credit card required).
In this article, Peter Schiff discusses the practical problems with a government’s abrogation of contract and property rights for some "contrived greater good." That is deeply disturbing enough but it goes further. Our Constitution gave specific powers to different branches of government to hold the powers of government in check. The loss of these checks and balances goes beyond the financial world "twilight zone" horrors unfolding before us now, it undermines the entire structure of our governance. – Ilene
By Peter Schiff, writing at LewRockwell.com
“Crony capitalism” is a term often applied to foreign nations where government interference circumvents market forces. The practice is widely associated with tin-pot dictators and second-rate economies. In such a system, support for the ruling regime is the best and only path to economic success. Who you know supersedes what you know, and favoritism trumps the rule of law. Unfortunately, this week’s events demonstrate that the phrase now more aptly describes our own country.
On Monday, the Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal from Chrysler’s secured creditors based on the government’s argument that the needs of other stakeholders outweighed those of a few creditors. In this case, the Administration concluded the interests of the United Auto Workers outweighed the interests of the Indiana teachers and firemen whose pension fund sued to block the restructuring. Given the enormous financial support that the UAW poured into the Obama campaign, such partiality is hardly surprising.
When making their investment in Chrysler just a few months ago, the Indiana pension fund agreed to commit capital because of the specific assurances received from the company. In allowing this sham bankruptcy to be crammed through the courts, we have shredded the vital principal of the rule of law, and have become a nation of men, rather than one of laws.
The risk that legal contracts can now be arbitrarily set aside will make investors think twice before committing capital to distressed corporations. Oftentimes enforcing contracts imposes hardships. That’s precisely why we have contracts.
Without absolute faith that deals will be honored, it will be extremely difficult for U.S. companies to borrow money. This will be particularly true for those companies already struggling with too much debt. Without the ability to issue secured debt,…

Tags: Ben Bernanke, BofA shareholders, Chrysler, Crony capitalism, Ken Lewis, Peter Schiff, United Auto Workers
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by ilene - June 8th, 2009 3:19 pm
By Peter D. Schiff, courtesy of Money Morning
With Oversized Deficits Almost Certain to Persist, an Investment In America’s Future is One Very Tough Sell
Just last week, Team Obama took its financial-crisis dog-and-pony show on the road. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner went to China. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke visited Capitol Hill. And President Barack Obama, himself, embarked on a Mideast tour that started in Saudi Arabia.
This full-court press is not coincidental, and comes just as the federal government began unloading trillions of dollars in new U.S. Treasury obligations. The coordinated charm offensive is meant to assure the world-at-large that the United States can repay these obligations – without destroying the dollar.
Given the renewed weakness in the dollar and the recent expressions of concern from China—our largest creditor—about the safety of its current holdings, this is no easy sell. Not only must our leaders convince holders of our debt not to sell what they already own, U.S. officials must persuade these same foreign investors to back up the truck and buy a whole lot more. The hope is that a Dream Team – consisting of a charismatic politician, a skilled Wall Street banker with longstanding ties to China, and a respected Fed chairman – can close the deal. However, no matter how slick the sales pitch, no amount of lipstick can dress up this pig.
The most obvious fear the trio must address is that oversized deficits will persist indefinitely. Reading from a carefully scripted rebuttal book, all three proclaim that as soon as the stimulus revives our economy, the government will take all necessary steps to reign in the deficits that result. Bernanke’s testimony showcases this rhetorical shift. The Fed chairman claimed that catastrophe has been averted and that the recession is nearly over. As a result, he advised Congress to now focus on debt management. How he expects U.S. lawmakers to do that was left unexamined.
Setting aside the fact that the recession is far from over and that the stimulus will actually weaken the economy in the long run, Bernanke’s words were less a practical guide to Congress than a bromide for our foreign creditors. Meanwhile, President Obama carefully peppers his speeches with calls for Americans to live within their means, to save more and spend less,…

Tags: CHINA, debt, Geithner, Obama, Peter Schiff
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