Peter Shiff
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/25/peter...ed-policy.html
The Fed's willingness to begin pulling back on crisis era policy was already in doubt. "Now, Janet Yellen can blame her failure to raise rates on Brexit," said Peter Schiff, CEO of Euro Pacific Capital on CNBC's "Trading Nation" this week.
"She could even use this as an excuse to cut rates back to zero and launch QE4," the bearish investor said, referring to a fourth round of quantitative easing, the massive bond buying used by the Fed to try and spur growth.
//-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remember the effect of a QE ?
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g...tegory_id=7972
//-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alan Greenspan echoed similarly worrisome sentiments on CNBC on Friday's "Squawk Box" and called Friday brutal trading the worst he's ever seen.
"This is just the tip of the iceberg," warned Greenspan, who served as Federal Reserve Chairman from 1987 to 2006. "This problem that's causing the British problem is far more widespread. Fundamentally, what we are looking at is a massive slowing in the rate of real incomes across the whole European spectrum."
Schiff added that gaps between the working class anti-establishment and the political and economic establishment are likely to fuel further upheaval in the world economy.
At this point in time, a global disconnect seems to be widening, he said.
"The people revolted," said Schiff. "After having been misled for so many years by the very elites who urged them to remain, the rank and file asserted themselves and voted with their feet."
Schiff argued the public is rebelling against policies backed by the political class, such as deficit spending, government regulation were key for a recovery post-2008. Furthermore, Schiff says that the rise of insurgents like Donald Trump illustrate a deep distrust of the establishment that helped lead to Britain's departure.
With cracks in the EU now exposed, troubled nations like Spain, Italy and Portugal could soon followed Britain's example, some say. With this, time will tell if the European Union's days are numbered, which could further help the Fed in delaying rate hikes.
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
This is very true, EU bring nothing good to people in EU.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/25/peter...ed-policy.html
The Fed's willingness to begin pulling back on crisis era policy was already in doubt. "Now, Janet Yellen can blame her failure to raise rates on Brexit," said Peter Schiff, CEO of Euro Pacific Capital on CNBC's "Trading Nation" this week.
"She could even use this as an excuse to cut rates back to zero and launch QE4," the bearish investor said, referring to a fourth round of quantitative easing, the massive bond buying used by the Fed to try and spur growth.
//-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remember the effect of a QE ?
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g...tegory_id=7972
//-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alan Greenspan echoed similarly worrisome sentiments on CNBC on Friday's "Squawk Box" and called Friday brutal trading the worst he's ever seen.
"This is just the tip of the iceberg," warned Greenspan, who served as Federal Reserve Chairman from 1987 to 2006. "This problem that's causing the British problem is far more widespread. Fundamentally, what we are looking at is a massive slowing in the rate of real incomes across the whole European spectrum."
Schiff added that gaps between the working class anti-establishment and the political and economic establishment are likely to fuel further upheaval in the world economy.
At this point in time, a global disconnect seems to be widening, he said.
"The people revolted," said Schiff. "After having been misled for so many years by the very elites who urged them to remain, the rank and file asserted themselves and voted with their feet."
Schiff argued the public is rebelling against policies backed by the political class, such as deficit spending, government regulation were key for a recovery post-2008. Furthermore, Schiff says that the rise of insurgents like Donald Trump illustrate a deep distrust of the establishment that helped lead to Britain's departure.
With cracks in the EU now exposed, troubled nations like Spain, Italy and Portugal could soon followed Britain's example, some say. With this, time will tell if the European Union's days are numbered, which could further help the Fed in delaying rate hikes.
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
This is very true, EU bring nothing good to people in EU.