Send this article to a friend: October |
![]() |
69 Percent Of U.S. Households “Are Preparing For A Possible Recession”
But first let’s talk about this new survey that just came out that says that 69 percent of all U.S. households “are preparing for a possible recession”…
Considering what I do, it makes perfect sense to me that more than two-thirds of the country would be preparing for a recession. But it would be very interesting to see this number broken down by political affiliation. In general, Democrats tend to be far more pessimistic about the economy than Republicans are right now, and that is just because Donald Trump is in the White House. I would suspect that the percentage of Trump supporters that are “preparing for a possible recession” would be well under 50 percent, but that is just a guess on my part. In any event, the truth is that 100 percent of Americans should be preparing for a recession, because the warning signs are all around us. And on Wednesday another economic red flag emerged. For months, the economic optimists have been touting “the strength of the consumer” as one of the bright spots for the economy, but last month retail sales dropped for the first time in seven months…
That is certainly not the end of the world, but it does indicate that consumers are starting to scale back their spending. Of course that is the last thing that retailers want to see happen. We are already on pace to absolutely shatter the all-time record for store closings in a single year, and we just learned that Sears and Kmart will soon be closing more stores…
Sears has essentially been in the process of liquidating for a very long time, and we can only hope that eventually this incredibly painful liquidation will mercifully come to an end. For many other retailers, this holiday season will be a “make or break moment”, and we should probably expect another huge wave of store closing announcements early in 2020. And as I noted above, it isn’t just the retail industry that is really struggling. We are already in a “transportation recession”, and we just learned that the Cass Freight Index has now declined for ten months in a row. The following comes from Wolf Richter…
Another sector that is facing very tough times is the auto industry, and according to Reuters over 7 million Americans are seriously delinquent on their auto loans…
If all these numbers remind you of the last recession, that would make perfect sense, because we haven’t seen anything like this in more than a decade. And all of this is happening even though the federal government is adding a trillion dollars to the national debt each year and the Federal Reserve has begun flooding the financial system with fresh cash. In terms of “economic stimulus”, our leaders are already pushing the accelerator all the way to the floor, and it is simply not working. This truly is the beginning of the end for the U.S. economy, and most Americans can now see that very tough times are ahead. But what most Americans don’t understand is that what we will be facing won’t be anything like 2008. Instead, it will be much, much worse.
|
Send this article to a friend:
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |