Stagnation +Inflation = STAGFLATION. I explain why this could be explosive for gold and silver.
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Hello dear friends. My name is Clive
Thompson and today is Friday. What is it
the
Today is Friday the 27th of March 2026.
Uh I hope you can hear me all right.
There's a bit of a gale blowing here in
Switzerland. Uh it's a freezing cold
day. Um but the sun is shining and you
get the impression that spring is maybe
coming soon. Um, so today I'm going to
be talking uh a lot about gold and
silver, but we're before we get there,
I'm going to give you the backdrop to
where we are in the world and why I
think that gold and silver could perform
very well in the coming environment,
which is going to be called stagflation.
Now, you're going to hear the word
stagflation a lot in the coming months
and years. Uh, but let's start off with
where we are in the environment. Now, we
are, in my opinion, we are heading into
a recession.
The reason I say that is there's a
number of uh things which are pointing
in that direction. Uh obviously there's
no guarantee that a recession will come
because recessions have been forecast
almost every year, but they rarely come.
But I think this time they're on their
way.
Um now the numbers I'm going to be
quoting are those from the USA. But
where the USA goes, the whole world
goes. So I'm pretty much uh convinced
that everything I say will be related to
um what's going on in the world as well
as the USA. So let's start with the
employment numbers. Now the one number
you should not be listening to is the
non-farm payroll number. We hear that
come out every month and every month
apart from the last month they show
massive increases in the number of
people employed. yet. Here we are uh in
uh fe the last number we've got is um
February uh 2026.
And comparing that number with the
number of people working in February
2025, we have 689,000
less people working now than we had in
February 2025. Uh that's nearly, you
know, 3/4 of a million nearly less
people working. Now that's coming in the
backdrop of a rising an increasing
population. So the population of the
United States has gone up in the same
period. If I go back to a year ago, the
number uh the population has gone up in
a year by 1.91
million people. So we have a rising
population but a falling number of
people working. net debt. That works out
that we have an increase in the
non-workers in the USA of 2.6 million
people. In other words, there's 2.6
million people more not working in the
United States than there was a year ago.
And that's a combination of more
population and less actual people
working. So 2.6 uh non-workers. That's
how much has gone up by. Um so that's
the first sign that we're moving into
recession. The second side is the GDP
number. Now the GDP number when you hear
a number quoted they quote it quarter by
quarter and they always annualize the
number. So uh if you hear a figure let's
say of 4% uh that means that it was the
GDP rose by 1% and they multiply by four
to get to 4%. So in the third quarter of
2025,
the GDP rose by
uh what was it now? Here I've got it
here 4.4%.
That was if you like 1.1% multiplied by
four.
In the fourth quarter,
the number rose by an annualized rate of
0.65%. The official number is 0.7
because they round it upwards to the
nearest number above but 0.65. So we've
gone from 4.4% growth to 0.65% growth
and the first quarter of this year which
is 2026 uh almost certainly is going to
be uh a lower GDP number based on
everything we know. So I think we're
going into negative GDP uh growth. I
think two negative quarters of GDP
growth would mean that we are in a
recession. So you won't actually know
that we're in a recession for perhaps
another 6 n months. But uh that's the
direction of travel I think. U lastly
we've got uh these private credit funds
and there's lots of them now who are
reigning in their horns uh because they
know there's massive redemptions coming
at the for the quarter ended uh 30th of
June. uh the redemptions are coming
because uh pension fund managers,
private individuals, wealthy people are
saying, "Can we have our money back?"
So, what they're doing, they're they're
basically saying when they've been
lending money to people on a quarter by
quarter basis or year-by-year basis,
when those loans reach maturity, they're
saying, "Sorry, uh we can't renew your
loan." Now, what does that mean for all
these small businesses, medium-sized
businesses who've been borrowing money?
It basically means that they'll have to
lower their stock levels. They won't be
able to carry as much stock as they used
to carry because their credit lines have
gone down. If they don't carry as much
stock as they used to carry, their
selection of goods or whatever they're
selling will be that much less. And that
means lower sales, uh, which basically
means lower profits. It means they'll
have to lay off some staff and things
like that. So many small businesses,
many medium-sized businesses are going
to struggle with getting credit. They
can't they borrow from the private
credit funds because typically they
can't borrow from the banks. That's
either because the loans are very
complicated or it's because the uh banks
don't trust the creditworthiness of the
of the aura. Why it's really blowing
again. I hope it's not affecting the
microphone. I have to listen to this
afterwards to see if you can hear me.
So what with with the raiding in of the
private credit companies obviously part
of their uh money that they have lent
out to other people come from the banks
themselves a small part and the banks
probably have taken collateral. Now what
happens when we get to June and they
have to meet all these redemption
requests. Well first of all we're going
to see a lot of gating. Gating means
they tell you you can have some of your
money back. Uh often the rule is 5% of
the of the value of the fund. So you can
have 5% of your money back. You might
have to wait 20 quarters to get your
full money back. Well, uh that's a
that's a lot of years.
It's five years basically in a worst
case scenario.
So we're going to have the banks have
lent money to these private credit
funds. So what does this mean? the banks
will perhaps be also saying perhaps we
don't want to lend you anymore uh
because we see things are there's
problems coming. Uh so you've got the
double whammy of perhaps the banks not
lending money to the private credit
funds and you've got the whammy of the
pension funds high netw worth invest
individuals cashing in their
investments.
Uh which means those private credit
funds cannot lend money. they can't roll
over the loans which are maturing
because they want to be be conserving
cash to meet the 5% or whatever the
gating level is uh at the end of the
June quarter. So that again will be
slowing the economy as these small
businesses won't be able to keep doing
what they've been doing to the same
extent and some of them will fail. Now
what happens when uh if you're a private
credit company and you've got to meet
redemptions? Well, what do you sell? You
sell the most liquid assets. You sell
the ones which are easiest to sell. Now
I don't think I'm telling a pension fund
manager anything he doesn't know.
Everybody on the planet knows that when
you have to raise cash, you raise you
sell the most liquid asset first. The
one which you can sell for the best
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