The Next Recession Is Going to Be Brutal. The economy is showing signs of turning ...

Leftists are insane, criticizing Trump for a recession that they're imaging in their heads.
 
Well it would have to be worse because general consensus is that the recession is a short phase and things rebound in a short period of time. The amount of time and how wide spread is it is significant factors that come into play. So Town C could be in a recession whereas Town D is not

Still it has to continuous with multiple recession hitting in a row that spread to other areas

Thus depression is defined as a serious of recessions that happen for a longer period of time (the great depression lasted 10 year according to economist) which by the definition is a serious of recessions

Also the number of people in unemployment based on a percentage (30 percent) factors into the equation.and GDP reaches a certain number.

So if some say as you do that there still in a recession since 2008 then we would be in a depression

And no one says that

Recession do happen and it could be very localized but it does not mean the whole country is in a recession

The great depression is said to have had 12 million unemployed with a 25 percent unemployment rate

In the great repression it got no hire than 9 % and by 2016 it was 4.7% and
GDP had similar numbers

No way that the recession is still gone on to the point that it will effect national numbers.

Even if town c had a high unemployment rate it still is nowhere near depression levels

So to sum it up a depression is considered a serious of recession that hit for a significant amount of time

If US has 30 percent unemployment rate under Obama

yeah then Donald Duck could have been elected president for life

so in simpler terms the posting of a speed limit
once a driver reaches a certain speed then its defined as speeding

Now you can get away with speeding but if a cop see ya then you will have to explain to the officer why you were speeding

but but officer, if it was 1930 then it wouldn't be speeding

Thus I can see why you would support the ideal that the recession is still ongoing because it would bolster your initial claim

The currency correction is ongoing these 12 years hence.

Jo
The inflation rate, overall, looks pretty stable over the last 35 years

fredgraph.png

The consumer price index flattened at the end of Obama's tenure and kicked up again during Trump's tenure.

Consumer price inflation during 2 years of Trump's tenure is up 5.5% which is probably more than wages have risen.

Donald Trump and his family should empty their pockets before they are evicted from the White House.

Federal debt is rising at 2.5x the annual GDP rise during Donald Trump's tenure.

Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average

Consumer price inflation during 2 years of Trump's tenure is up 5.5% which is probably more than wages have risen.

Wages rose more than inflation.


According to this since 1998 the American economy looks pretty shotty.

Wage Growth Tracker - Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Capitalism is collapsing, just like Communism did.
If you think you can find better wage growth somewhere other than America, and that is your key goal, you should go there.
 
The consumer price index flattened at the end of Obama's tenure and kicked up again during Trump's tenure.

Consumer price inflation during 2 years of Trump's tenure is up 5.5% which is probably more than wages have risen.

Donald Trump and his family should empty their pockets before they are evicted from the White House.

Federal debt is rising at 2.5x the annual GDP rise during Donald Trump's tenure.

Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average

Consumer price inflation during 2 years of Trump's tenure is up 5.5% which is probably more than wages have risen.

Wages rose more than inflation.

Not true. Minimum wages are rising and this skews the data. The middle class wage is stagnant and the wage scales are being compressed from the bottom.

Minimum wages are rising and this skews the data.

The bottom 2% of the pay scale isn't skewing anything.

Hmm, higher wages are pretty worthless if everything costs more at a similar rate.

July in Trump’s Economy: Real Wages Fell, Consumer Prices Rose, More Workers Laid Off - Democrats
Under Trump, Wage gains are finally outpacing inflation.

fredgraph.png

You willfully disregarded the fact that working hours for many people were reduced to counter any meager increase they managed to acquire.
 
Well it would have to be worse because general consensus is that the recession is a short phase and things rebound in a short period of time. The amount of time and how wide spread is it is significant factors that come into play. So Town C could be in a recession whereas Town D is not

Still it has to continuous with multiple recession hitting in a row that spread to other areas

Thus depression is defined as a serious of recessions that happen for a longer period of time (the great depression lasted 10 year according to economist) which by the definition is a serious of recessions

Also the number of people in unemployment based on a percentage (30 percent) factors into the equation.and GDP reaches a certain number.

So if some say as you do that there still in a recession since 2008 then we would be in a depression

And no one says that

Recession do happen and it could be very localized but it does not mean the whole country is in a recession

The great depression is said to have had 12 million unemployed with a 25 percent unemployment rate

In the great repression it got no hire than 9 % and by 2016 it was 4.7% and
GDP had similar numbers

No way that the recession is still gone on to the point that it will effect national numbers.

Even if town c had a high unemployment rate it still is nowhere near depression levels

So to sum it up a depression is considered a serious of recession that hit for a significant amount of time

If US has 30 percent unemployment rate under Obama

yeah then Donald Duck could have been elected president for life

so in simpler terms the posting of a speed limit
once a driver reaches a certain speed then its defined as speeding

Now you can get away with speeding but if a cop see ya then you will have to explain to the officer why you were speeding

but but officer, if it was 1930 then it wouldn't be speeding

Thus I can see why you would support the ideal that the recession is still ongoing because it would bolster your initial claim

The currency correction is ongoing these 12 years hence.

Jo
The inflation rate, overall, looks pretty stable over the last 35 years

fredgraph.png

The consumer price index flattened at the end of Obama's tenure and kicked up again during Trump's tenure.

Consumer price inflation during 2 years of Trump's tenure is up 5.5% which is probably more than wages have risen.

Donald Trump and his family should empty their pockets before they are evicted from the White House.

Federal debt is rising at 2.5x the annual GDP rise during Donald Trump's tenure.

Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average

Consumer price inflation during 2 years of Trump's tenure is up 5.5% which is probably more than wages have risen.

Wages rose more than inflation.


According to this since 1998 the American economy looks pretty shotty.

Wage Growth Tracker - Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Capitalism is collapsing, just like Communism did.

Sure thing, Ivan.
 
Trump's recession is gearing up.

U.S. Stocks Drop as Treasurys Flash Warning Signal

"Trade tensions between the U.S. and China, uncertainty about the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate policy and signs of slowing economic growth have spurred weeks of turbulence that have rippled through the stock, bond and currency markets. In the Treasury market, the yield on the U.S. 30-year Treasury note touched 2.018%, below the previous intraday low of 2.094% in July 2016, according to Tradeweb.

Meanwhile, yields on the 10-year Treasury note briefly fell below two-year yields for the first time since 2007. This kind of inversion between short and long-term yields is viewed by many as a strong signal that a recession is likely in the future.""

The federal government has broken yet another record for how much money it's spending
"The federal government has spent more real money in the first seven months of this fiscal year than any other year in U.S. history, according to the latest monthly statement by the Department of Treasury. The previous record was set in 2011, when the U.S. was recuperating from the Great Recession."

Mark this up as another failure of Trump's, so many now.
Trump's "failure"? U6 is at 25 year lows, wages are up nicely, inflation is nicely modest, and the Stock Market is UP almost 3,000 points since you posted this.

Santa Claus Rally Here We Come!

Up almost 30% since last Christmas Eve. Trump's gonna win This War On Christmas!

fredgraph.png
This U-6? The one that's been dropping for 10 years now? What did Trump do to lower it?

latest_numbers_LNS13327709_2009_2019_all_period_M11_data.gif
 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.

  • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
  • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.

  • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.

  • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.

  • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
  • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.

 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.




    • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
    • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.




    • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.




    • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.




    • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
    • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.
 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.




    • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
    • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.




    • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.




    • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.




    • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
    • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.




    • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
    • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.




    • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.




    • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.




    • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
    • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
While Obama was president.
 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.




    • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
    • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.




    • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.




    • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.




    • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
    • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
While Obama was president.

I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.




    • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
    • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.




    • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.




    • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.




    • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
    • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
While Obama was president.

I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
:lmao:
 

Dow Hits 22nd Record Close in 2019 — Rank-and-File Workers Get Biggest Pay Raises in More than a Decade

The U.S. economy is ending 2019 by racking up more and more historic wins for American workers in the form of higher wages, surging stock markets, and record-high optimism.

Every Democrat running for president needs to be asked why President Trump’s policies—which they claimed would lead to “Armageddon”—are delivering historic wins for U.S. workers.

A new Federal Reserve report finds wages for low-income U.S. workers grew 4.5% over the past year, and wages for low-skill workers are accelerating at rates not seen in a decade.




    • Wall Street Journal: “Pay for the bottom 25% of wage earners rose 4.5% in November from a year earlier… Wages for low-skilled workers have accelerated since early 2018, and last month matched the pace of high-skill workers for the first time since 2010.”
    • Axios: “It indicates that the benefits of a tightening labor market and a time of historically low unemployment rates are finally being passed along to most work.”
Optimism and confidence in President Trump’s economy pushed the stock market to new record highs and “within reach” of its best performance in nearly two decades.




    • CNBC: “Stocks notched fresh records on Friday as year-end optimism continued to drive the rally… A year-end rally in December has already ushered the U.S. equity indexes to historic levels and within reach of the market’s best calendar year in more than two decades.”
Confidence in the U.S. economy led to “phenomenal” record-high sales on the pre-Christmas ‘Super Saturday’ shopping day, the biggest in U.S. history.




    • New York Post: “Democrats have been warning of a recession, but evidence that the economy remains strong keeps growing. The latest: Super Saturday… logged the highest level of sales in US retail history. American consumers spent $34.4 billion on Dec. 21, a phenomenal figure that exceeded expectations and easily broke last year’s Super Saturday record.”
Polls confirm that overwhelming majorities of voters are optimistic about the surging U.S. economy.




    • A recent CNN poll found that 76% of voters rate the economy as “very” or “somewhat” good, the highest ratings since 2001.
    • A recent Quinnipiac poll found 73% of Americans rate the economy as “good” or “excellent,” the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
While Obama was president.

I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
:lmao:

I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
 
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
While Obama was president.

I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
:lmao:

I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif
 
Um.... the Dow was at a record high when Obama left office.

Not quite.
But it did rally 1500 points between Trump's election and his inauguration.
While Obama was president.

I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
:lmao:

I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif

The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win.

It's funny when the market thinks Hillary would be better than Obama, eh?
 
While Obama was president.

I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
:lmao:

I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif

The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win.

It's funny when the market thinks Hillary would be better than Obama, eh?
LOL

To clarify... you think that. The market didn't.
 
I know, the market jumped 8 percent because they knew Trump was replacing Obama.
:lmao:

I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif

The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win.

It's funny when the market thinks Hillary would be better than Obama, eh?
LOL

To clarify... you think that. The market didn't.

It would have been difficult for Hillary to be worse than Obama.
 

I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif

The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win.

It's funny when the market thinks Hillary would be better than Obama, eh?
LOL

To clarify... you think that. The market didn't.

It would have been difficult for Hillary to be worse than Obama.
LOL

Well there's your delusion ... and then there's the Dow tripling under Obama after bottoming out from Bush's Great Recession.
 
I get it, you think the market rallied because of all the awesome things Obama was going to do in his last
few months in office. LOL!
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif

The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win.

It's funny when the market thinks Hillary would be better than Obama, eh?
LOL

To clarify... you think that. The market didn't.

It would have been difficult for Hillary to be worse than Obama.
LOL

Well there's your delusion ... and then there's the Dow tripling under Obama after bottoming out from Bush's Great Recession.

Well there's your delusion ..

Yeah, Hillary would probably be worse.

and then there's the Dow tripling under Obama

The Dow has done better since Trump was elected than it averaged under Obama.
 
Trump's recession is gearing up.

U.S. Stocks Drop as Treasurys Flash Warning Signal

"Trade tensions between the U.S. and China, uncertainty about the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate policy and signs of slowing economic growth have spurred weeks of turbulence that have rippled through the stock, bond and currency markets. In the Treasury market, the yield on the U.S. 30-year Treasury note touched 2.018%, below the previous intraday low of 2.094% in July 2016, according to Tradeweb.

Meanwhile, yields on the 10-year Treasury note briefly fell below two-year yields for the first time since 2007. This kind of inversion between short and long-term yields is viewed by many as a strong signal that a recession is likely in the future.""

The federal government has broken yet another record for how much money it's spending
"The federal government has spent more real money in the first seven months of this fiscal year than any other year in U.S. history, according to the latest monthly statement by the Department of Treasury. The previous record was set in 2011, when the U.S. was recuperating from the Great Recession."

Mark this up as another failure of Trump's, so many now.
Have you seen the stock market since you posted this bullshit?
 
The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win. That was due to her non-policies too, right?
icon_rolleyes.gif

The Dow jumped by nearly 450 points in the days leading up to the election while Hillary was predicted to win.

It's funny when the market thinks Hillary would be better than Obama, eh?
LOL

To clarify... you think that. The market didn't.

It would have been difficult for Hillary to be worse than Obama.
LOL

Well there's your delusion ... and then there's the Dow tripling under Obama after bottoming out from Bush's Great Recession.

Well there's your delusion ..

Yeah, Hillary would probably be worse.

and then there's the Dow tripling under Obama

The Dow has done better since Trump was elected than it averaged under Obama.
And by difficult to be "worse than Obama," you mean the guy who was president while the Dow tripled.
 

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