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Stansberry Investor Hour

'Nothing Is Written'... Survive in Advance

Stansberry Investor Hour

Stansberry Research

America, How, To, Crash, Money, Learn, Stansberry, Income, Research, Debt, Stocks, Porter, Business, Realestate, Banking, Investment, American, Investing, Invest, Howtosave, Sjuggerud, Ferris, Eifrig, Jubilee, Buck, Sexton, Market, Bonds, Churchouse, Savings, Options, Lashmet

4.4677 Ratings

🗓️ 26 September 2022

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today's Stansberry Investor Hour guest is the man behind a theory that Dan says "scares the crap out of me when I think of foreign markets"...

We're thrilled to have Brent Johnson, the creator of the famous "dollar milkshake theory," on this week's episode.

A seasoned Wall Street veteran with decades of experience in finance and money management, Brent is currently the CEO of Puerto Rico-based Santiago Capital, a wealth management firm focusing on macroeconomic trends. 

Brent says most folks who have read or heard about his dollar milkshake theory think it's just about the U.S. dollar going higher. But he says there's more to this narrative... He explains how the Federal Reserve's switch to quantitative tightening is like a straw sucking up liquidity from markets worldwide – strengthening the dollar. And it's a story that he says is playing out right now, with a soaring greenback and other currencies in a tailspin...

After the global financial crisis, governments and monetary authorities around the world were forced to provide incredible amounts of liquidity... They created this big pool of liquidity, and they kept doubling down on it and doubling down on it...

The world mixed this big milkshake of liquidity and capital that needs to go somewhere. But as we get further into this, it's going to cause a global sovereign debt crisis because the debts have just gotten too big. A lot of that capital is going to flow into the U.S. dollar – or U.S. dollar assets – and deprive that liquidity to the rest of the world.

As the dollar gets stronger, that attracts more capital and it also puts more pressure on the rest of the world – which makes the U.S. even look more attractive on a relative basis and perpetuates more capital flows. The U.S. dollar is going to "drink the world's milkshake."

 With another clever analogy, Brent also explains just how much power the buck lends to America. There's a "rigged" poker game playing out where the U.S. has the upper hand – and it has the "biggest stack at the table" with its currency. If any of the other countries "wins a big hand and tries to leave," Uncle Sam's "guards" at the door – or the dollar's privilege as the world's reserve currency – are ready to rob them of their profits. However, he says that the greenback could eventually plummet and end up in the same trouble that other currencies are undergoing... ultimately leaving gold as the "last man standing" at the table.

 Brent also shares which of his favorite movies served as the inspiration for his theory. And his takeaway for surviving this challenging economic environment should resonate with longtime Investor Hour listeners... It's all about preparing for even the most unthinkable outcomes and building a well-diversified portfolio – or, as Dan always says, "Prepare, don't predict." And this time, Brent's cinematic muse is Lawrence of Arabia... 

Be prepared. Nothing is certain. "Nothing is written." Any of these ideas that you have that you think are absolutely foolproof, I would throw them in the trash can. Just open your eyes. Be ready for anything.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the Stansberry Investor Hour.

0:08.7

I'm your host, Dan Ferris.

0:10.6

I'm also the editor of Extreme Value published by Stansberry Research.

0:14.8

Today we'll talk with Brent Johnson.

0:17.2

See?

0:17.5

I told you last week we're going to get him and we got him.

0:20.1

He'll tell us all about his dollar milkshake theory today in the mailbag today gold again and two questions about last week's interview guest, Joel Littman. And remember, you can call our listener feedback line 800-381-2357. Tell us what's on your mind and hear your voice on the show. For my opening rant this

0:39.3

week, my number one takeaway from the latest Federal Reserve meeting, that and more right now

0:46.4

on the Stansberry Investor Hour.

0:53.4

Couple of things today.

0:55.6

First of all, let's talk about the Federal Reserve meeting.

0:58.8

So what I noticed, there are probably a lot of things to discuss, but I'm just going to give

1:03.0

you my number one takeaway.

1:05.1

What I noticed was the very first question after Jerome Powell made his remarks in the press conference

1:14.0

at 2.30 Eastern on Wednesday, the very first question was about what things will, I don't

1:23.6

remember the precise question, but it doesn't matter because it was about how things will

1:27.2

look when the Fed stops hiking rates and starts cutting and what that'll be like and what they need to

1:32.6

see or something like that. And I thought that Jerome Powell's answer was really interesting

1:40.3

because he said, look, my comments from my Jackson Hole speech, you know, that's still the way I'm

1:48.4

thinking. It was like he was saying, look, get rate cuts, get, you know, easy monetary policy

1:57.8

and rate cuts and anything like it out of your head, the beatings will continue

2:03.5

until morale improves. He's really, really trying to convince us that they're serious. And I'm

...

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