"Tech Prophet" Who Predicted the iPhone Now Predicts...

George Gilder - who predicted the iPhone 17 years early and gave Reagan the first microchip - is making his boldest call yet. He says an American nanotech "super-convergence" could mint more millionaires than any event in recent memory. He's found 3 stocks set to benefit before November 18's bombshell.

Trump says inflation isn't his No. 1 issue. So what will happen to consumer prices?

CHRIS MEGERIAN and JOSH BOAK
January 26, 2025

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two months ago, in his first network television interview after the election, Donald Trump said he owed his victory to Americans' anger over immigration and inflation, specifically the rising cost of groceries.

"When you buy apples, when you buy bacon, when you buy eggs, they would double and triple the price over a short period of time," he told NBC's "Meet the Press. "And I won an election based on that. We're going to bring those prices way down."

But in Trump's first week back in the White House, there was little in his initial blitz of executive orders that directly tackled those prices, besides directing federal agencies to start "pursuing appropriate actions." He is taking steps to lower energy costs, something that Trump hopes will have ripple effects throughout the economy. Otherwise, his focus has been clamping down on immigration, which he described as his "No. 1 issue" shortly after taking the oath of office.

"They all said inflation was the No. 1 issue. I said, 'I disagree,'" Trump said. "I talked about inflation too, but how many times can you say that an apple has doubled in cost?"

Trump is banking on voters giving him a pass and continuing to blame former President Joe Biden for high prices. The Republican's comments reflect the reality that presidents have almost no levers to reduce inflation quickly without causing collateral damage to other parts of the economy.

There is more that Trump can do on energy. He is pushing to reduce regulations and increase the amount of land available for drilling. He is trying to persuade domestic and foreign oil producers to potentially sacrifice their own profits by pumping more.

During a rally Saturday in Las Vegas, Trump went after his Democratic predecessor for allowing prices to rise under his watch, and promised to take care of the problem quickly.

"When I think of Biden, I think of incompetence and inflation," Trump said.

Inflation peaked at a 9.1% annual rate in June 2022 during worldwide supply chain problems after the economic shock of the coronavirus pandemic. Overall consumer prices have fallen since then, but have ticked up in recent months, from 2.4% in September to 2.9% in December, the latest figures available. Economists have warned that Trump's plans for tariffs and tax cuts could create new inflationary pressures and keep interest rates elevated.

Vice President JD Vance, in an interview with CBS' "Face the Nation" airing Sunday, defended the White House's work so far.

"Prices are going to come down, but it's going to take a little bit of time, right?" he said. He added, "Rome wasn't built in a day."

Trump's relative shift away from addressing costs could create an opening for Democrats to say he is not helping working-class voters, hoping that argument could offer the party a path back to power in Washington.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said Trump preferred to distract people from inflation with talk of adding Greenland to the United States or seizing the Panama Canal.

"It's catnip and it causes everybody to stop paying attention to their actual economic agenda, which has nothing to do with lowering costs and everything to do with rigging the economy to help the Mar-a-Lago crowd," he said.

During an interview on Fox News this past week, host Sean Hannity struggled to get Trump to focus on the economy.

"Let me get to the economy," Hannity said at one point. "I'm running out of time."

"The economy is going to do great," Trump insisted.

When Trump did talk about inflation in the interview, he noted how low it was during his first term and insisted prices would not have jumped up if he had president after the 2020 election, even though higher inflation was a global trend coming out of the pandemic.

It is not clear how Trump would persuade oil companies and foreign countries to quickly increase production, possibly costing them profits.

The Energy Information Administration reported that domestic oil production has grown at an annual rate of roughly 8.4% over the past two years to an average of nearly 13.5 million barrels a day in October. Some Trump aides suggest that could increase by an additional 3 million barrels a day.

It would be difficult to achieve that much additional production in a single year without serious changes to the global market. The International Energy Agency estimates that the oil supplied to the entire world will increase by 1.8 million barrels per day to 104.7 million barrels a day. He also has expressed opposition to climate-friendlier wind and solar energy, putting more pressure on the U.S. economy to rely on fossil fuels.

EJ Antoni, a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington, said the potential increase in energy production under Trump would ultimately flow through the economy in the form of lower prices.

"If you're going to bring down the cost of energy, you're going to bring down the cost of all kinds of goods and services," he said.

But there is a risk that some of Trump's plans taken as a whole could raise -- not reduce -- prices. Deporting migrants who are in the United States illegally could deprive companies of lower wage workers. The cost of tariffs, which are taxes placed on foreign imports, could be passed on to consumers.

Trump said that his strategy also might ultimately involve publicly pressuring the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, saying in Davos that he would "demand" lower rates from central banks. The Fed sees its political independence as key for making tough choices to stabilize prices. Biden saw the independence as worth protecting, whereas Trump sees it as problematic.

The Fed raised its benchmark rates starting in 2022 to make it more expensive to borrow and succeeded enough in reducing inflationary pressures that it could trim rates late last year. Trump believes that greater oil production will put him in a position to tell the Fed what to do.

Asked in the Oval Office if he expects the Fed to listen to him, Trump simply said, "Yeah."

Continue Reading...

Popular

Schwab: Half Of US Investors May Ditch Other Assets For ETFs — 4 Funds To Watch

Nearly half of ETF investors could go all-ETF within five years, Schwab says. Here's how they're building portfolios with funds like ITOT, BND, and XLK.

Trump White House Clamps Down on Press Access

White House restricts reporter access to West Wing Room 140; NSC cites sensitive material, echoing Pentagon curbs, raising press concerns.

Forget Amazon's 1997 IPO... This Could Be 287 Times Bigger - Ad

Since Amazon's IPO in 1997, it climbed enough to turn $100 into $250,000. Now, one man says Elon Musk could be gearing up to take his internet satellite giant public... in what Fortune magazine says will be the biggest IPO in history! James Altucher is sharing how ANYONE can get a pre-IPO stake... with as little as $100!

UPS distribution hub in Louisville has 300 flights per day. What to know

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A at a Louisville, Kentucky airport where the company operates its largest package delivery hub.

The Tesla Shock Nobody Sees Coming - Ad

While headlines scream "Tesla is doomed"...Jeff Brown has uncovered a revolutionary AI breakthrough buried inside Tesla's labs. One that is helping AI escape from our computer screens and manifest itself here in the real world all while creating a 25,000% growth market explosion starting as early as January 29.

Bill.Com Scales Payments Footprint With 33 Million Transactions

Bill Holdings, Inc. (BILL) reports Q1 fiscal 2026 results, beating analyst estimates with adjusted EPS of 61c and revenue of $395.74M.

Why Are 21 Billionaires Moving Their Money ASAP? - Ad

One of the biggest stock market events in 25 years is rapidly unfolding... The economist who predicted the 2008 Financial Crisis says it will be: "The Biggest Crash of Our Lifetime." Starting November 19 it could cut the entire tech marketing by HALF.

Dave Ramsey Reveals Why Millionaires Crush Mortgages Early

Dave Ramsey advises buying a home with cash, citing his firm's survey of millionaires who often retire their mortgages in about 10 years.

Another Gold High? Here's the Move Wall Street Is Missing ... - Ad

Gold just surged past $4,200, up 45% in a year - but Sean Brodrick says $6,900 could be next. History shows when gold booms, one hidden play has delivered far bigger gains - 21x, 49x, even 1,386x. The same strategy once handed 26,000% profits. And Sean says it's back on the table now.

Metals... Not Missles... Is the New Arms Race - Ad

China and Russia control 70% of the world's critical minerals, giving them leverage over the West. One N. American discovery could help shift that balance by developing the metals essential for defense systems.

Pete Hegseth Says War Department Preparing For 'Action' In Nigeria

U.S. Defense Secretary Hegseth agrees with Trump's order to prepare for action in Nigeria to stop the killing of Christians by Islamist militants.

Wall Street Enters Its Strongest Month: These 7 Stocks Often Crush It

November is historically Wall Street's strongest month. These 7 stocks often delivered standout gains in recent decades.

America's Defense Future Starts Underground - Ad

A N. American metals project just caught the attention of Rio Tinto - a mining giant. With four projects in key regions, this firm is aligned with Washington's push to rebuild the defense-metal supply chain.

Investigators look into 'repeating bell' heard during takeoff of UPS cargo plane that crashed

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A repeating bell sounded in the cockpit for 25 seconds as pilots tried to control a UPS cargo plane that caught fire, had an engine fall off and this week in Louisville, Kentucky, a National Transportation Safety Board member said Friday.

Trump Signs Law to Launch Dollar 2.0 - Ad

Trump just signed law S.1582, unleashing the biggest money shift in 100+ years. For the first time since 1913, private firms - not the Fed - can mint a "Dollar 2.0." Treasury says it could drain $6.6T from banks and pay 10X current savings rates. Early investors in minting firms could see 40X returns by 2032.

Britain's Treasury chief prepares the ground for a tax-hiking budget

LONDON (AP) — U.K. on Tuesday signaled she will raise taxes in her budget this month, arguing that the economy is sicker than the government knew when it took office last year.

The "Mar-A-Lago Accord" Is Now Underway - Ad

The global order is in chaos. And according to 40-year market veteran Dr. David Eifrig, the biggest controlled demolition of the old monetary order in history could now be here, too. That means if you don't take action today, your wealth could decline by 40%... (Yes, even your cash savings.)

Trump Touts 'Really Good Deal' With China As US Stock Futures Rally — Dow Up 91 Points While Gold, US Dollar Remain Flat

U.S. stock futures are surging on Sunday evening, following greater clarity and easing trade tensions between the United States and China over the weekend, following the summit between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in South Korea last week.

Japan's Toyota, hurt by President Trump's tariffs, reports a drop in profit

TOKYO (AP) — Toyota reported a 7% year-on-year drop in its profit for April-September on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump’s tariffs slammed Japanese automakers, but it raised its forecast for the full fiscal year.

Nvidia CEO: E.I. Will Be as Common as Cars Today - Ad

E.I. isn't science fiction anymore. It's already here. And one little-known company is quietly supplying the systems behind it. This stock is still under Wall Street's radar... but not for long. You'll get the name, the ticker, and the full thesis inside.

Tempus AI Stock (TEM) Slides 6% Overnight: Here's Why The Stock Is Trending

Tempus AI shares fell 6.02% in after-hours trading Tuesday following its third-quarter earnings report.

"Tech Prophet" Who Predicted the iPhone Now Predicts... - Ad

George Gilder - who predicted the iPhone 17 years early and gave Reagan the first microchip - is making his boldest call yet. He says an American nanotech "super-convergence" could mint more millionaires than any event in recent memory. He's found 3 stocks set to benefit before November 18's bombshell.

Japanese game maker Nintendo reports zooming sales and profit on its hit Switch 2 machine

TOKYO (AP) — Japanese video-game maker Nintendo’s net profit jumped 85% in April-September from the year before, as its sales more than doubled following the launch of its hit Switch 2 console in June, the company said Tuesday.

African Union Rejects Trump's Claims Of Targeted Killings In Nigeria, Warns Against Military Action

The African Union rejected U.S. claims that Nigeria targets Christians, emphasizing the country's constitutional religious freedom and sovereignty.

Forget Amazon's 1997 IPO... This Could Be 287 Times Bigger - Ad

Since Amazon's IPO in 1997, it climbed enough to turn $100 into $250,000. Now, one man says Elon Musk could be gearing up to take his internet satellite giant public... in what Fortune magazine says will be the biggest IPO in history! James Altucher is sharing how ANYONE can get a pre-IPO stake... with as little as $100!

Average US long-term mortgage rate ticks up to 6.22% after four straight weekly declines

The average rate on a 30-year U.S. mortgage ticked up for the first time in five weeks after falling to its lowest level in more than a year last week.

Hillary Clinton Says Trump Taking A 'Break' From Gold-And-Marble Interior Renovations To Defy Court Order On SNAP: 'Nero Would Be Proud'

Hillary Clinton criticizes Trump for withholding SNAP benefits during shutdown, accusing him of defying court order and being indifferent to public suffering. Democrats blast Trump for creating hunger crisis and breaking the law.

The Tesla Shock Nobody Sees Coming - Ad

While headlines scream "Tesla is doomed"...Jeff Brown has uncovered a revolutionary AI breakthrough buried inside Tesla's labs. One that is helping AI escape from our computer screens and manifest itself here in the real world all while creating a 25,000% growth market explosion starting as early as January 29.

Spotify Premium Subscribers Boost Q3 Revenue, Eyes Strong Holiday Quarter

Spotify (NYSE: SPOT) shares rose after reporting better-than-expected Q3 results, with revenue of $4.99B and 17M new MAUs.

Rivian Automotive CEO Gets An Elon Musk-Style Pay Raise

Rivian CEO's new pay plan could be worth up to $4.6 billion over the next ten years.

Why Are 21 Billionaires Moving Their Money ASAP? - Ad

One of the biggest stock market events in 25 years is rapidly unfolding... The economist who predicted the 2008 Financial Crisis says it will be: "The Biggest Crash of Our Lifetime." Starting November 19 it could cut the entire tech marketing by HALF.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright systemtrading.ca
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service