Peter Schiff

Peter Schiff
Peter David Schiffis an American stockbroker, author, and one-time Senate candidate. He has appeared as a guest on numerous financial television shows and has been quoted in major print publications as a financial analyst. He is host of The Peter Schiff Show, an audio show broadcast on terrestrial and Internet radio, and he was formerly host of an Internet podcast called Wall Street Unspun, now archived as podcasts...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBusinessman
Date of Birth23 March 1963
CountryUnited States of America
All those commodities are going to have to rise in value as we are in short supply and we are printing too much money.
Printing money is merely taxation in another form.
At some point, the dollar has to give. You can't just keep printing money, and monetizing debt, and buying bonds, without the dollar imploding.
It is production that creates purchasing power, not the printing press!
Printing money is merely taxation in another form. Rather than robbing citizens of their money, government robs their money of its purchasing power.
Printing money creates inflation, which weakens an economy. Unfortunately, this kind of common-sense thinking never seems to penetrate academic circles.
Currencies are losing value and will continue to do so at a rapid pace.
There's no question it will keep rising. The bull markets keep the nervous people out of the market.
You are going to lose wealth in U.S. stocks. My advice is to avoid them if at all possible.
Wall Street is in trouble because Main Street is broke.
The left-wing agenda wants us to think that the reason there was a depression was because the government didn't do anything. That's not true.
When the dollar collapses, it's not doing it in a vacuum. If the dollar loses value, it's doing so relative to some other currency. So the purchasing power that we lose, somebody else gets.
My mother always taught me that two wrongs don't make a right. We shouldn't bail out Wall Street. We shouldn't bail out Detroit. It will cost the economy more than the cost of the bailout which is more than the politicians think. We'll run into the hundred of millions to prop these companies up.
We think all the issues brought up on the federal side has already come up in the state side.