The 2026 economic crisis mirrors the structural conditions that preceded the Great Depression, including a negative US Treasury balance sheet ($41.72 trillion), 722 banks with losses exceeding 50% of capital, $4.6 billion trapped in private credit funds, and a job market that just went negative for the first time since the pandemic. The crisis is compounded by the largest oil supply disruption in history (Strait of Hormuz closure, oil at $126/barrel), creating stagflation where rising prices coincide with economic contraction. Consumer debt has reached $18.8 trillion with 111 million Americans carrying credit card balances, and 40% cannot pay off their bills in full. The Federal Reserve is frozen between inflation and recession, with no fiscal room to respond due to $39 trillion in national debt. This represents the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression, with every structural condition present simultaneously.
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People Don't Realize This Is The Worst Collapse Since The Great DepressionHinzugefügt:
You are poorer today than you were 3 weeks ago and you do not even know by how much. Go check right now. Open your 401k. Open your bank account. Look at what you spent on groceries last week versus what the same groceries cost you a month ago. Look at what you paid at the pump this morning. Now ask yourself why nobody on television is saying the word that every economist in the room is whispering to each other when the cameras turn off. Depression, not recession. Depression. Because what is happening to the American economy right now is not a dip and it is not a correction and it is not a rough quarter that sorts itself out by Christmas. The United States Treasury looked at its own balance sheet last week and the number came back negative 41.72 trillion. The government of the United States of America is officially mathematically by its own accounting insolvent. Fortune published it and nobody blinked. While that headline was being ignored, Wall Street quietly locked $4.6 billion of American investor money inside funds that will not return it. They shut the gates. Your money is on the other side.
722 banks are sitting on losses so catastrophic that the Federal Reserve had to pump $18.5 billion in emergency cash into the system overnight just to keep them standing. That was the fourth largest emergency injection since co and the man who saw 2008 coming before anyone else. Michael Bur posted a warning last week that said this one is going to be worse. The last time he said something like that, the world economy came apart at the seams. I am going to show you something in this video that I have never shown on this channel before.
I went through every major economic indicator in this country and I lined them up against the exact same indicators from the years before the Great Depression. The stock market bubble, the record consumer debt, the wealth concentration at the top, the banking system sitting on hidden losses, the government unable to respond, the external shock that breaks what was already cracking. They match not loosely, not kind of, they match. And on top of all of it, we have added something that 1929 did not have. The largest oil supply disruption in the history of the world. Oil at $126 a barrel. Diesel above $5. The straight of Hormuz shut down for the first time in history. And the International Energy Agency calling it, and I quote, the greatest energy security challenge in history. This video is about your money, your job, your retirement, your kids' future, and why everything you are feeling right now, that not in your stomach, that voice in the back of your head that keeps saying something is really wrong. That feeling is not anxiety. It is pattern recognition. And by the time this video is over, you are going to know exactly what pattern your brain has been trying to warn you about.
Let's get into it. The job market just flipped negative for the first time since the pandemic and nobody is connecting it to what comes next. All right, I need you to pay very close attention to what I am about to say because this number right here changed everything and most people scrolled right past it. The United States economy lost 92,000 jobs in February 2026. Lost.
Not gained 92,000 fewer than expected.
Lost. Economists were forecasting the economy would add 55,000 jobs. Instead, it went negative by 92,000.
That is a swing of nearly 150, zero jobs from what Wall Street was expecting. And it is the sixth decline in payrolls since January 2025. Unemployment ticked up to 4.4%.
And according to Challenger, Gray, and Christmas, the outplacement firm that tracks corporate layoff announcements, US-based employers have announced 1.2 2 million job cuts so far in 2025 and into 2026 with over ones 621 companies announcing mass layoffs since January 1st of this year alone. That is not a cooling labor market. That is a labor market in freef fall. And here is what makes this so much worse than the headline suggests. Freight waves reported that logistics, manufacturing, and supply chain firms started 2026 with a surge of layoffs, facility closures, and bankruptcy filings affecting more than two 200 workers in the first week alone. UPS announced it is eliminating 30,000 jobs and closing 24 facilities.
Meta is carrying out 8,000 layoffs in its first wave, 10% of its global workforce. Cisco cut 4,000. Nike cut 775. Macy's is shutting down multiple facilities and cutting over 1,000 workers. CBS News Radio, which has been on the air for 99 years, is shutting down entirely. And across the tech sector, company after company is framing these layoffs as a pivot to AI, which is corporate speak for we figured out how to do your job with software and we do not need you anymore. A software QA manager with 30 years of experience said publicly that for the first time in his entire career. He is nervous because AI is now doing his job from start to finish and he just prompts it. A Microsoft executive told employees that within 3 to 5 years most of them will be without jobs and the job listings that do exist are increasingly fake. Ghost jobs postings that companies put up with no intention of filling. either to collect resumes for future use or to give the appearance of growth to investors. People are submitting 200 applications and not getting a single response. A dental billing specialist with 3 years of experience, a certification, and a 4GPA walked into an interview where the posting said $25 an hour, and was told the actual pay was $15. A woman with 19 years at the same company was fired on Christmas Day after being forced to work with a skeleton crew. and no holiday pay. She is now in training as a server at another restaurant. A doctor at UCSF was let go along with thousands of other VA physicians and nurses, and the people who still have jobs are being told it is like the Hunger Games. A manager at a major tech company literally used those words in a year-end review. The conference board just revised its GDP growth forecast down to 1.6% for 2026, well below 2%. Gary Schilling, the legendary economist who called the 1969 recession, told Business Insider that a US recession is almost inevitable by year end, and that a stock market decline of 20 to 30% is probably in the cards. Capital expenditures growth collapsed from 24% at its pandemic peak to just 3.9% by end of 2025. And deote warned that consumer spending which accounts for nearly twothirds of GDP has barely grown since the summer of 2022.
So you have a job market that just went negative. Mass layoffs accelerating across every sector. AI replacing workers faster than anyone predicted.
GDP growth collapsing. Consumer spending flat. And the guy who has been right about recessions for 50 years saying this one is almost inevitable. That is not a rough patch. That is the beginning of something that looks a lot like what happened in 1929.
And the reason nobody is making that comparison yet is because they are still looking at the stock market and telling themselves it will bounce back. It always does, right? Businesses are dying at a rate we have not seen since the financial crisis and the war just made it 10 times worse. Here is a number that should stop every small business owner in America in their tracks. Consumer bankruptcies in February 2026 hit 43,225 individual filings. That is up 13% from February 2025.
Total bankruptcy filings in 2025 reached 565,759 cases, an 11% increase over 2024.
And 2026 is continuing on that same upward trajectory with double-digit monthly increases across the board. But here is where it gets truly alarming.
Business bankruptcies are climbing even faster. Commercial bankruptcy filings in February 2026 hit 2,666, up 21% from February 2025. Chapter 11 filings, which are the large corporate restructurings, surged 60% year-over-year. And Chapter V small business bankruptcies, are up 91% compared to February 2025.
91% that is not a trend that is an extinction event for small businesses in America and CFACE one of the largest credit insurance companies in the world published a report confirming that US business insolvenies have now risen above prepandemic levels for the first time and that the country has entered what they call insolveny overshoot territory. Their analysis found that demand is no longer solid enough to absorb the growth of production costs and that corporate insolvenies are reacting to cost pressures that have been building gradually with higher input costs and financial costs meeting gradually slowing demand. And they warned that the effects of tariffs are only now starting to show up in corporate bottom lines because US firms have been absorbing the lion's share of those costs. When they stop absorbing, the failures accelerate. And now layer the Iran war on top of all of that.
Diesel above $5 a gallon, oil above $110 a barrel, shipping costs spiking across every supply chain. A Boston College economics professor warned that if oil prices stay elevated for any meaningful period, you will see a persistent cost shock that businesses simply cannot eat anymore. And they have already been eating tariff costs for over a year.
There is almost no margin left to cushion a second shock. Freight waves documented the carnage at the start of 2026 alone. Rail Crew Express laid off 400 workers after losing a major contract with CSX. Avy Food Systems cut 297 jobs in Philadelphia. Packaging Corporation of America shut down a paper machine and cut 200 workers. A 132year-old furniture manufacturer filed for Chapter 11. An Amazon delivery partner laid off 160 drivers overnight.
FedEx cut 89 workers at a single facility in Texas as part of its network 2 reorganization.
And Finance Buzz published a list of 14 major recognizable companies that may not survive 2026, including Walgreens, which reported a net loss of $ 8.6 billion in 2024 and is closing dozens of locations after being acquired by private equity. And here is the dot tail that connects business failures directly to your life. Small businesses employ 46% of the private sector workforce in America. There are 30.7 million of them and 66% of them are currently facing financial challenges.
According to SEMrush, when small businesses die, they do not just disappear. They take jobs with them.
They take local tax revenue with them.
They take the character of your downtown with them. Every boarded up storefront you have driven past in the last year is a data point in this collapse. And the combination of tariff costs they have been absorbing for over a year, plus an energy shock from the Iran war, plus tightening credit conditions, plus slowing consumer demand, is creating a compression that is killing businesses at a rate we have not seen since 2008.
The difference is that in 2008, the government had fiscal room to respond.
Interest rates could be cut to zero.
Stimulus could be deployed. Today, the government is $39 trillion in debt. The Fed is frozen. And the deficit was already $1.9 trillion before the first bomb was dropped. There is no rescue coming this time. And the businesses that are dying right now are the ones that were supposed to be the backbone of the recovery. $4.6 billion of your money is trapped right now in funds that will not let you have it back. And almost nobody knows this is happening.
Bloomberg reported 4 days ago that more than $4.6 $6 billion of investor capital is currently locked behind withdrawal limits across the private credit industry. Investors have tried to pull roughly $13 billion from over a dozen funds this quarter alone and have only been able to access about 2/3 of that amount because the funds are capping withdrawals at 5% of net assets per quarter. Let me say that again so it registers. People put their money into these funds. They want it back and the funds are saying no, not later. Not when the market stabilizes. No, your money is trapped. And the people running these funds include the biggest names on Wall Street. Blackstone saw its $82 billion flagship private credit fund hit with $6.5 billion in redemption requests in the first quarter alone, representing nearly 8% of the entire fund. To stop the bleeding, Blackstone executives had to inject $400 million of their own money just to signal to the market that the fund was not going to collapse.
Black Rockck was forced to gate its $26 billion HPS corporate lending fund after redemption requests surged to 9.3%.
Nearly double the 5% quarterly cap.
Morgan Stanley locked down its $7.8 8 billion North Haven Private Income Fund after investors demanded 10.9% back and the fund could only return 5%. Leaving 54.2% of requested withdrawals trapped inside. Cliffwater imposed curbs after redemptions hit 14%. Blue Owl shut down quarterly redemptions entirely on its OBDCI fund. UBS locked up $469 million in a real estate fund and told investors they could wait up to three years to get their money. An Apollo capped withdrawals after a surge in redemption requests. This is a $3 trillion market, guys. 3 trillion. And Fitch Ratings reported that private credit defaults have surged to a record 9.2%.
CNBC published a piece this week headlined that private credit's zero loss fantasy is coming to an end. and the data firm Robert A. Staner found that redemptions as a share of fund value nearly tripled in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to the quarter before. Among the largest funds, redemptions rose 217% quarter over quarter. Now, here is why this matters to you even if you have never heard the words private credit in your life. This is the shadow banking system. It is a $3 to4 trillion pool of money that exists outside of the traditional banking system. It is not FDIC insured. There is no government backs stop. There is no lender of last resort. And it is connected to the real banking system through what analysts call a $4.5 trillion bank to non-bank nexus. With US banks alone carrying $1.2 $2 trillion in exposure to these funds. Jaime Dimmon called the hidden risks in this market cockroaches. That was his word. And one analyst wrote that in 2008 the system snapped. In 2026 it is slowly freezing.
No single break, no single trigger. Just a system where liquidity is gradually draining away from every layer that sustained the cycle. That is not a technical problem for hedge fund managers. That is a structural threat to the entire financial system because when $3 trillion in shadow credit starts locking up, the companies that borrowed from those funds cannot refinance. When they cannot refinance, they default.
When they default, the losses flow into the banks. When the banks take losses, they pull back on lending to everyone else. And that is when the credit freeze that started in the shadows reaches your mortgage application, your car loan, your small business line of credit, and your job. That is the contagion chain and it is already in motion. 722 banks are sitting on unrealized losses that exceed 50% of their capital and the Fed just made the largest emergency injection since co 7222 banks. That is the number of financial institutions in the United States that are currently sitting on unrealized losses that exceed 50% of their total capital. Think about what that means for a second. If those banks were forced to sell the bonds and assets they are holding at current market prices, more than half of their capital base would evaporate. And the reason this is happening is the same reason that Silicon Valley Bank collapsed in 2023.
When the Federal Reserve raised interest rates from near zero to over 5% in the fastest tightening cycle in four decades, the value of the bonds that banks were holding on their balance sheets plummeted. Banks buy US treasuries and mortgage back securities as safe investments. But when interest rates rise, the market value of those bonds falls. The bonds still pay out at maturity. So the banks do not have to sell them. But as long as they hold them, the losses sit there unrealized, invisible on the balance sheet waiting.
And those unrealized losses across the entire US banking system peaked at over $600 billion according to FDIC data.
That is the highest since the FDIC started tracking it. And here is the detail that should genuinely alarm you.
The Federal Reserve just injected $18.5 billion into US banks through overnight repurchase agreements, which are short-term emergency loans from the Fed to commercial banks. The Fed buys securities from the banks and agrees to sell them back the next day, pumping cash into the system to ease liquidity pressure. That $18.5 billion injection was the fourth largest liquidity move since CO. Not the fourth largest this year, the fourth largest since the pandemic. The Fed does not do this because everything is fine. The Fed does this because banks are calling and saying we need cash tonight. And all of this is happening at the same time that the Iran war is sending oil above $110 a barrel and driving interest rates higher. Which means the unrealized losses on those bank balance sheets are getting worse. Not better. Higher interest rates mean lower bond values.
Lower bond values mean deeper unrealized losses. Deeper losses mean less capital.
Less capital means less lending. Less lending means tighter credit. Tighter credit means harder to get a mortgage.
Harder to get a car loan. Harder for businesses to borrow. Harder for the economy to grow. And if any of those 722 banks experience a deposit run the way Silicon Valley Bank did, if their depositors get nervous and start pulling money out faster than the bank can cover it, the unrealized losses become realized losses and the bank fails. SVB held $91 billion in held to maturity securities with $15 billion in unrealized losses. Depositors panicked.
$42 billion was withdrawn in a single day. The bank collapsed in 48 hours and right now 722 banks are in a worse position than SVB was relative to their capital and the macroeconomic environment is deteriorating faster than it was in March 2023. The war is pushing energy costs higher. The Fed cannot cut rates because inflation from the oil shock is accelerating and the private credit market that was supposed to absorb the lending that banks pulled back from is itself now locking up and freezing. Michael Howell, one of the most respected global liquidity analysts in the world, estimates that global debt rollovers will reach $40 trillion by 2027 and that the private credit maturity wall of 2026 to 2027 is the specific breaking point where $2 trillion in shadow credit reaches the point where it can no longer be rolled over without central bank support. And that support cannot come because of inflation. This is the trap. The banking system is sitting on hundreds of billions in losses. The shadow banking system is freezing. The Fed is stuck.
And the war is making everything worse at the exact moment the system can least absorb it. In 2008, the trigger was mortgage back securities. In 2026, the trigger is private credit and energy.
The mechanism is different. The math is the same. Stagflation just arrived in America for the first time in 50 years.
And it is the one word that makes every economist in the room go silent. Oil up 35% in one week. Jobs went negative.
That is staglation. I want you to understand what that word means because it is the single most dangerous economic condition that exists and the last time America experienced it. The economy was destroyed for nearly a decade.
Stagflation is when you have rising inflation and slowing economic growth happening at the same time. Prices are going up, but the economy is going down.
And the reason it is so terrifying is that the tools the government has to fix one problem make the other problem worse. If the Fed raises interest rates to fight inflation, it crushes economic growth and pushes more businesses into bankruptcy and more workers into unemployment. If the Fed cuts interest rates to stimulate growth and save jobs, it pours gasoline on the inflation fire and your groceries and gas and rent get even more expensive. There is no clean exit. The Fed is trapped and they know it. They left rates unchanged at their most recent meeting because the war has made the path forward impossible to navigate. Cut and you fuel inflation, raise and you tip an economy that is already buckling under energy costs into a full recession. And the data is screaming that we are already in stagflationary territory. The economy lost 92,000 jobs in February. Q4 GDP was just revised down to 0.7% growth, less than half of what was initially reported and usually one of the strongest quarters of the year because of holiday spending. The conference board cut its 2026 GDP forecast to 1.6%.
Moody's warned that the probability of a recession this year has climbed above 50%. And at the same time, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge rose 0.7% month overmonth in March and 3.5% year-over-year. Oil is above $110 a barrel. Diesel is above $5. Gas hit $3.88 national average. Jet fuel surged 85%.
And the International Energy Agency called this the greatest global energy security challenge in history. Not a moderate disruption, the greatest in history. And here is what makes this so much worse than the stagflation of the 1970s. In the 1970s, the national debt was manageable. The government had fiscal room to spend its way through the crisis eventually. Today, the government is $39 trillion in debt. The deficit was $1.9 trillion before the war started.
interest payments on the debt are now consuming a growing share of federal revenue. According to the Peter G Peterson Foundation, there is no fiscal room left. And in the 1970s, household balance sheets were stronger. People had savings. Credit card debt was not at all-time highs. Household debt was not at $18.8 trillion. Today, 53% of Americans cannot cover a $1,000 emergency. The median emergency savings fund just got cut in half. Credit card debt crossed $1.3 trillion at 23% interest and the consumer who accounts for twothirds of GDP is already tapped out. Deote warned that consumer spending has barely grown since the summer of 2022. So the consumer cannot spend the economy out of this because the consumer has no money left. The government cannot spend the economy out of this because the government is $39 trillion in debt.
The Fed cannot cut rates out of this because inflation from the oil shock is running too hot. And every major oil price shock in the last 50 years, the 1973 OPEC embargo, the 1979 Iranian revolution, the 2008 oil spike, has been followed by a recession, every single one. The pattern is so reliable that economists consider oil shocks one of the few dependable triggers for stagflationary conditions and the current disruption with production across Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the UAE dropping by at least 10 million barrels per day is being described as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market. That sentence does not get used lightly and it should change how seriously you take what is happening right now. Regardless of what the number at your local gas station says because the gas price is wave 1, wave two is groceries, wave three is fertilizer, wave four is airfare, wave five is interest rates.
And by the time all five waves have landed, the economy will look nothing like it does today. Your retirement just lost $15,000 in 8 weeks. And the people who are supposed to be watching it are telling you not to look. Open your 401k right now, I am serious. Go look at it because what happened to the stock market in the last 8 weeks is the kind of decline that changes retirement timelines. And millions of Americans have not checked their balance since January because their financial adviser told them not to look during volatility.
That advice is about to cost people years of their lives. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell into official correction territory on March 27th, dropping nearly 800 points in a single session and closing below 45 200 for the first time since August 2025. It posted five consecutive losing weeks, the longest streak in almost four years. The SNP 500 dropped to a 7-month low at 6368, down roughly 9% from its January peak.
The Nasdaq Composite plunged nearly 13% below its record high and has been sitting in correction territory for weeks. The Russell 2000, which tracks smaller companies that are more sensitive to interest rates and the real economy, crossed into correction last month, down more than 10% from its January high. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said publicly that he expects a 10 to 20% decline in equity markets within the next 12 to 24 months. JP >> Morgan Global Research put the probability of a US and global recession at 35%.
And that was before the Iran war began.
Moody's has since pushed that number above 50%. And Smart Asset laid out the math that every American with a retirement account needs to see right now. If equities represent 70% of a $500, $0 portfolio and stocks fall 30%.
Your equity holdings lose roughly $150.
Your balance goes from $500,000 to $395,000.
And for someone who is 58 or 60 years old and planning to retire in the next few years, that $15 is not an abstract number. That is 2 and a half years of retirement income at the 4% withdrawal rate. That is the trip you are going to take. That is the year you are going to stop working.
gone in 8 weeks and the VIX, which is Wall Street's fear gauge, surged from the mid- teens to nearly 32. Gold, which was supposed to be the safe haven, spiked above $5.400 per ounce, and then crashed more than 10% in a single week.
Its worst performance since 1983.
Even the safe plays are not safe. Brent crude hit $120 before settling at $112, its highest close since 2022. And here is the detail from RBC Wealth Management that most people do not know. If you miss just 10 of the best trading days over a 20-year period, your returns get cut roughly in half. Miss 20 and you barely beat inflation. And the market's best days and worst days cluster right next to each other on the calendar. The people who panic sell during the worst days are the same people who miss the best days. And the gap between what the market actually returns and what the average investor earns, what behavioral economists call the behavior gap, exists almost entirely because people buy when they feel optimistic and sell when they feel afraid. The exact opposite of what works. So here is the brutal truth. If you are 55 or older and you have not moved a portion of your portfolio into stable assets like bonds or a money market fund, you are playing a game of chicken with your retirement. And if you are younger and you stopped your contributions because the market is falling, you are making the most expensive mistake of your financial life. The shares you buy during this decline will likely be the cheapest shares you will ever purchase. Years from now, the people who kept investing through this period will look back at March 2026, the way people look back at March 2020 as the best buying opportunity they ever had. But only if they stayed in. The guy who called the 2008 crash just said this one is going to be worse and nobody is listening to him again. Michael Bur bet against the US housing market in 2005 when every single person on Wall Street told him he was insane. He was right. The housing market collapsed, the banks collapsed.
The global economy collapsed and he made hundreds of millions of dollars because he saw what nobody else was willing to see. They made a movie about it, The Big Short. You have probably seen it. Well, Michael Bur just posted a warning on Substack, and I need you to hear what he said because the last time he sounded like this. The world economy came apart.
Bur's argument this time is built on three pillars, and each one of them is more alarming than the last. Pillar one is passive investing. Over 60% of all equity fund assets are now in passive index funds. your SNP500 ETFs, your 401k target date funds, your Vanguard total market funds. These funds buy everything in the index automatically regardless of whether the individual companies are actually worth the price. Nobody is doing the work of figuring out which stocks deserve to go up and which deserve to go down. Bur calls it idiot savant money. Money goes in, but no real price discovery is happening. The market is being propped up by momentum and automatic contributions, not by analysis. And when sentiment shifts, when fear takes over and the money starts flowing out instead of in, there is no fundamental floor underneath these stocks because nobody priced them based on fundamentals in the first place.
Pillar two is the demographic time bomb inside the 401k system. Most of the passive money that has been flowing into index funds for the last 30 years came from baby boomers contributing to their retirement accounts during their peak earning years. That generation is now hitting the age where they are legally required to start taking money out.
Required minimum distributions and Bur is projecting that by 2028 for the first time in history those mandatory withdrawals will exceed new contributions going into the system. The engine that pumped the market up for three decades is about to start running in reverse. Money that has been flowing in is going to start flowing out and there is nothing anyone can do to stop it because it is required by law. Pillar three is the collapse of corporate buybacks. For years, the biggest buyer of American stocks has not been you or me. It has been the companies themselves. Share buybacks are when a company uses its profits or borrowed money to buy its own stock, which reduces the number of shares outstanding and makes each remaining share worth more. It artificially inflates the stock price. In the combined share buybacks from Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Oracle dropped 74% in the fourth quarter of 2025, down to just 12.6 billion.
Why? because those companies are borrowing billions to fund AI infrastructure instead. Oracle borrowed $25 billion. Meta borrowed $30 billion.
That money used to go into buybacks that propped up stock prices. Now it is going into data centers. And when that support disappears, what is holding the market up? Bur's conclusion is direct and it should chill you. He says crashes are going to get more violent, more correlated across assets and longer in duration. He says the next one is going to be worse than liberation day. And he says the gloom might stick for a long time. The last time Michael Bur warned the world about a financial catastrophe, the world ignored him and then wished it had not. The question you need to ask yourself right now is whether you are going to ignore him again. 111 million Americans are carrying credit card debt every single month and the entire consumer economy is one missed payment away from a death spiral. 111 millions.
That is the number of American adults who are carrying a balance on their credit card every single month.
According to an analysis by the Century Foundation and protect borrowers that was featured on Good Morning America this week, that is 40% of all US adults who cannot pay off their credit card bill in full. They are rolling debt from month to month at an average interest rate of nearly 23%. And of that 111 million, more than 27 million can only afford to make minimum payments. Not paying extra, not making a dent, just the minimum, which means they are barely covering the interest. And the balance is either staying the same or growing.
And a growing share of families are maxing out their cards, opening new accounts just to keep going, and then turning to payday loans and buy now pay later services, which are the financial equivalents of putting out a fire with gasoline. Now, here is where this connects to the Great Depression comparison. And I need you to follow this very carefully. Consumer spending accounts for nearly twothirds of the entire US GDP. That is not a figure of speech. 2/3 of the American economy depends on people buying things. And when 111 million of those people are drowning in credit card debt at 23% interest and 27 million of them can only make minimum payments and 53% of the entire country cannot cover a $100 emergency. You do not have a consumer base. You have a consumer base on life support and the life support is credit.
People are not spending because they have money. They are spending because they are borrowing. And borrowing only works as long as the credit is available and the payments are manageable. The moment either of those conditions breaks, spending collapses and spending collapsing is what triggers a recession.
That is not theory. That is the mechanical sequence. And right now both conditions are under attack simultaneously. The Fed is frozen, which means interest rates are not coming down, which means borrowing costs stay elevated, which means every dollar of revolving debt gets more expensive every month. And the job market just went negative, which means income is becoming less certain at the exact moment that debt payments are becoming more expensive. When income drops and debt costs rise, at the same time, people default. And defaults are already climbing. Bankruptcy filings are up 13% for consumers and 21% for businesses.
Small business Chapter V bankruptcies are up 91%.
Subprime auto loan delinquencies hit 6.65%.
The highest since Fitch started tracking in the early 1990s, higher than the peak during the Great Financial Crisis. And one creator in the reference footage said something that cuts to the heart of the entire situation. She said, "It is hard to stay within your means when they keep changing the means by which we are able to live. My budget two years ago is not the same as my budget today." And she is right. The goalposts moved, the prices went up, the wages did not keep pace, and the only thing bridging the gap has been credit. $1.3 trillion in credit card debt, $18.8 trillion in total household debt. All-time records across the board. And the system is dependent on these people continuing to borrow and spend even as every signal in the economy is telling them to stop.
That is the fragility. That is the fault line. And when 111 million people simultaneously hit the wall where they cannot borrow anymore and they cannot spend anymore, the twothirds of GDP that depends on their consumption disappears.
And that is not a recession. That is a depression. That is the 1930s. And the people at the top of the financial system know this, which is why Blackstone is injecting its own capital into its funds and Jaime Dimmon is talking about cockroaches and Michael Bur is posting warnings on Substack.
They can see the numbers. They know what is coming. The question is whether you do. Every single oil shock in the last 50 years has been followed by a recession. And this one is the largest supply disruption in the history of the world. Not the largest this decade, not the largest since the Gulf War. The largest in the history of the world oil market. That is not my phrase. That is the International Energy Agency's characterization.
Wikipedia's page on the 2026 straight of Hormuz crisis now states that the closure became the largest disruption to world energy supply since the 1970s energy crisis as well as the largest in the history of the world oil market. The largest monthly increase in oil prices ever recorded occurred in March 2026.
Brent crude surpassed $100 per barrel on March 8th for the first time in four years and peaked at $126.
Bloomberg reported that US government officials and Wall Street analysts are now considering the possibility that oil could surge to $200 a barrel. 200. And if you think that number sounds impossible, remember that Brent was $73 weeks before the war started. It doubled in 21 days. Another doubling would put it at $200. And European traders are warning that the continent is heading towards scarcity pricing on Diesel within weeks if the straight does not reopen. Now, let me walk you through why this matters more than any single data point in this entire video. There have been five major oil price shocks in the last 50 years. the 1973 OPEC embargo, the 1979 Iranian revolution, the 1990 Gulf War, the 2008 oil spike, and the 2022 Russia Ukraine invasion. Every single one of them was followed by a recession or severe economic contraction. Every single one, the 1973 embargo led to a 2-year economic contraction, the worst since the Great Depression at that time. The 1979 revolution doubled oil prices and triggered another deep recession with unemployment hitting 10.8%.
The 2008 oil spike preceded the worst financial crisis since 1929.
The pattern is so consistent that economists at Harvard, the Federal Reserve, and the IMF have all published research showing that oil shocks are among the most reliable predictors of recession in the developed world. And the current disruption is categorically larger than all of them. Production across Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Iran has collectively dropped by at least 10 million barrels per day.
20% of the world's oil supply transit through the straight of Hormuz, 27% of all global seaborn oil trade, and onethird of the world's liqufied natural gas. The London School of Economics published an analysis in April estimating that global GDP growth could slow from 2.9% to 2.6% in 2026 and from 3% to 2.5% in 2027. And they warned those forecasts could be underestimates depending on how long the war lasts. The IMF has since suggested that a prolonged conflict could trigger a global recession outright. The European Central Bank warned that the war will likely push Germany and Italy into technical recession by the end of 2026.
And here is the detail that separates this from every previous oil shock. Even if the war ended tomorrow and the straight of Hormuz reopened the next morning, relief would not be instant.
Economists describe what is called the rockets and feathers effect. Prices shoot up like a rocket when costs rise, but drift down like a feather when they fall. After Russia invaded Ukraine, gas spiked within days. It took months to come back down. After hurricanes Katrina and Rita wrecked Gulf Coast refining in 2005, the spike was immediate and the recovery was glacial. The Energy Information Administration now projects that gasoline will not fall below $3 a gallon at any point between now and the end of 2027. 2 years. The strategic petroleum reserve release 172 million barrels from the US alone and the largest in IEA history buys time. It does not fix the rupture and the damage to Qatar's raw lapen LNG facility alone is estimated to take 5 years to repair.
So the question is no longer whether this oil shock will cause economic damage. The question is how much and for how long. And every historical precedent says the answer is more than you think and longer than they are telling you.
You are not living through a bad economy. You are living through the early stages of a structural collapse that mirrors every warning sign that preceded the Great Depression. I need to be very careful with what I am about to say because comparing anything to the Great Depression sounds like fearing.
And I am not trying to scare you. I am trying to show you a pattern. Because when you line up what happened in the years before 1929 with what is happening right now in 2026, the parallels are not vague. They are specific. They are documented and they are alarming. Before the Great Depression, there was a massive stock market bubble driven by speculation and easy credit. Right now, the S&P 500 reached valuations that Gary Schilling, one of the most respected economists alive, called very expensive and said a decline of 20 to 30% is probably in the cards. Over 60% of equity assets are in passive index funds with no price discovery. The market is propped up by momentum, not fundamentals. Before the Great Depression, consumer debt was at record levels. Americans were buying cars, appliances, and homes on installment plans they could not afford.
Right now, household debt is $18.8 trillion. Credit card debt crossed $1.3 trillion at 23% interest. 111 million Americans carry a balance every month.
27 million can only make minimum payments. Before the Great Depression, wealth inequality had reached extremes not seen before or since. The top 1% owned a wildly disproportionate share of national wealth while the bottom half had almost nothing. Right now, the top 1% holds 31% of all wealth. The bottom 50% holds 2.6%.
Bloomberg reported in January 2026 that US inequality hit a postwar high. Before the Great Depression, the banking system was riddled with hidden risks and fragile institutions. Right now, $722 banks are sitting on unrealized losses, exceeding 50% of their capital. The $3 trillion private credit market is locking investors out. Bloomberg reported $4.6 billion trapped behind redemption gates. Fitch says private credit defaults hit a record 9.2%.
Jaime Dim is talking about cockroaches.
The Fed just made its fourth largest emergency liquidity injection since co.
Before the Great Depression, there was an external shock that accelerated the collapse. The Smoot Holly tariff act of 1930 destroyed international trade.
Right now, the Iran war has caused the largest oil supply disruption in the history of the world oil market. Tariffs were already adding cost pressure. The straight of Hormuz is closed. Diesel is above $5. Oil hit $126.
The IEA called it the greatest energy security challenge in history. And before the Great Depression, the government's response was too slow, too small, and too late. Right now, the government is $39 trillion in debt. The deficit was $1.9 trillion before the war. Social Security is insolvent in less than 7 years. The Highway Trust Fund runs dry by 2028. The Fed is frozen between inflation and recession. and the Treasury Department's own financial statements show a negative net position of $41.72 trillion. Fortune magazine ran the headline, "The US is insolvent." I am not saying we are in the Great Depression. I am saying that every single structural condition that preceded the Great Depression is present in the American economy right now. And on top of those conditions, we have layered the largest energy shock in world history. A shadow banking system that is freezing, a consumer base that is drowning in debt, a job market that just went negative, and a government that has no fiscal capacity to respond.
The 1929 crash did not happen because of one thing. It happened because everything was fragile at the same time and then a shock arrived. That is exactly where we are. Everything is fragile and the shock has arrived. So here is what I want you to do. I want you to pressure test your emergency fund. 6 months of expenses minimum in a high yield savings account paying over 4%. I want you to audit your spending before waves 2 through 5 arrive.
Groceries, fertilizer, airfare, interest rates, all of them are coming. Cut the discretionary spending now before you have to. If you are investing on a regular schedule, keep doing it. The shares you buy during this decline will likely be the best investments you ever make. If you're carrying highinterest credit card debt, attack it now. The Fed is not cutting rates. Every dollar of revolving debt is more expensive than it was before the war started. And if you are within 10 years of retirement, rebalance towards stable assets today.
Do not wait for the next 800 point down day to find out your portfolio was too aggressive. The difference between the people who come out of economic shock stronger and the people who come out weaker has almost nothing to do with what happened. It has everything to do with what they did while it was happening. The households that fared best in every past crisis, 1973, 2008, 2020, 2022, were not the ones with the highest incomes. They were the ones who adjusted earliest. Small, unglamorous moves, trimming spending, building savings, maintaining contributions, reducing debt. None of those moves are dramatic. Nobody posts on social media about moving $200 a month from dining out into a high yield savings account.
But compounded over the 6 to 12 months that a disruption takes to fully cycle through the system. Those early adjustments create an enormous gap. You are watching this video right now. Your window is open. Most people will not think about any of this until the fourth or fifth wave has already hit their bank account. By then, the window is closed.
Do not let the disruption make your decisions for you. Make them yourself.
And if this changed how you are thinking about the next few months, share it with someone who needs to hear this. Not for me, for the person in your life who has no idea what is coming. Because the fall has begun.
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