BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Are We Heading Into a Recession? J Scott Breaks It Down
Episode Date: July 29, 2025In this episode of the BiggerPockets Money podcast, hosts Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench are joined by real estate expert J Scott to break down the mixed signals dominating today's economic landscape. ... Are we or we not heading into a recession? They discuss what's really happening with GDP growth, consumer spending patterns, and the evolving nature of work itself. From the rise of gig economy jobs that complicate traditional employment metrics to the unprecedented challenges facing businesses nationwide, this deep-dive conversation reveals the nuances behind the economic data that directly impacts your financial decisions. This Episode Covers: Key indicators of a recession Analysis of recent conflicting economic headlines Differing impacts on consumer spending and employment trends Influence of tariffs and the rising wave of business bankruptcies Potential economic impact of artificial intelligence Importance of portfolio diversification during uncertain times And SO much more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Last week, I saw three headlines that perfectly capture our economic confusion.
Number one, a weak economy is good for military recruiting.
Number two, Amazon Prime Day is down by 41%.
And number three, GDP growth beats expectations.
So here's the million dollar question, or should I say trillion dollar question?
Are we in a recession?
Heading into one or completely missing the real story.
And welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
My name is Mindy Jensen, and with me as always is my not receding any time soon from being my co-host, Scott Trench.
I was really hoping that a few more years before jokes about my hairline made it onto the podcast intro, but I think we're here.
Speaking of receding, we're going to be joined once again by Jay Scott on today's episode to discuss whether or not we are in a recession here in the United States.
He's going to help us separate economic reality from economic anxiety, and we're going to dive into what the data actually shows, why experts are spurs.
split and why not just experts, but the community here at Bigger Pockets money is actually split.
And most importantly, what this means for your money, your job, and your FI journey.
Jay, thank you so much for being here.
Hey, thanks for having me. Always thrilled to be here.
Jay Scott is a real estate expert. He has written, I don't know, 150 books or five books,
same thing, about real estate, negotiating real estate, estimating rehab costs, et cetera.
But he's also really, really, really into the economy.
Jay, what is a recession? Let's define this first of all before we start talking about,
are we in a recession? What are we talking about here? It's funny. That really should be an easy
question to answer, but it's probably one of the harder questions you're going to ask me today.
Let's start with there's actually no formal definition of a recession where we can kind of
check a bunch of boxes and definitively say, yep, we're in one or nope, we're not in one.
That said, the mainstream media does like to use the metric of GDP, gross demetical,
product, which is basically the total economic output of the country. And they like to use that as a
measure of whether we're in a recession or not. And so the common mainstream definition is that if
GDP decreases, in other words, if the economy shrinks for two quarters in a row, we like to think
that we're in a recession. And so if we look at where we are right now, Q1 of this year, we actually
saw GDP shrink. We saw negative growth in the economy in Q1 of this year. Q2 ended in the end of
June, we won't get the GDP numbers. We won't get the data for economic growth or shrinkage until
the end of July. So we won't know until the end of July if GDP is negative for Q2. But if at the
end of July we find that GDP number is negative, we're going to start to hear a lot of people talking
about the fact that we're in a recession. So that's one way to look at it. But there's actually
another way to look at it that I prefer. That's that there happens to be a government agency,
Enbird, National Bureau of Economic Research, who's tasked with determining when we're
we're officially in a recession. And it's basically just a group of people who look at the data
and they decide if they think we're in one or not. And they have the final say when it comes
to the official government determination of when we are or aren't in a recession. And interestingly,
it's pretty common for this group of people to wait until after the recession is either well
underway or even until after it's over to actually declare that there was a recession. So while they
aren't saying we're in a recession today, they could get together next year or even the year,
after that and decide that we're actually in a recession right now, at which point the government
will retroactively declare a recession and update all their charts. Now, that's the official
definition of recession, but the reality is that official definitions are less important than
just simply keeping our fingers on the pulse of where the economy is headed. Instead of thinking
about, are we in a recession, are we not in a recession? I actually prefer to think about the economy
as a spectrum. So our job as investors is to look at various pieces of data and just try to
determine, are things getting better? Are things getting worse? Are they getting stronger? They're
getting weaker? So that way we can generate a good strategy moving forward for our portfolios.
I want to just chime in here and try my hand at this as well in a couple of ways and see what you think.
I'm looking up a couple of definitions of recession here. And yes, there's the two quarters of GDP contraction
as one of the technical definitions. But there's also just this general concept of it being a contraction
in broad economic activity, characterized by rising unemployment, lower consumer spending, lower
corporate profits, lower valuations in a variety of asset classes and those types of things. And that's
what makes this so hard is that there's components of this that, from a media perspective,
are subjective. And we don't know whether we're in a recession or not in an official capacity
until long after it. And that leads to endless discussions about it and lots of conjecturing about it.
So based on these definitions, what do you think? Are we in a recession?
or not right now. Again, I don't like that determination. Let's approach you from a 10,000 foot level,
and then I'll answer that question. So I think you hit the nail on the head. At the end of the day,
the economy consists of two main groups, the people that are in the economy and the businesses
that are in the economy. And so if we want to know if we're in a recession or if the economy is
getting better or weaker, we're going to look at how people and businesses are reacting and the data
around people and businesses. And you mentioned a couple important pieces of data. Number
One, unemployment.
So do people have jobs?
Do they have good jobs?
Are their wages going up?
If we look at unemployment data today, we see a couple things.
It's pretty mixed data.
Number one, a lot of people have jobs.
The unemployment rate is somewhere around 4.1, 4.2%, which is a really good number.
Historically speaking, most people have jobs.
We're actually seeing pretty strong wage growth, which is great.
Wage growth is higher than the government's number for inflation.
So people in real terms are making more money now than they were last year.
So that's great, but we're also seeing some less great data.
Number one, the labor participation rate, the number of people that are actually looking for jobs and participating in the economy is decreasing considerably.
700,000 people last month stopped looking for jobs.
A lot of them retired.
Some of them may have given up because they couldn't find the job they want.
Some of them may just be taking the summer off, whatever it is, but 700,000 people essentially walking away from the job force last month was a lot.
Additionally, what we're seeing is a lot of people who are losing their jobs are having trouble finding new jobs.
So this metric called insured employment claims, unemployment claims.
Basically, people filing for unemployment week after week after week just hit its highest number since 2021.
So people that don't have jobs are having trouble finding jobs.
So that's the employment piece.
The other side of that is consumer spending.
So are people spending money?
Because that's obviously probably one of the single most important things in the economy.
How much money are people spending?
Are there as many transactions now as there were last year?
As there's as much money and currency flowing through the system as there was last year?
And what we find is that consumer spending is actually trailing off a good bit.
So from Q4 of last year to Q1 of this year, we saw a decrease in consumer spending of about 60%.
It was still positive growth.
We'd still more than it was last year.
You're not saying that if consumers spent a number of trillions of dollars in Q4, they spent
60% less than that.
The growth rate? The growth rate. So yes, when I say that spending decreased by 60%. I'm talking about the growth in spending decreased by 60%. So if you look at Q4 numbers from 2024, we saw spending growth increase 4%. In Q1, we still saw growth in spending, but it was only 1.8%. So that total growth in spending decreased considerably from Q4 to Q1. Additionally, in Q2, the first two months of Q2, we saw an actual decrease.
in spending, a contraction in spending. 1% in April, 0.9% in May. We did see a decent recovery in June,
so things are kind of still a mixed bag. But long story short, we are seeing consumers starting to
pull back, starting to spend a lot less than they were. And anytime consumers spend less,
that's going to be bad for businesses. It's going to be bad for the economy in general.
But even then, it's consumers are spending more. They're just, it's the growth rate is slowing.
So we're not actually seeing a contraction in consumer spending yet. Is that correct?
That's correct. And keep in mind, we rely on growth in our economy. We rely on GDP, the total
economic output of the country to go up. If GDP were zero, that would be a bad thing because we have
inflation. The price of things is going up. The money supply is increasing. And so we need to
keep up with that price increases, those money supply increases through expanded economic output.
And so we need to see that growth. And we need to see growth. And we need to see growth.
of at least two or three percent for the economy to keep up with the money supply inflation and
the price inflation. And so when we're only seeing 1.8 percent spending growth, that's not getting
us where we need to be long term. So real inflation-adjusted consumer expenditures may have fallen
in Q1, is what you're saying. That's exactly what I'm saying. That's the consumer side of things.
Then there's the business side of things. Businesses typically lead the economy. So when businesses
start to suffer, that's a good indication that we may be heading towards,
economic softening, potentially even a recession. So what are we seeing on the business side of things?
Production manufacturing has been a mixed bag over the last few months down a little bit, but not to the
point where we're overly concerned. One of the big issues that businesses are facing these days
is bankrupt. A lot of businesses are going bankrupt simply because interest rates have been so high
for the last few years. Remember, a lot of businesses operate just like we in the real estate world
operate on debt. They need to raise money. They need to borrow money in order to
to continue to grow and expand. And when the cost of that money is approaching 5, 6, 7, 7, 8%
for business debt, it's really hard for businesses to make enough that they can pay that debt
and continue to expand. And so high interest rates are starting to take a toll on businesses,
and we're starting to see businesses going bankrupt at much higher rates than we have in the past.
What are some notable recent examples of businesses that have gone bankrupt in this way?
I'm not talking about any notable businesses. I'm not talking about companies like Google or Microsoft
or Nvidia.
I'm talking about a lot of small businesses.
These are mom and pop businesses,
the ones that keep the economy going,
the ones that keep families employed
and food on the table.
So when we talk about bankruptcies,
again, not talking about necessarily
businesses you may have ever heard of,
but a lot of smaller businesses
are struggling and going bankrupt.
Some of it has to do with tariffs.
We're seeing import costs increase
across certain sectors
and a lot of businesses that rely on
foreign manufacturing and imports
are struggling to last.
few months. And so, again, businesses not in a horrible position right now, but we're definitely
starting to see some softening from where we were last year. What are the actual indicators to look at
to see if we're in a recession? We'll discuss this when we're back. Tax season is one of the only times
all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending,
savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening.
That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where your money is going. And more importantly,
your tax refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward,
it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one
personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life,
including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning together in
one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this
tax season and get 50% off your Monarch subscription with the code pockets. What I personally
like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking. You can see your
budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place. So every decision actually moves
in a needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all in one tool that makes money
management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off
at Monarch.com code pockets. I love Matt, said no one ever. Nobody starts a business thinking,
you know what would make this more fun? Calculating quarterly estimated taxes. But somehow every
small business owner ends up doing it. Your dreams of creating, selling, and growing get replaced by
Eight nights chasing receipts, juggling invoices, and wondering if that bad sushi lunch with Scott counts as a write-off.
Change all that with Found.
Found is a business banking platform built to take the pain out of managing money.
It automatically tracks expenses, organizes invoices, and even preps you for tax season without you doing the heavy lifting.
You can set aside money for business goals, control spending with virtual cards, and find tax write-offs you didn't even know existed.
It saves time, money, and probably a few years of life expectancy.
Found has over 30,000 five-star reviews from owners who say, Found makes everything easier.
expenses, income, profits, taxes, invoices even.
So reclaim your time and your sanity.
Open a found account for free at found.com.
That's fowund.com.
Found is a financial technology company, not a bank.
Banking services are provided by lead bank, member FDIC.
Don't put this one off.
Join thousands of small business owners who have streamlined their finances with Found.
Audible has been a core part of my routine for more than a decade.
I started listening years ago to make better use of drive time and workouts, and it stuck.
At this point, I've logged over 229 audiobooks.
completions on Audible alone, and I still regularly re-listen to the highest impact titles.
Lately, I've been listening to Bigger Leen or Stronger for Fitness, the Anxious Generation for Parenting
Perspective, and several Arthur Brooks' audiobooks that have been excellent for mental well-being.
What makes Audible so powerful is its breadth.
Beyond audiobooks, you also get Audible Originals, podcasts, and a massive back catalog across
business, health, parenting, and more, all accessible in one app.
If you're looking to turn everyday moments into real progress, Audible has been indicted.
indispensable for me over over 10 years.
Kickstart your well-being journey with your first audiobook free when you sign up for a
free 30-day trial at audible.com slash BP money.
All right.
After that brief recess, we're back.
In 2025, bankruptcy filings are on the rise, reaching the highest level since the
Great Recession in some sectors.
And in first quarter, we saw 188 companies filing for Chapter 11, the highest number,
since 2010.
And according to SMP Global, that's pretty fascinating.
And for some reason, I'm not catching that on the news in the same way. Maybe what I'm looking at is that, is this commonly being reported on? Are these headlines all over the place?
I mean, if you're following the economic data, this probably isn't surprising. For me, this is kind of been something that not only have we expected over the last couple years, keep in mind, we're in somewhat unprecedented territory with where the economy is today. We haven't had a recession since 2008. We haven't seen the start of a real recession since 2008. We can talk about 20.
2020, kind of that blip that was COVID-related, but most people wouldn't consider that to be a true
economic recession. And so going on 17 years since the last time we saw the beginning of a recession,
that's the longest period of time in history between the beginning of two recessions.
Historically, we see recessions every four, five, six years. And so from purely a timing standpoint,
the fact that it's been 17 years since the last real recession tells me that it's not
surprising that we're starting to see the slowdown. I expected it years ago. And if it doesn't happen
in the next couple years, I'd be very surprised. I have a friend who was just visiting recently.
He went on Shark Tank for a product that he has made. Apparently, in the Shark Tank world,
they have their own little community and their own little Facebook group and where they just have
conversations and discussions about like running a small business. And he said that because of
these tariffs, there have been people who are caught up in this where they play.
a big order from overseas manufacturing.
And between the time they place the order and the time that it's coming in, the tariffs
click into place.
And they're like, well, I can't afford to pay for these product.
I just have to stop selling this product because that's my product and I can't get it.
I don't have any way to continue on in business.
And I think there's a lot of these little stories that to your point, Scott, aren't getting
reported because who cares if that one guy who's selling that one thing goes out of business.
like how is that affecting the economy? It's not that one guy. It's hundreds of that one guy. It's thousands of that one guy who are selling this little widget and that little widget. And all of a sudden, you know, the jobs that he is creating are no longer there. I'm seeing so many of these tiny little things that if it was a one-off, then, oh, okay, well, that's, that's a little blip. But it's like all these little one-offs that are starting to add up.
I have a couple of observations here.
I just don't understand what is currently the drivers of the economy.
The things that seem to have been true for the last hundred years seem to be not the case right now, right, in a couple of sectors, right?
We're two standard deviations above the average for price to earnings multiples in the stock market, right?
We're at a 200% stock market valuation to GDP ratio, above it indicator.
So expectations for company profits in the economy, on the one hand, are 3,000.
through the roof. And then there's all this fear and uncertainty. On the other hand,
in the anecdotal stuff that we hear from folks, we're seeing bankruptcies on the rise.
We're seeing consumers spending growth slow or regressed behind inflation. We'll see that
ends up for Q2 here. And it's just not fitting all nicely together. Jay, one thing that we
argue about, you know, you'll post something on Facebook. I'll agree with 95% of it and push back
on one or two things here and there. One of the things that I think is an interesting one here,
and I'd love to get your take on this year on the podcast is the unemployment data.
And I've observed that there's an enormous surge from the Great Recession to today,
to 2006, 2007, 2008 period, to today in gig work.
Let's extend this concept of gig work to self-employment, small business ownership,
and those types of things.
We've seen a huge surge, a huge shift in the percentage of people who work as employees
at companies to people who work for themselves or as contractors in this gig work economy.
And this has been bugging me for a long time because that's a hallmark of a recession as rising
unemployment rates.
But if this population that was at the most risk, the gig workers and contractors, are losing
their contracts or gig worker, finding it harder.
They're making less dollars per hour as an Uber driver because there's longer wait times
between rides or whatever.
That's not going to show up in our unemployment data.
These people are not going to be able to file for unemployment.
They're not going to get fired.
They're just going to lose these income streams that have coming in or to see their
income decline, and it's not going to show up on those reports. And I think that's a major
factor that's impacting the economy right now, and we'll give insulation to employment data
for the next several quarters, at least. There's nothing huge would have to happen. I feel like
for the official unemployment data to really see a sharp intake like we saw in the Great Recession.
I just don't think it can happen in today's economy. Yeah, and it's actually worse than what you just
said. If you look at the data around gig workers, the average gig worker in this country works an average
of six months before they leave and either leave the job force or go and look for another W-2.
And so you have to ask yourself the question, if they're leaving after six months, why is that?
Did they achieve everything they were looking to achieve?
Did they make all the money that they needed?
Or were they not making enough money in that six months that they were able to survive and they had to
give it up?
If that's the case, and I think logically speaking, we can all agree, it's probably the case
that gig workers leave because they're not making enough money to live and to survive,
then that six months where they are apparently quote unquote employed in their gig work,
they're actually not employed, or at least they're very underemployed.
And so if we're measuring gig work and we see the number of people that may not be in the traditional job force,
but we say we have this many millions of people in gig work,
what we don't realize is the vast majority of them or some large percentage of them
aren't making enough money to actually survive.
They just haven't realized it.
And if we can look back six or 12 months, what we'll realize is that most of the people that were
in gig work, that wasn't true employment for them. I also want to call out, though,
another component to this, which is the realtor world, right? Like, how do you describe a
realtor? They're not a gig worker. Maybe a lot of agents over the last couple of years,
they're making bank in 2020, 2021, maybe the early part of 2020. And then that dried up. We got
1.5 million realtors in this country and what, like 800,000 active listings or something
like that. And so it just doesn't compute. So these folks are licensed realtors. They were
making money. Maybe they drove Uber or did some task rabbit or whatever.
to try to hold out and see if they could get some business in there.
And now they're finally applying for jobs, but that's not hitting any of this data.
And so it's masking this story.
Unemployment has historically been a very difficult set of data to get your head around.
There's lots of different metrics, lots of different data that in some ways seem contradictory
or not necessarily complimentary and even like really smart economists.
I'm not going to claim to understand unemployment data very well, but even really smart
economists that I followed have said that it can be really difficult to get a true picture of
what's going on in the employment sector simply from the data that's released by the government.
And that was 10, 15, 20 years ago when we had a lot more traditional employment and pretty
easy to parse data. These days, like you said, with the gig economy and with things changing,
people having multiple jobs, it can be very, very difficult to actually get a good understanding
of what's going on in the employment.
market and with the employment data. And so even really smart people kind of disagree what the
trajectory is for the labor market right now. Are things getting better? Are things getting worse?
Are things staying the same? General consensus is that things aren't getting better.
General consensus is that we're either trading water or things are starting to get worse.
One of the things that really prompted me to reach out to you to say, would you come on and
talk about this with me? Is I saw an article from unusual whales.
It says, first day of traffic for Amazon Prime Day is down 41%.
I mean, people write articles about these are all the things that are on Prime Day and people
talk about Prime Day and I'm going to wait to buy this on Prime Day.
And then all of a sudden it's down by 41%.
That's a big number.
That gained headlines a week or two ago during Amazon Prime Day, which is actually now four days.
It went from Amazon Prime Day to Amazon Prime 2 days to now Amazon Prime 4 days.
You've got to add another day.
That's actually part of it. With four days, there's going to be less urgency from buyers to go out and spend money.
So that's number one. Number two, there's some belief that that 41% number was generated by one of the brands, one of the big brands on Amazon, who specifically they saw 41% decrease and kind of extrapolated that decrease across the site.
Whereas while we haven't gotten official Amazon data yet, the numbers are actually looking pretty good.
But again, it's four days instead of two, so it's hard to tell how much of that was.
a product of just having extra days to buy versus consumers really wanted to spend versus businesses
giving better deals. So it's looking like Amazon Prime Day that 41% that hit some headlines,
but it's probably not true. But we don't know what exactly is true yet. Amazon hasn't released
any data. And so a lot of it's still just speculation. Okay. And what about the article,
Air Force and Space Force hit 2025 recruiting goals three months early? And the both,
of these people coming in are college graduates. And the reason the college graduates go into the
military, for the most part, is because they can't find a job. I read that headline as well.
I'm not smart enough to draw any conclusions from that, but certainly if I just went with
common sense and logic, I mean, that tells me that there are a lot of people out there that
don't believe that their job prospects are particularly good right now and are looking for
an alternative path. And so I can't think of any other reason why.
the military might be more attractive today than it was a year ago or two years ago or five years ago.
And again, I don't have data to support this, but the logical conclusion is simply that people don't feel like there's many opportunities elsewhere.
I brought you on for wild conjecture, Jay. Make some stuff up. I don't want to be a fearmonger, but I also want people to realize there's some stuff going on that isn't being reported and all these other numbers like you and Scott were just talking about that should give you pause with regards to,
you know, just living a willy-nilly financial life. Don't rage quit your job because your boss made you
mad. If you really want to leave your job, make sure you have another one before you jump out.
I have a lot of friends right now who are looking for jobs and just can't find them. They're not even
getting calls back. And I don't think they are in these unicorn positions where it's, there's just
no jobs available. I think there's jobs available. There's just a lot more people looking than in recent years
past. If you're looking for reasons to be concerned, let me give you another one. And this is something
that's starting to get talked about a little bit more recently. Let me start with, I'm not a big
truster of government data, not because I think the government's purposely lying to us or that
they're bad at their job. I think if anything, the government, they move slowly. And so data
collection techniques that might have made sense back in the 80s and 90s, phone surveys and
and mail surveys simply don't make sense today. The people that respond to those surveys
aren't necessarily a good cross-section of the U.S. And so the data we get, again, isn't
purposefully manipulated by the government, but it's probably not very good data. The last couple
months, what we've seen, and this has been by the admission of the government agencies themselves,
is that they're starting to change the way that they collect and impute a lot of the data that
they're getting. And so a good example of this is a couple days ago, June
inflation data came out. And there was a note that I think it was the Wall Street Journal picked up
on and called the BLS, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the group that puts out the inflation data
and verified that this was true and they verified that it was true. But basically, the story goes
that historically about 10% of inflation data can be very difficult to generate from true data.
The data sources are just too hard to collect and there's not enough resources at the BLS to
go through that data. And so about 10% of the data historically has been what's called imputed,
meaning they kind of take information here, information from there, and then somebody who claims
to be really smart says, I think the right answer is this, and they put a number into that
cell of the spreadsheet, and they hope it doesn't mess up any of the rest of the data that was
actually collected in correct ways. Well, that 10% of data that they've had trouble collecting
and have been imputing is now up to 35% as a...
of the June inflation report, meaning 35% of the cells in the spreadsheet that were used to generate
the inflation data for June were not taken directly from sources that are necessarily reliable,
but instead are filtered through some people who kind of make their best guess judgment at what that
data is. And then the whole spreadsheet is tabulated and we get a big number. But when a third or more
than a third of the data may be either incorrect or just to be a little conspiracy theorist here,
maybe manipulated in a way that makes whoever that person wants to look good or bad,
it's possible that the data we're getting is not even as good as it was a couple months or a
couple years ago. And I would argue that data wasn't great either. I think that this is where you've got
to go into tariffs, right? And you say, it just doesn't make sense, right? If you're going to impose
higher costs on the 25% of goods that are imported in this economy? What percentage of the goods are
imported in this economy again, Jay? It's in the 30s, I believe. I don't have the data.
We got a third of our goods imported here, and there's a substantial tax on those goods that are
going to be paid by the importers. How does that not translate in an inflationary capacity to
the CPI, or the producers parity index? The PPI, how does it not hit those numbers?
And I think there's two answers, right? One is bad data, which I wasn't really considering.
but the other is a pullback in consumer spending at the highest possible level where people are
buying less of those goods forcing the producers to lower prices. Those are the only two
economic responses to that journey. I guess the third one would be that production productivity
goes so much better. Maybe that's the AI component of this or whatever. Productive capacity
gets so much better that's driving those costs down enough to offset any costs imposed by the
tariffs. But it's fascinating that that data has not shown up in the official data set.
And that really has a lot of red flags going for me. Like, are we really sitting here saying
this dude's a genius? Not, you know, whatever your opinion is of politics or whatever,
but are we really saying that these tariffs are going to come into play and have no impact
on inflation and inflation is beaten and we should lower rates while we've got these tariffs in place.
Like, how can, how does that possibly make sense?
So there is a third option. And it's probably a little too early to disqualify.
discount it, and we may even find that it's the right option. The third option is that those price
increases, for the time being at least, are being somewhat or entirely eaten by the retailers,
the wholesalers, the retailers, the people that are importing the products, in which case we may not
see inflation, we may not see reduced consumer spending, but what we will see is lower profits,
smaller margins from these retailers, because they are eating the extra costs. And so it'll be
very interesting to look at Q2 earnings data. We're just starting to get Q2 earnings data. We haven't
gotten any from any major retailers yet, but it'll be interesting to see companies like Target and
Walmart and Home Depot and Lowe's to see if their margins or their profits have gone down
considerably, which might tell us that they are eating some of these cost increases due to
tariffs. Let's talk about what can go right for a second here in the economy. Well, I want to start with
interest rates, right? We know, we're getting a bunch of headlines about, you know, Trump waving around a
letter saying, I'm going to fire Powell, here it is, should I send it, you know, whatever. The guy fires
Powell, and immediately you presume interest rates come down because a doveish bed chair who was
going to promise to lower rates will almost certainly be the selection. And wouldn't that have a
major impact that would offset recession risk? So keep in mind, there's theory, then there's reality,
and then I'm going to layer on top of that, the real reality. So let's start with the theory.
The theory is Trump fires Powell, puts in somebody who was willing to do his bidding.
And I say that is sincerely with he has said his bidding is he wants to drop interest rates a couple points.
And so the minute he were to fire Powell, I don't think he's going to, by the way, because I think he and his advisors know this.
The minute he were he were to fire Powell, we're likely to see the US dollar drop, dollar strength drop, just due to loss in confidence in our currency.
We're likely to see interest rates.
So treasury yields and interest rates spike because it's a good indication that we're likely to see inflation.
when you have lower interest rates, you're going to have higher inflation.
Higher inflation leads to higher treasury yields.
I want to push back on that one, right?
That doesn't make any sense to me because, like, I think there's one or two possibilities,
right? Either Trump's going to fire, pal, or he's going to just not say,
all right, we're going to wait it out until he's done.
I think it's like September of next year, right, 2026.
When we get to next year, this will be our guy.
And the market will respond by inverting the yield curve, right?
Assuming that the price for U.S. treasuries will just go down, the yield will go down,
the price will go up, because people will be expecting the new Fed chair, who will almost
certainly be promising to lower rates on day one to lower those rates at that point in time.
But what happens when you lower rates? You potentially drive inflation. And what does higher
inflation mean? Demand for higher yields in bonds. Investors aren't going to buy 10-year bonds
at 5 percent if they think the 10-year inflation rate's going to be 6 percent. They're going to
demand 6 percent. And so the Fed share, the Fed can control the short end of the curve. They can control
the overnight rate and they're really shortened, but they can't necessarily control the 10, the 20,
the 30-year rates. But let me step back real quick because I think this is really important. So I mentioned
there's theory versus reality. The theory is that Al gets kicked out and gets replaced by somebody who's
willing to lower rates. And the thought is there's a big shock to the economy. Probably true.
I think there would be an immediate shock to the economy, the currency, our treasury yields,
our interest rates, all of that. But the reality is that the Fed chair can't unilaterally lower
interest rates. There are 12 members of the Fed committee that decides to lower rates or not lower
rates, and they take a vote. If the majority doesn't think that rates should be lowered,
rates are not going to be lowered. And so the new Fed share, while they have some implicit power,
they don't at the end of the day have enough power to unilaterally decide to lower rates.
And so assuming that we don't have seven members of the Fed committee who are looking to lower
rates, it's unlikely we're going to see rates come down just because Powell is replaced. So that's
the reality. But here's the reality on top of the reality. Over the next year, we're going to see
several members of the FOMC committee, the Fed Committee, that votes on interest rates leaving.
Their tenure is up. And Trump will be the person that appoints the replacements. So it's very possible
that over the next year, between the people that Trump has already appointed and the people that
Trump appoints in the next few months, the majority of people on the FOMC committee could be Trump
appointees. Doesn't necessarily mean that they're going to take the same radical approach towards
interest rates. They haven't in the past. The ones that are on there now haven't in the past.
But the reality of the reality is that it takes a vote. Trump is going to have some more people
on the on the board that were appointed by him and he's going to appoint them based on what they're
going to do for him. So we don't know exactly what's going to happen. But I'm not nearly as concerned as
as kind of the first reactionary idea of how's gone, interest rates are coming down 3%.
That's not going to happen.
All right.
Stick around after our final economic break to figure out whether we're in a recession or not.
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial
picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing.
And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening.
That's why I like Monarch.
It helps you see exactly where your money is going.
And more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress.
Simplify your finances with Monarch.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier.
It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments,
net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your
Monarch subscription with the code pockets.
What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking.
You can see your budgets, debt pay-off, savings goals, and net worth all in one place.
every decision actually moves in Edle.
Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch,
the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple.
Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year.
That's 50% off at monarch.com code pockets.
You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday.
How can you find amazing candidates fast?
Easy. Just use Indeed.
When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need.
That means you can stop struggling to get your job notice on other job sites.
Indeed's sponsor jobs helps you stand out and hire the right
people quickly. Your job post jumps straight to the top of the page where your ideal candidates are
looking. And it works. Sponsored jobs on Indeed get 45% more applications than non-sponsored posts.
The best part? No monthly subscriptions or long-term contracts. You only pay for results.
And speaking of results, in the minute I've been talking to you, 23 people just got hired through
Indeed worldwide. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed.
And listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at
Indeed.com slash bigger pockets.
Just go to Indeed.com slash bigger pockets right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast.
Indeed.com slash bigger pockets. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring, Indeed is all you need.
When you want more, start your business with Northwest Registered Agent and get access to thousands of free guides, tools, and legal forms to help you launch and protect your business all in one place.
Build your complete business identity with Northwest today. Northwest Registered Agent has been helping small business owners and entrepreneurs launch
and grow businesses for nearly 30 years.
They're the largest registered agent and LLC service in the U.S.
with over 1,500 corporate guides who are real people who know your local laws and can help
you and your business every step of the way.
Northwest makes life easy for business owners.
They don't just help you form your business.
They give you the free tools you need after you form it, like operating agreements,
meeting minutes, and thousands of how-to guides that explain the complicated ins and outs of
running a business.
And with Northwest, privacy is automatic.
They never sell your data.
And all services are handled in-house because,
privacy by default is their pledge to all customers. Visit northwest registeredagent.com
slash money-free and start building something amazing. Get more with Northwest Registered Agent at
Northwest Registered Agent.com slash money free.
Marvel Television's Wonder Man, an eight-episode series, now streaming on Disney Plus.
A superhero remake. Not exactly what we'd expect from an Oscar winning director.
Action! Simon Williams, audition for Wonder Man.
I'm going to need you to sign this
Assuming you don't have superpowers
I'll never work again if anyone
Farn out. My lips are sealed.
Marvel Television's Wonder Man
All eight episodes now streaming
Only on Disney Plus
Uh, where are my gloves?
Come on, heat
Any day now?
Winter is hard, but your groceries don't have to be.
This winter, stay warm.
banner to order your groceries online at voila.ca. Enjoy in-store prices without leaving your home. You'll
find the same regular prices online as in-store. Many promotions are available both in-store and online,
though some may vary. Thanks for digging with us. Let's talk about another component of this economy,
which is AI. The adoption rate seems to have massively ticked up in the last 12 to 18 months among
many people in this economy, many companies in this economy. There is real power to it. I mean,
good God, my email is so much more efficient using AI powered tools, right?
Like they're creating documents, creating images, creating presentations, and all this stuff is
just speeding up a work that otherwise would have taken me much longer to do today.
And so there's a real productivity gain.
I think that's being, that's actually being captured by the economy now in a really rising
way, even as AI has been around for a while.
I think it's being adopted to boost the productivity of average people in this economy
at a much faster and faster rate.
can that just offset all of this and spur on massive growth that that really trumps all the other things we discussed?
It could have a couple different effects. And depending on who you ask, you're going to get different answers. I'm not smart enough to know exactly, but to Mindy's point, I'm happy to throw out some wild conjecture. First, keep in mind who's at risk from AI. My thought is if you do your job by sitting in front of a computer all day, you are at risk from AI. You stand to have the highest risk, which is very different than all of the technical revolutions we've had in this country, in this world over the last couple hundred years. Typically, when you have a,
technological revolution. It's the blue collar, the lower on the socioeconomic spectrum workers who
are most at risk because they get replaced by productivity. In this case, it very well may be
the white collar and the more highly trained folks that are getting replaced by AI. So that's
number one. Number two, yes, it could significantly increase productivity, which is good for
businesses. Businesses will be able to generate a lot more supply of whatever it is they're creating,
whether it's goods or services.
On the other side, it could be tremendously bad for workers
because when businesses can perform optimally
without necessarily having people sitting at desks,
they're not going to hire those people.
And so what we might find is that the unemployment rate goes up
and productivity goes up.
Now, the good thing is when productivity goes up,
in theory, prices settle or even go down,
we may see deflation
because businesses can generate their goods and services
with so much less overhead.
They don't have to pay as many people.
They don't need to have as much office space.
Basically, they just need computers
because they can generate all their goods and services
at so much less cost,
they may be able to lower prices.
So what we might find is we're living in a world
where the unemployment rate is high,
but the cost of things is low.
And so people find ways to supplement their income,
gig work or multiple jobs
or lower paying jobs,
that's still sufficient to cover
their lifestyle to put food on their table to pay their rent. Who are the biggest losers in that
world? In reality, it's investors. So real estate investors are going to find that in a deflationary
world in a world where prices are coming down, rents are coming down. And when rents come down,
the value of property comes down. When people are making less money, when people don't have to pay as
much to live, they're not going to pay as much for real estate. They're not going to pay as much
in rent. And so real estate investors could get hurt. Additionally, we could see businesses get hurt.
We can see the equity markets get hit.
So it'll be good for businesses that their productivity is going up, but when so many people are laid off,
potentially we don't have as much money flowing through the economy.
People don't have as much money to spend.
And so we see earnings drop and we see the stock market drop.
Lots of things at play here, but I could imagine in my mind, the world that we live in in five years has an unemployment rate that is plateaued higher than where it is today.
But prices have substantially stopped increasing at the rate that.
that they've been increasing the past couple years.
Just because I love doing it, I can't resist.
I take the same kind of observations
and almost reached opposite conclusions to you, Jay,
with respect to AI, because, you know,
when you look at the internet, right,
it wasn't the established businesses,
you know, the established, you know, ExxonMobiles of the world
that benefited from the much lower cost
of doing business and video conferencing
and those types of things.
It was new players that didn't exist previously.
Small companies that started in garages like Google and Amazon
or in a college of door.
like Facebook. And I believe that is much more likely of an outcome from this AI race. Think about
the proprietary database and algorithms that meta has created painstakingly over the last several
decades. Those are now almost worthless, right? Or they will be in two years. They have to stay
so far ahead of that because an AI could rapidly re-engineer that using a very small cohort of a small
community, for example, and really replicate that almost to a better degree. Look at TikTok,
for example of how that's working.
So I think we're going to see explosions coming out of nowhere from a lot of companies,
and we're going to see the ability to compete with the big boys using GROC or chat GPT
or whatever your preferences.
They can spit out code that can solve many of these problems at an astonishingly improving
rate.
And soon it may be as good as some of these engineers at top companies, which would allow
me to compete.
I have no engineering capability whatsoever, but I might be able to compete with
stuff that people were producing two years ago at bigger pockets, highly trained software engineers.
So I think that's going to really disrupt things in an interesting way. And that's going to drive
costs down dramatically, which I think it's going to harm corporate profits to a pretty
substantial degree. Because if I'm paying for something online right now, like, I'm going to
Google less, right? I'm going to Google. I'm going to type into Google less and I'm going to type into
chat GPT or grok more when I've got questions. That's going to be devastating for Google. It's going
be beneficial to these AI providers, but who knows how that's going to exactly play out?
I think we just said the same thing. I think we're pretty much in agreement there that it could be
bad for businesses. It could be bad for employment. It could drop prices. For anybody out there
that is interested in this idea of upstarts or startups, basically coming along and killing
large businesses, I think we're going to hear the term innovators dilemma a lot more in the near
future. So there was a book written back in the, I think, late 80s, early 90s called The Innovators
Dilemma by a guy named Clayton Christensen. For anybody in the tech industry was kind of a must-read
book, but it's all about why large companies that have such a huge technological advantage
and head start, often fail and often get eaten by startups out of nowhere. And so your example of the
browser is a great example. Just the last few days, I've been reading a lot about this idea that
Google is probably at risk from some of these small AI startups like OpenAI who are in theory
going to create their own browser and create their own search engine. And in theory,
it could be the thing that takes down Google that nobody has been able to take down,
obviously, for the last 20, 25 years. And now this startup technology that's been around for a
year or two could potentially take down Google at its most profitable business unit.
It could have so many unexpected things, too, that benefit, again, the consumer
or the small producers.
For example, let's take, let's take agriculture, right?
Right now, most of the food produced in this country is in the breadbasket, right?
In the Midwest, you know, in the Great Plains.
There's a reason to believe that it might be more efficient to use AI to build very small
but highly efficient gardens or whatever in the future, which have the advantage of not
having any transport costs, right, over a large distances.
Like, who knows how that's going to play out?
But I think that there is almost certain to be immense productivity games.
which I think should benefit society as a whole in a major way with winners and losers very
difficult to predict. I guess the opposite point would be I would take real estate in that space
because I think physical space is a perpetually limiting factor. If the standard of living is
rising for people, whether it's deflationary or inflationary, we're going to target an inflation
rate of 2% in the long term. Real estate should be a, you know, if there's a rise in the
standard of living and there's limited physical space to live in, I would imagine that rents
rents will rise as a percentage of real spending. Yeah, certainly the thesis that inflation would
continue at 2% would be good for real estate. One truism we have in the real estate world is that
historically, inflation and real estate values have basically worked in lockstep up until at least a few
years ago. So it's reasonable to believe that if inflation continues to grow at two, two and a half
percent, that real estate value should grow long term at least two, two and a half percent. So that's
the big question, though. Do we see?
inflation continue or do we see deflation, which I think is the risk? Jay, are we in a recession?
I was hoping that if I spoke long enough, I could avoid that question. I remember I mentioned earlier
that we have this group of government folks, Enver, who will meet at some point in the future and
look back and say we were in a recession or we weren't. They're going to look back today and over the
last couple years and they're going to determine that, no, we're not in a recession. So for me,
that's good enough to say that as of this moment while we're having this discussion, we are not
in a recession. That said, I'm definitely seeing signs of economic softening. I think there's enough
volatility going on in trade and business and at the highest level of government. Uncertainty is going
to drive a good bit of additional economic softening over the next six to 12 months. And I would not
be surprised to find that if we have this conversation six or 12 months from now, my answer might change.
Well, I want to preview some data with you here. Our audience agrees with you. It's 46% the largest
cohort of this. The question is, do you believe the United States is in recession currently?
35% I posted this an hour ago, so it'll fill out over the next day with close to a thousand
votes, I believe. About a third of folks believe, yes, we are in a recession. About half,
say, 46% say no, and 18% are not sure. I am likely in the no or not sure camp myself in
alignment with you, Jay. I'm not necessarily ready to say whether I think we will be in a recession
in the next six, 12 months. For what it's worth, I looked at this in February, and you know,
the macroeconomic data and I was like, I just don't understand how expectations can be met at the
highest level for the stock market, the US-B-US-based stock market, given the factors that are at play.
And so I pulled out and moved to paid off real estate turtling and playing defense here.
So one thing that I didn't mention, but is really important, especially when you do surveys and
polls and ask people what they think, keep in mind that when we talk about recession from an academic
standpoint like we're doing here, we're talking about the economy as a whole. But when you ask people,
are we in a recession or not, and they're not thinking like an economist, they're not looking at the data.
Most likely what they're hearing when you ask that question is, do you feel like we are in a recession?
Is your financial situation at a point right now that you feel like the economy is bad and you're suffering?
And the reality is that just because we might not be in a recession doesn't mean that there aren't a lot of people who are suffering out there.
Historically, we've had a very large middle class.
and typically speaking, when the economy shifts, when it softens or strengthens, it's the middle class that notices it first.
And because they were historically so, such a big group that was bundled together, if you were to survey the American people, is the economy getting better or worse?
What you would hear is a pretty consistent yes or no.
These days, we don't see nearly as much of that because the middle class is shrinking.
We've got a lot more people being pushed down into lower socioeconomic layers.
and then we have a few people that are being pushed up into higher socioeconomic layers.
And if you're being pushed down, you're probably experiencing something very different
than somebody who's being pushed up to the top 10% or 5% or 1%.
And your experiences of what's going on in the economy is going to be very, very different.
If you own assets, hard assets, whether it's Bitcoin or real estate or stocks or gold
or any of those things, your view of what's going on in the world financially is going to
a lot different than if you don't own hard assets because hard assets have been overperforming,
outperforming for the last couple years, then it's really easy to think, hey, my situation's getting
better, the economy has to be good because my situation is getting better. But if you don't own
hard assets, you're probably thinking, my situation is not getting better. Prices are going up,
work is getting more difficult. Things just don't feel as good. So it's not surprising that there are a lot
of people and I'm not going to tell them that they're wrong because that's their experience. But just
remember when we talk about recession from an academic standpoint, we're going to get much
different answers than when we talk about it from an individual, how are you feeling standpoint?
I want to chime in on that point as well because I can't help myself again. But, you know,
look, I'm looking at a data set here on what you just said. It's Pew Research for the
shrinking middle class, this observation that you have here. There's a headline here that the
percentage of Americans who are in lower income, this is all inflation adjusted, has increased,
to your point, from 25% to 29%. But more of the shrinkage,
the middle class is actually relative to them going into the upper income brackets here.
So we're seeing a stratification of wealth, which is 100% true, but it's actually been more
shifting Americans as a whole towards the upper income portion in there, which I find very
interesting. And I think that a major catalyst for that is the advent of the internet technology.
And I think AI is only likely to accelerate the stratification. Again, shifting more people into the
upper income class, but also creating a larger, lower income bracket here. Because I think it amplifies
the ability for elite income earn and makes it harder for folks that are not able to benefit from
that technology for whatever reason to drive their earnings up. And what's interesting, I don't have the
data and I'm not sure how much different it would be, if at all, but the data you were just
presenting was based on income levels. We could also do the same exercise using net worth levels.
And I'm curious how much different it would be. And again, I don't have the data, but it's
kind of a thought experiment, that that could result in a much different answer than what we just saw.
Okay, Jay, I so appreciate your willingness to come on here and share your vast knowledge of
all things economy. I don't know another person that I know so well that I could just say,
hey, you want to come on and chat about this? Who would be as intelligent as well versed in this
material as you? So thank you so much for joining us today. I really appreciate your time.
Where can people find you?
J-Scott.com, letter J-S-C-O-T-T-com.
That will link out to everything you might need
and my email address is on there
for anybody that wants to get in touch with me.
All right.
Thank you so much and we will talk to you soon.
Thanks.
That was Jay Scott, Scott Trench.
What did you think of that episode?
I always love talking to Jay.
I love following him on Facebook.
I get into the discussion with him.
I think we agree on most things
with a couple of nuanced disagreements there.
So I agree with this take.
We have the same take.
I think no.
We're not currently in a recession.
And I think a big part of the reason why people feel that we're not in a recession is because
of the stock market valuations, which have bounced back to peaks, right?
They're back at all-time highs.
I think that has a lot to do with things.
I think that the anecdotes on the ground continue to talk about the middle class struggling,
losing their jobs, finding it harder and harder to get jobs.
It does seem to be an employer's market in many parts of the economy right now.
And I think there's a lot of things to be worried about.
There's also things that could go really right over the next couple of years, which I think include
things like AI or a reduction in interest rates.
So it's really hard to tell whether we'll be in a recession anytime in the near future.
That term you use at the beginning of this economic confusion, I think is a great way to describe
where things are right now, right?
In one hand, American wealth and prosperity is at all-time highs.
And more and more people are benefiting from that, despite headlines to the contrary,
even as a huge portion of the population and more and more people are being left behind by
that in the middle class just shrink. That's a real problem. Who knows what's going to go from here?
It seems like there's a lot to be worried about right now, but also investors clearly are not worried
and are valuing things at all time high is even adjusted for inflation. I am in the camp of,
I'm not sure if we're in a recession or not, just because there is so much confusion and so many
conflicting stories and conflicting bits of information that are coming in. I'm happy to be wrong.
I would love to side with you and Jay and say, no, we're not in a recession, but I'm just not sure.
I'm going to continue on my path of investing the way that I'm investing, and we'll see what happens.
You know, at the end, I wanted to chime with this.
We talked Jay after the recording, as so often happens, there's a good nugget that comes
from those after recording conversations.
And I'll just time in that, you know, the question, what do you do in the context of this
environment comes up?
And, you know, we discussed this at length.
But Jay put the nail on the head.
You diversify.
This is how you handle economic uncertainty.
you can't handle the uncertainty of what's going on in the economy, you diversify. We just had
Frank Vasquez on the show talking about how to build a golden ratio portfolio. There are answers to
how you invest that are other than 100% concentration in this asset class or this asset here.
And if you're worried, diversify, especially if you're approaching your fire number,
you're 80% or even at or approaching it. It's time to diversify. That will sway a lot of these
risks. And there's ways to take advantage to diversify in a way that will take advantage of really any
market condition that's ever existed. Absolutely. Scott, should we get that?
out of here. Let's do it. That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. He is Scott
Trench. I am Mindy Jensen saying out the door of a Lasiraptor.
