CPI Hits 3.3%, Consumer Sentiment Hits Record Low: Stagflation Is Here

March CPI tripled to 0.9% as consumer sentiment hit a record low, signaling the arrival of stagflation. With the Fed quietly resuming QE and GDP stalling, gold and silver continue to climb amid rising M2 money supply.

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Source: DepositPhotos

CPI triples to 0.9%, consumer sentiment hits an all-time low, and the Fed is quietly running QE — stagflation isn't coming, it's here.

Gold ended the week at $4,745 with silver at $75.76 and mining stocks up 5%, all buoyed by the Taco Tuesday ceasefire that sent markets surging mid-week. Peter Schiff argues the ceasefire is a win for Iran and that Trump was looking for a way out of threats he could never carry out — but the real story is the inflation data.

March CPI came in at 0.9% month-over-month, tripling February's reading and pushing year-over-year inflation to 3.3%. The Fed's balance sheet has quietly expanded by nearly $200 billion in 2026 — quantitative easing in everything but name. Q4 GDP was revised down to 0.5%, making 2025's full-year growth just 2.1% — lower than any year under Biden. Consumer sentiment plunged to 47.6, the lowest reading in the history of the survey. Schiff connects the dots: M2 money supply growing at 5%, a proposed 50% defense budget increase, and a Fed that will be forced to cut rates regardless of inflation all point to a stagflation environment where gold and silver are headed substantially higher.


Video Length: 00:44:12

Video Chapters

00:00 Ceasefire and Market Mood
15:20 Inflation Data and Fed QE
23:14 Inflation Not The War
38:46 Stagflation Bull Case

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