To: IC720 who wrote (1560671 ) 9/24/2025 8:01:36 AM From: Maple MAGA 1 RecommendationRecommended By longz
Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579005 Martin Armstrong forecasts that did not play out as stated or on the timetable claimed , pairing his own words with “what actually happened.” 1) “Big Bang”/sovereign-debt crisis to begin at 2015.75 (Oct 1, 2015) Armstrong source: Multiple posts keying the crisis start to 2015.75 / Oct-1-2015 (“Big Bang 2015.75”; “The ECM date October 1”; “Changes on September 30/October 1, 2015”). Armstrong Economics+2Armstrong Economics+2 What happened: No immediate sovereign-debt cascade; global growth in 2015–2016 remained ~3.1–3.6% and the IMF expected a gradual pickup from 2017. IMF+1 2) ECB/Euro collapse by 2018 (or a failure of a “major central bank”) Armstrong source: “Eurozone will Collapse – There is No Other Choice Economically” and related euro-collapse pieces; risk of monetary reform “as early as 2018.” Armstrong Economics+1 What happened: The ECB did not collapse; 2018 saw slower euro-area growth but continued expansion; the ECB published a normal Annual Report for 2018. European Central Bank 3) “Financial Panic” in Europe into May 2019 Armstrong source: “The Financial Panic of 2019?” calling for a major panic “come this May 2019.” Armstrong Economics What happened: No systemic European banking/market panic materialized. Euro-area equities traded through 2019 without a collapse and, in fact, subsequent years saw the EURO STOXX 50 make new records by 2025. Cinco Días 4) Gold to $5,000 on the 2011–2016 window (conditional language, but presented as model cap/target) Armstrong source: 2009 reports discussing a 2016 high for gold and “maximum our models project is $5,000.” Armstrong Economics+1 What happened: Spot gold never approached $5,000 by 2016 (or since). It finished 2016 near $1,152/oz . Macrotrends+1 5) Euro “collapse” & persistent USD haven call (2015) Armstrong source: Repeated 2015 euro-bear themes (“The Euro” page collects pieces; “Pound Sterling Collapses” also ties a sovereign-debt eruption to 2018–2020). Armstrong Economics+1 What happened: The euro did not collapse; EUR/USD fluctuated but remained a major currency pair through 2015–2025 (historical series shows the euro very much extant). Macrotrends 6) Dow 30,000 by 2015 Armstrong source: Will the Dow Reach 30,000 by 2015? (Aug 14, 2009) tying a big equity peak to 2015.75 . Armstrong Economics What happened: The DJIA ended 2015 at ~17,425 —far from 30,000 (which wasn’t reached until late 2020). Macrotrends 7) Sovereign-debt crisis “moving into 2020.05” (as the next leg of the 2015.75 call) Armstrong source: Posts framing 2015.75 as the start with a next leg into 2020.05 and “demise of governments.” Armstrong Economics What happened: While 2020 had a sharp COVID shock , the immediate macro story was a rapid, policy-driven rebound rather than broad sovereign defaults; by mid-2020–2021 risk assets had recovered strongly. (Armstrong himself later emphasized the March-23-2020 low and rebound.) Armstrong Economics Notes on interpretation Armstrong often frames forecasts via the Economic Confidence Model (ECM) with windows and “turning points,” which can make ex-post interpretation flexible. That’s precisely why the items above use his original posts plus hard outcome data