SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Box-By-The-Riviera™ who wrote (217836)11/18/2025 3:47:25 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218672
 
this day's critically important news allowing for max insight, unless I am misunderstanding the situation due to language and to distance

am pondering what would mean should any other national leader champion affordability of one vs another eats

mao did that, once upon a time, and some French queen, also once upon a time

bloomberg.com

Trump Hails McDonald’s Extra Value Meals in Affordability Pitch


Donald Trump at the McDonalds Impact Summit on Nov. 17.Photographer: Win McNamee/Getty Images

By Kate Sullivan and Hadriana Lowenkron

November 18, 2025 at 8:19 AM GMT+8

Takeaways by Bloomberg AIHide

  • President Donald Trump argued his administration was making process on lowering prices as he faces new political headwinds.
  • Trump touted economic policies he said have drawn new investments to fuel private-sector job growth and eased inflation, and thanked McDonald's for slashing prices for popular items.
  • The administration has taken steps to ease price pressures, including reducing tariffs on food items and announcing deals with Latin American countries aimed at lowering costs of many items.

President Donald Trump argued his administration was making progress on lowering prices as he faces new political headwinds, pushing back on criticism from Democrats who blame his tariffs for high costs.

Trump touted economic policies he said have drawn trillions in new investments to fuel private-sector job growth and eased the raging inflation that was a political liability for his predecessor, during an address Monday to franchise owners from McDonald’s Corp.

“I want to give a very special thanks to McDonald’s for slashing prices for your most popular items, bringing back Extra Value Meals,” Trump said at the event. “I hear you’re recommitting to the affordable options of Americans that we really know and love, all of the items that we love. And I hear that McDonald’s is playing a very big role in getting prices down for this country.”

The president, whose affinity for McDonald’s is well-known, spoke of his own affection for the company, telling franchise owners he was “one of your all-time most loyal customers” and thanking them for lowering prices on some goods.

The company and its franchisees brought back Extra Value Meals at $5 and $8 price points. McDonald’s thanks to its presence across the country offers an important barometer for consumer spending, in particular with budget-sensitive consumers.

The address, though, highlighted the challenge for Trump — convincing voters his administration is making headway on the high costs that have frustrated Americans for years — even as he tries to maintain a tariff policy most mainstream economists say will worsen price growth.

“Affordable should be our word, not theirs,” Trump said. “Democrats get up and they talk about ‘affordability,’ ‘affordable.’ They don’t say that they had the worst inflation in history, the highest energy prices in history, everything was the worst.”

Trump’s pitch came nearly two weeks after Republicans suffered prominent defeats in off-year state and local elections where affordability concerns were front and center.

In recent days, the administration has taken steps to ease price pressures, including moving to reduce tariffs on a number of food items such as beef, tomatoes, coffee, bananas, fruits, nuts and juices. The administration also announced deals with several Latin American countries aimed at lowering costs of many items not produced in significant quantities in the US.

Trump officials have also floated studying 50-year mortgages as a way to help ease monthly housing costs and suggested making direct $2,000 “dividend” payments from tariffs to citizens.

Still, Trump’s advisers have downplayed the impact of tariffs on prices, even as last week’s move to exempt imports of many agricultural goods from those levies appeared to be a tacit acknowledgment to some that higher duties had contributed to price growth.

Monday’s remarks are poised to be the first of many on affordability as Trump’s advisers consider taking a president who has done relatively little domestic travel so far this year on the road to promote his agenda.



To: Box-By-The-Riviera™ who wrote (217836)11/18/2025 5:49:34 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218672
 
Just-saying and ‘nuff-said, except to note I off-loaded the last of my BTCs and ETHs, and sitting on a whole lot of USDTs and some tokenized gold

Very exciting