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The average American will hardly feel any impact of the rate reduction and fresh quantitative easing, as those tools were not designed to help those people who are about to be displaced or lose much of their income.Jim Rogers: 'We're headed for the worst financial crisis of our lifetimes'
"We are still waiting for the next shoe to fall, with concerns that next shoe is going to be in the credit markets, not necessarily the stock market," she said. While it is still hard to say where the credit crisis is going to come from, $10 trillion dollars in the corporate debt market may hide a "potential sleeping giant" that could cause disruption, she believes.
The measures to contain the spread of coronavirus may even lead to a technical recession, as nationwide social distancing is set to disrupt services on which the US economy is dependent.
"I told RT earlier that the next time we are going to have a financial problem it's going to be the worst..." said Rogers, adding that it appears we are headed toward "the worst financial crisis of our lifetimes" and "we will know in a few months."
Lots of industries like airlines and travel are going to suffer. Companies with big debts are especially vulnerable at this time and those participating in international trade in particular will have serious problems. "Some of them will be bankrupt."
Most markets were not ready for the global health crisis and did not know what was coming. However, the reason behind such a mayhem is "not just the virus, it is certainly much more" than that.
Rogers also has a piece of advice for investors, suggesting they invest their money "only in what they know a lot about."

"The US carried out airstrikes on Thursday against multiple Iranian-backed militia sites in Iraq, according to the US Defense Department.CNN and other Western corporate media outlets have attempted to depict militias like Kata'ib Hezbollah as "Iranian-backed" in an effort to demonize them - and while they are indeed partly backed by Iran - they are also an official component of the Iraqi military.
"The strikes come one day after the US assessed an Iranian-backed group was responsible for a rocket attack on a base where coalition forces are located, killing two American service members and one British service member."

Comment: When government bails out industries, it always falls on the taxpayer to take care of the payout. One wonders where all this extra money is going to come from.