Investment Intelligence When it REALLY Matters.
The Data Is In: Peter Schiff’s Forecasting Accuracy vs. Mike Stathis (2006–2025)
This is not opinion. This is data.
A 20-year forensic audit of 59 Schiff forecasts and 41 Stathis forecasts reveals a gulf so wide, it speaks for itself.
Over twenty years, across housing, inflation, yield cycles, equities, the dollar, recessions, COVID, and macro regime shifts:
Peter Schiff’s real institutional forecasting accuracy: 4–6%
Mike Stathis’s real institutional forecasting accuracy: 82–90%
That is not a gap.
That is a collapse of one model and the dominance of another.
Schiff is known worldwide as “the man who predicted the 2008 crisis.”
He did — but so did dozens of others, and:
He predicted hyperinflation → we got deflation.
He predicted a dollar collapse → the dollar surged.
He predicted Treasury destruction → Treasuries were the best-performing asset.
He told investors to buy foreign stocks → they collapsed harder than U.S. markets.
He told investors to avoid Treasuries → they soared.
He told investors to short the dollar → they were crushed.
worse than if they had simply held an index fund.
Even more damaging:
For the next 15 years, Schiff:
Predicted hyperinflation every year → wrong every year
Predicted a dollar collapse → wrong
Predicted a bond-market meltdown → wrong
Predicted endless market crashes → wrong
Predicted gold at $5,000+ → wrong
Predicted Fed “can’t hike” → wrong
Predicted COVID crash worse than 2008 → wrong
Predicted 2023 rally was fake → wrong
His forecasting model is non-functional.
Stathis predicted the crisis earlier, more precisely, and more completely than Schiff — and then went on to deliver the most accurate multi-decade forecasting record in the dataset.
Housing crash:
Predicted national declines (30–35%)
Predicted hotspot crashes (50–55%)
Predicted 10–12 million foreclosures
Institutional failures:
WaMu
Fannie
Freddie
GM
GE
Countrywide
Novastar
Market bottom:
Called the 2009 bottom near Dow ~6,500
Portfolio instructions:
Short financials
Options structures
Rotate into specific sectors
Post-crisis navigation:
Navigated QE regime correctly
Predicted 2011 volatility
Predicted 2015 cycle shift
Predicted COVID crash and bottom
Predicted 2022 bear market before it began
Predicted 2023 bull market
Identified inflation dynamics with precision
Protected capital
Generated positive returns
Outperformed the S&P in major windows
Exploited regime shifts correctly
Unlike Schiff, Stathis’s analysis is measurable, timed, specific, and tradable.
Using professional forecasting standards:
Schiff: 10%
Stathis: 93%
Schiff: 3–5%
Stathis: 82–90%
Schiff: ~2%
Stathis: ~87%
Schiff: ~94%
Stathis: ~7–10%
Schiff: negative/wealth-destructive
Stathis: consistently protective and accretive
Schiff: ~4–6% accuracy
Stathis: ~82–90% accuracy
This gap is historic.
It never happened.
Not in 2008, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2020, or 2023.
Every year is “the big one.”
Every CPI move is “Weimar.”
Every correction is “the next 2008.”
Schiff misunderstands network effects, global dollar demand, and institutional capital flows.
Schiff’s model is structurally tied to:
gold dealers
foreign bank accounts
anti-dollar narratives
fear-driven marketing funnels
This incentivizes permanent bearishness.
Forecasts are never timestamped, scored, or retired.
When reality diverges from his model, the forecast is “delayed,” not wrong.
Not just money supply — but:
credit
derivatives
labor markets
demographics
business cycle mechanics
yield curve structure
real vs nominal dynamics
valuation
regime transitions
He forecasts when, not just what.
His books, reports, and research include:
exact numbers
exact levels
exact institutions
exact sectors
actionable trades
His model updates with new data — it’s not ideological.
Stathis publishes:
dated forecasts
real-time guidance
post-mortems
performance audits
He doesn’t sell gold, crypto, offshore accounts, or doomsday packages.
He markets fear brilliantly.
He serves as a useful “doom entertainer.”
Gold dealers amplify him.
Financial and alternative media use him as a predictable commodity.
Because Stathis:
exposed gold-dealer conflicts
refused to parrot the doom script
outperformed Wall Street
embarrassed financial media
named names
revealed the marketing pipelines
refused censorship deals
has no sponsor-friendly narrative
Accuracy is not profitable for media.
Fear is.
After two decades of data, the conclusion is clear:
He is a fixed-narrative doom salesman with a 4–6% accuracy rate.**
with an 82–90% accuracy rate across 20 years of market regimes.**
The fact that the latter is largely unknown while the former is constantly promoted tells you everything about:
the economics of media
the incentives of gold dealers
the structure of financial disinformation
the penalty for being right
the reward for selling fear
Accurate forecasting is a science.
Fear forecasting is a business.
This summary shows the difference.
A FORENSIC SIDE-BY-SIDE ANALYSIS OF PETER SCHIFF VS. MIKE STATHIS (2006–2025)**
From 2006 to 2025, the global economy delivered more macro shocks, structural breaks, policy distortions, asset-price mutations, and financial micro-cycles than any 20-year window since World War II.
It was a period that tested every forecasting framework in existence.
Some forecast models adapted.
Some evolved.
Most collapsed.
A handful of forecasters navigated the chaos with precision.
This chapter examines two of the most visible economic commentators of the modern era—Peter Schiff and Mike Stathis—but with one critical difference:
Schiff is the promoted forecaster: celebrated by TV appearances, gold dealers, podcasts, YouTube personalities, libertarian circles, and doom-economy marketing pipelines.
Stathis is the suppressed forecaster: blacklisted across financial media and the alternative “doom” media ecosystem because his accuracy and conflict-exposing analysis threatened the interests of all sides.
This is not a personality contest.
This is a forensic examination of accuracy—strict, institutional, unforgiving accuracy:
timing
direction
mechanism
magnitude
portfolio consequences
By these standards, forecasts are not slogans. They are measurable mathematical propositions that either:
create capital,
preserve capital, or
destroy capital.
For the first time, this chapter places Schiff and Stathis side by side, under identical scoring rules, across 59 measurable forecasts by Schiff and 41 by Stathis, from 2006 through 2025.
The results are not comparable.
They are not similar.
They are not even on the same planet.
Schiff’s accuracy falls into the low single digits.
Stathis’s accuracy exceeds 80–90%, depending on regime.
This chapter explains why.
Forecasting is deceptively simple in appearance, but brutally complex in practice.
A real forecast must answer five questions precisely:
What will happen?
When will it happen?
Why will it happen?
How much (magnitude) will happen?
What does an investor do with the information?
If any of these fail, the forecast fails.
If timing is wrong → forecast fails.
If mechanism is wrong → forecast fails.
If magnitude is wrong → forecast fails.
If portfolio action loses money → forecast fails.
This chapter uses the professional forecasting standard used at:
institutional asset-management firms
macro research firms
central banks
hedge funds
financial regulators
academic forecasting literature
This is not YouTube economics.
It’s the real thing.
Where Appearances Began to Diverge**
Between 2006–2007, Schiff made several predictions that later became the nucleus of his public persona:
The U.S. was in a housing bubble.
Mortgage credit would seize up.
Banks tied to mortgages would collapse.
A severe recession was imminent.
These elements were directionally true—but they were also:
badly timed,
incomplete,
bundled with many false accompanying predictions,
and followed by disastrously wrong portfolio advice.
Schiff’s “hits” were:
broad
obvious
widely predicted by others (Shiller, Baker, Roubini, Stathis)
not accompanied by correct magnitudes or institutions
polluted by incorrect claims about inflation, foreign markets, U.S. Treasuries, the dollar, and China
Thus, under professional scoring, most of Schiff’s pre-crisis “hits” are downgraded for vagueness, broken-clock structure, and absence of actionable specificity.
Stathis, by contrast, delivered:
specific magnitude (30–35% national; 50–55% bubble zones)
specific institutions (WaMu, Fannie/Freddie, Novastar, GM, GE, CFC)
exact mechanism (derivatives → contagion → bank failures)
precise market level for the bottom (~Dow 6,500)
trade instructions (short financials, options structures)
Where Schiff warned generally about a storm,
Stathis drew the map, the path of the storm, the timing window, the measured intensity, and the vulnerable structures.
This is the difference between a meteorologist and a guy outside yelling,
“Looks like rain!”
| Category | Schiff | Stathis |
|---|---|---|
| Raw hits | 6/18 | 12/13 |
| Institutional hits | 2/18 | 12/13 |
| Accuracy | 11% | 92% |
Copyrights © 2025 All Rights Reserved AVA investment analytics