exist there for a little bit on wednesday. nine major countries are either in recession or on the brink of one. perhaps even a bigger concern than the inverted yield curve. other than pushing the fed to lower interest rates, what is the administration doing to stave off any potential recession from coming here? >> so let's clear up this inverted yield curve thing. i didn't write the book on it, but i have written several books about the yield curve as a leading economic indicator. technically, we did not have a yield curve inversion. an inverted yield curve requires a big spread between the short and long end. >> we had a smaller one. >> correct, all we had was a flat yield curve. >> it was inverted for a little bit. >> that's not technically an inversion. a flat curve, which is a weak signal of any possibility, and in this case, in this case, the flat curve is actually the result of a very strong trump economy. what we see now is foreign capital coming to the best game on the globe. which is the trump economy. it's going into our stock market. when it goes into the bond