← All stories
Politics

Schiff Predicts US Forced Into Bad Iran Deal Despite Trump Claims of Victory

The Peter Schiff Show · The Debt, the AI Bubble, and Strategy's Liquidity Crisis… It's All Connected · May 28, 2026
Schiff Predicts US Forced Into Bad Iran Deal Despite Trump Claims of Victory
The Peter Schiff Show
The Peter Schiff Show
The Debt, the AI Bubble, and Strategy's Liquidity Crisis… It's All Connected
"Trump is going to be forced into a deal, and he keeps saying he's not going to sign a deal unless it's a great deal. Well, he'll sign any deal, I think, ultimately, but regardless of the deal that he signs, it's gonna be a great deal because if Trump signs it, it's automatically a great deal."
Schiff argues Trump has his back to the wall on Iran negotiations despite repeated claims of an imminent 90% complete deal. He predicts Trump will sign any agreement and declare victory regardless of terms, comparing it to the NAFTA-to-USMCA rebrand where the biggest difference was the name.

About this episode

In this episode of The Peter Schiff Show, host Peter Schiff delivers a withering critique of the Trump administration's Iran deal optimism, the AI capital expenditure bubble, and what he claims is systematic IRS criminality targeting his bank. Schiff argues that despite Trump's repeated claims of an imminent Iran agreement being 90% complete, bond yields refuse to drop—remaining near 4.5% on the 10-year Treasury and above 5% on the 30-year—proving the real problem is America's unprecedented $39.3 trillion debt, not the war. He reveals that FOIA-obtained emails show IRS coordination with Puerto Rican regulators to destroy his bank starting in December 2021, though the agency is withholding the most damning early communications in defiance of a court order. Schiff predicts a collapse in MicroStrategy and Bitcoin, arguing that Saylor's early debt buyback signals distress rather than genius and that Bitcoin is failing to rally with tech stocks or benefit from gold weakness. He attacks the $1 trillion AI capital expenditure boom as a bubble built on layoffs and deferred productive investment, warns that Elizabeth Warren's proposed AI tax reveals how government punishes job creation through payroll taxes, and makes the controversial claim that Americans had more freedom under King George than modern democracy. The episode closes with Schiff announcing his summer hiatus and previewing commentary on America's 250th anniversary, arguing the country needs a new revolution to escape government tyranny worse than what colonists faced in 1776.

Key takeaways

More stories More from The Peter Schiff Show