"Trump's approval drops to its lowest ever: 29 percent, or nearly half a Rasmussen" President Trump’s approval rating has cratered after he incited a deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, led by a dramatic drop in support among voters of his own party. A new Pew Research Center poll released Friday found just 29 percent of Americans approve of the job Trump is doing in office, by far the lowest rating he has received during his presidency. More than two in three Americans, 68 percent, disapprove of his handling of the job.
This week in Trumponomics: Out with a whimper https://finance.yahoo.com/news/this-week-in-trumponomics-out-with-a-whimper-180816951.html President Trump is leaving office with two impeachments, a banned Twitter account and a reputation in tatters. The economy isn’t doing much better. When Trump took power in 2017, he inherited an economy that was in pretty good shape after the slow recovery of the Obama years. Employment improved further under Trump, and wages started to rise as the labor market tightened. The Trump tax cuts of 2017 included unnecessary giveaways to business and the wealthy, but they did put Americans firms on better footing by lowering the corporate tax rate. By the end of 2019 a strong economy could have clinched Trump’s reelection. The coronavirus pandemic that erupted in 2020 wasn’t Trump’s fault. But the faltering U.S. response to the crisis was. Trump politicized and even opposed simple public health measures that could have better contained the virus and let more businesses stay open. He left cities and states to fend for themselves instead of mustering a muscular federal testing plan. Trump now takes credit for the swift rollout of vaccines, but any president would have done the same and probably more. And since losing his reelection bid in November, a petulant Trump has given up on policymaking even though pandemic deaths are hitting galling new records and the economy is backsliding. The question now is whether incoming President Joe Biden will do better. There’s reason to think he will. Biden has no magic wand that will vanquish the virus or revive the economy. But one of his first priorities will be developing a national vaccination program with community vaccination centers, mobile units in rural areas and more federal resources than states and cities can mount on their own. Biden says his administration will also provide far more testing capability than currently exists, to isolate those who are sick and more easily open schools and businesses. Trump should have demanded this nine months ago. Congress is also likely to pass more additional stimulus spending than if Trump were still president. Trump seemed uninterested in more stimulus spending last fall, even though it probably would have helped his reelection odds. Congress passed the latest $900 bill in December without his involvement, essentially. Many Republicans don’t see a need for more stimulus, but Democrats will control both houses of Congress starting Jan. 20, and they’ve got the checkbook out. Biden probably won’t get the entire $1.9 trillion in spending he wants, but he’ll get at least half of that, which will be a short-term boost for the economy. Our final weekly Trump-o-meter reading is MEDIOCRE, the third-highest. This reflects tempered optimism for what Biden might accomplish, rather than disdain for the wreckage Trump is leaving behind. (More at above url)
Let's see what is waiting for Donald after the 20th... Manhattan DA expands criminal probe of Trump Organization to include its Seven Springs Westchester County compound to investigate whether its value was inflated for tax breaks The Manhattan District Attorney, Cyrus Vance, is investigating Trump for possible tax fraud, and bank and insurance fraud Vance was already investigating hush money payments made to women who had claimed they had sex with Trump The investigation now includes Trump's home at Seven Springs, an historic estate in Westchester, New York, purchased in 1996 for $7.5million A 2012 Trump financial document values the property at $291 million, but local agents estimated the property would trade for around $50 million or less Trump signed a deal with a land conservancy promising not to develop it It gave him a $21million charitable tax deduction while Trump also claimed $2.2million in property taxes from the house as business expenses Trump had planned to build a golf course along with nine homes on the site but was stopped by local residents who wanted to protect it In 2014, Eric Trump described it as the family's personal compound where he'd spent summers as a child learning 'the art of the deal' https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ation-finances-including-family-compound.html As noted in the article and links plus other articles .... all of Trump's private residences have loans under the Trump Organization.... none of them have traditional residential mortgage jumbo loans.... they are all tied into his businesses and use short term lending. This means that Trump is likely not only likely to lose all of his business properties when banks refuse to re-finance over the next few years but all of his private residences as well.
Trump’s businesses were already in a ‘billion-dollar hole’ before the Capitol riot fallout https://finance.yahoo.com/news/donald-trump-business-prospects-194722864.html By almost any metric, the Trump administration has taken extraordinary measures to help the president’s businesses profit during his four years in office. The administration pushed to hold the G7 summit at President Trump’s private club and the President himself visited one of his own properties on approximately one out of every three days he’s been in office. But the striking thing, based on the limited information we have about the inner workings of Trump’s company, is how little these moves helped the profitability of the business itself. “They were already in trouble,” Robert Maguire, research director of watchdog organization Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), told Yahoo Finance. This was “before the pandemic, and then the pandemic hits and it's a huge blow.” Forbes has been estimating Trump’s net worth for years. In March 2016, when the earliest figure was available, his net worth stood at an estimated $4.5 billion. Soon after he was inaugurated president, that figure had dropped to $3.5 billion. “We now have him at $2.5 billion,” said Dan Alexander, a Forbes senior editor and one of the people behind the data. “That's a very substantial hit.” The coronavirus pandemic has gutted businesses across the country, with 10 million fewer jobs in the U.S. than before the pandemic began. That overall factor, combined with a host of companies cutting ties with the Trump Organization following the president’s role in inciting the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, is likely to damage the president’s business further. “Politics has not – despite what a lot of people think – been good for his business,” said Alexander, who also wrote a book on the subject called "White House Inc.” 6 years of apparent losses Another way to measure the health of Trump’s businesses is what we know about his revenue. CREW has analyzed the revenues from the Trump Organization, which he still owns but says is currently under the day-to-day control of his two adult sons, and finds that the money coming in has likely flatlined. According to multiple analyses of Trump’s personal financial disclosures, the Trump Organization – which includes a range of assets from office buildings in Manhattan to hotels and golf courses around the world, and other revenue sources like licensing deals – generated a minimum of around $452 million in revenue in 2017. That figure fell to $434 million in 2018, and was $446 million in 2019, the last year for which data is available. The business has been under intense pressure since 2015 when Trump announced his run for office by calling Mexican immigrants “rapists” before adding, “some, I assume, are good people.” The list of groups that cut ties back then was longer and included more prominent names than this past week. Corporations from NBCUniversal to Macy’s to NASCAR to Serta all rushed to cut ties. Another wave of Trump business backers ran for the exits in 2017 after he responded to violent protests in Charlottesville, Va., that featured white supremacists, by saying "you also had people that were very fine people, on both sides." Then of course, came the COVID pandemic that has hit Trump’s hospitality-centric business hard over the last year. Trump’s Washington, D.C. hotel, for example, remains open to guests but the lobby and restaurant – which long served as a hub for Trump officials to meet and spend money – has been closed by the virus even as hotel officials have repeatedly pushed to open up. Zach Everson runs a website devoted to tracking the comings and goings at Trump’s D.C. hotel, and noted in a recent interview that there are far fewer people broadcasting their stay at the Trump hotel on Instagram now than in the past. “It's just been tough trying to see what exactly can be attributed to the riots and what was just ongoing because of COVID,” said Everson. ‘They're not going to need to curry favor with him anymore’ The one bright spot in Trump’s empire has been at places he frequented as president. According to Trump’s personal disclosures, places like his Bedminster, N.J., golf club and his Washington-area golf resorts, which he visits regularly, have seen revenue increases. Maguire noted that these businesses were often “promoting the possibility that the president would drop in on your wedding or something like that,” which helped business, “and so it makes sense that these properties that he frequented the most are the ones that would see the most benefit.” Maguire predicts that “we're going to see a drop-off in the kinds of events that we saw during his presidency for that very fact that they're not going to need to curry favor with him anymore.” There is also a slight chance, in addition to barring him from further office, that Washington lawmakers could cut off another stream of revenue for the soon-to-be former president: the taxpayer-funded trappings usually afforded to former presidents. “There are many members [of Congress] who are concerned about his continued benefits as an ex-president, the huge transportation budget, Secret Service” he would get, said Rep. Don Beyer (D., Va.) in an interview with Yahoo Finance. “I'm not quite sure the Senate will want to go that far as to take them away, but certainly people are talking about that.” What’s next for the organization Either way, Alexander of Forbes said any taxpayer funds would only be a drop in the bucket compared with Trump’s expected financial (and legal) challenges in the years ahead. He has reported that the company’s total debt is over $1 billion. “Stopping in at Turnberry [Trump’s golf course] and forcing your Secret Service to stay there? Yeah. It's going to bring you money,” he said. “But it's not going to fix the billion-dollar hole.” A host of businesses have cut ties with Trump in recent days, from the PGA to Shopify to, reportedly, his real estate brokerage firm Cushman & Wakefield. New York City also canceled contracts worth $17 million at two ice-skating rinks and a golf course. Perhaps the most significant will be Deutsche Bank’s (DB) reported move to eventually sever its relationship with Donald Trump and his companies. The multinational bank has long been a key holder of Trump’s debts and has helped finance his business for decades. The Trump Organization, for its part, is claiming that the business will thrive in the coming years, built around Trump’s die-hard supporters. “You have a man who would get followed to the ends of the Earth by a hundred million Americans,” the president’s younger son Eric Trump said in a recent interview with the AP. “He created the greatest political movement in American history and his opportunities are endless.” A spokesperson for the Trump Organization didn’t respond to repeated inquiries from Yahoo Finance on various aspects of the business. The big question, according to Alexander, focuses on the leases that Trump holds across New York City and the country. These sources of income constitute the heart of Trump’s empire and may hurt his bottom line more seriously than anything else As just one example, Business Insider recently reported that the Girl Scouts of New York are exploring ways to get out of its lease in Trump’s building at 40 Wall Street. That lease isn’t set to expire until almost 2030. For all four years “really the big question is: when is this going to hit the leasing empire? And I think that's kind of the stage that we're at right now,” said Alexander.
https://www.newsmax.com/politics/mclaughlin-trump-impeachment-poll/2021/01/12/id/1005279/ 23% prefer impeaching Trump. 77% say Congress should work on the coronavirus response instead. 74% say impeachment is “politically motivated to prevent the president from running again.” 65% said President-elect Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are “keeping the country divided.” 74% say if social media platforms can take away Trump’s free speech, “they can take away the right to free speech for any American
What I think will happen now is that Pro-American Trump supporters will begin staying at The President's properties as a show of financial and ideological support. I've booked a room at a Trump hotel myself.