Sadly I think he has it correct here:
https://youtu.be/nrrVju_rvRo
Hard to weigh what he says because he doesn't pin any levels or time-frames.
The fed may stop hikes sooner than they say now. A lot of inflation with correct itself as stimulus money burns off and stock, bond, real estate, crypto crash destroys enough demand to cool the economy. I don't think the Fed merely stopping rate hikes is enough to prevent the current collapse. I think it takes active printing to suspend the market above historical trends. The end of rate hikes would make bonds much more attractive so at least there would be some safe haven it dip a toe in. All this, if history is any guide, will surely result in some level of recession as well which will also lower inflation.
I believe over the next 12-24 months (failing a complete Fed reversal) the stock market will collapse down to something around SP 2500-1500 range.
From there I expect a good bull market for the next decade. After it burns down to below historical trend, it has room to grow at a good healthy, sustainable rate ~10-12% a year. I don't know if that next decade long bull market is what he is talking about in the "massive rally". I look forward to that. I love healthy bull markets that are supported my natural growth instead of zero interest crack. That will start inflation again, but some inflation is natural to our system, lets just keep it ~2-4%.
Up to that I think he and I have no argument.
Then I think he says it is at the end of the NEXT market cycle that we have the super crash. Well, hell. A full market cycle can last 20 years. So if he is talking about a super crash then, that might be up to 30 years away. I probably won't care by then.
And leave the country for where? I have been sufficiently convinced by Peter Zeihan's work that due to demographics and changes to the security landscape, as messed up as the US is, the rest of the world is going to be far far worse.
For instance, when the crash is over and I go Risk-On again, my investments will NOT be including international or emerging market exposure like I used to have. I think over the next 50 years the rest of the world is going to be WAY worse off than the US.