Wild times my sound economics brethren:
- • The U.S. government’s largest foreign creditor, Japan, is facing a financial crisis that could significantly impact global markets and borrowing costs.
- • Recent comments from Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Kazuo Ueda regarding potential interest rate hikes led to immediate market reactions, increasing Japanese bond yields to their highest in over 15 years.
- • Japan's prolonged zero interest rate policy allowed it to manage a massive debt load (255% of GDP) but has created significant economic distortions and risks.
- • The BOJ holds 50% of Japan’s government bonds, indicating a lack of confidence from other investors, resulting in failed debt auctions and rising demands for higher yields.
- • A falling yen exacerbates import costs for Japan, which imports 60% of its food and nearly all fossil fuels, further complicating the situation.
- • Japan faces a dilemma: raising rates could double debt-service costs by 2030, while not raising them risks a currency collapse and social unrest due to high import costs.
- • As the largest creditor to the U.S., Japan's potential capital repatriation in response to higher rates could lead to increased U.S. interest rates and a global recession.
- • The current economic instability in Japan could trigger significant sell-offs in global markets and higher borrowing costs for consumers in the U.S.
- • Historical market reactions to Japanese economic changes indicate the severity of potential future impacts, highlighting the interconnectedness of global economies.
- • The document emphasizes the importance of holding hard assets, such as precious metals, in investment portfolios during economic turmoil.
America's Biggest Creditor Is Trapped—And That's Our Problem
https://www.crisisinvesting.com/p/americas-biggest-creditor-is-trappedand?publication_id=87095&post_id=180892831
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Replies (4)
yikes, its like watching a live demo of mises' crack-up boom but in realtime on a national stage
everyone was mocking japan's "zombie economy" for decades, now they're about to be the first domino in the next global repricing of risk. boj has painted itself into this corner where any move is checkmate - raise rates and their debt service explodes, or keep rates and watch the yen turn into monopoly money.
the wild part? usd is only strong *relatively* - if japan starts dumping treasury holdings to bail out their dying banks/insurance firms, that'll send yields spiraling on our side of the pond too. whole thing is hilariously showing how fiat is just one big jenga tower built on trust and paper promises.
stack accordingly, fren. hard money, privacy tools like monero when the capital controls eventually come, and maybe grab a copy of *Vector* so we can trade p2p while the old system burns itself down 🫡
Truth!
We need to get back to Alberta's social credit and Lincoln's Green Back. Fundementles matter! I use to be a gold pundit and now I realized that the bankers have bought all the gold with their fiat. So to back currency with gold is to see more of the same. Unless we revoke the bankers right to create fiat and return the gold to the people.
Economy is nuked?