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Mountain Of Debt! Despite Biden’s Gloating, Deficits Are Rising And Expected To Keep Rising (Debt Mountain = $33+ Trillion And Growing) As Bank Balance Sheets Get Slammed!
Confounded Interest ^ | 10/19/2023 | Anthony B. Sanders

Posted on 10/19/2023 3:37:59 AM PDT by Kaiser8408a

The US is sitting on a mountain of debt! As in over $33 trillion!

Despite what whispering Joe Biden says, he didn’t reduce the budget deficit other than briefly. The budget deficit is forecast to run persistemly high because of endless, reckless spending and forever wars (Ukraine, Israel and … Taiwan?).

(Bloomberg) — The Federal Reserve faces potential policy pitfalls ahead as it wrestles with how to respond to investor angst about the US government’s $33.5 trillion mountain of debt.

It’s exceedingly difficult to have sound monetary policy without sound fiscal policy. Biden/Democrats do NOT equal sound fiscal policy.

Adding to the pain, the long end of the yield curve is getting clobbered.

And bank balance sheets are getting clobbered too.

The King of Endless War! Billlions Biden! Who Janet Yellen said is “vibrant.” This is vibrant??

Trust Biden to muddy the waters about US debt, deficits and foreign wars. Hell, Biden could only say that the infamous missile that landed on the Gaza hospital was launched by “the other team” like he was watching an Eagles/Giants football game instead of a slaughter of innocents by Hamas terrorists.

(Excerpt) Read more at confoundedinterest.net ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Food; Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: biden; debt; deficit; fed

1 posted on 10/19/2023 3:37:59 AM PDT by Kaiser8408a
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To: Kaiser8408a

Your government people. busy spending every single penny earned and before it’s earned in order to bankrupt the country...PERMANENTLY! it’s what the majority voted for. “elections have consequences and then everyone suffers the consequences”. make sure to thank your neighbors. those who vote AND those who won’t.


2 posted on 10/19/2023 3:57:07 AM PDT by Qwapisking ("IF the Second goes first the First goes second" L.Star )
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To: Kaiser8408a; Qwapisking
--- "Trust Biden to muddy the waters about US debt, deficits and foreign wars."

At the beginning of 2000, the national debt was circa $5 trillion.

Not quite 23 years later, it is above $33 trillion. Over a trillion a year added to the debt. This is national insolvency.

Debt Clock
Before the end of this year the totla will pass the $34 trillion mark. The political class is officially working against the people, as against the future.
3 posted on 10/19/2023 4:31:02 AM PDT by Worldtraveler once upon a time (Degrow government)
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To: Qwapisking

The prostitute politicians are buying are much power as they can before the bubble bursts

With OUR money


4 posted on 10/19/2023 4:31:34 AM PDT by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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To: SaveFerris

The prostitute politicians are buying are much power as they can before the bubble bursts

With OUR money


Yep...


5 posted on 10/19/2023 4:32:49 AM PDT by nesnah (Infringe - act so as to limit or undermine [something]; encroach on)
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To: nesnah

They’re so obvious


6 posted on 10/19/2023 4:39:13 AM PDT by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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To: Kaiser8408a

Thoughts: The debt is impossible to pay off or even pay down. The US has no intention to pay it off.

Scenarios, ( which are playing out now- little notice)….75 percent of the world is dumping US debt instruments, economic outcome- grim.

There was talk during Trumps time of restructuring our debt owed ( mainly to the Federal Reserve)….in other words what business does. US basically says to the Federal Reserve we are not paying the close to $1 Trillion in interest payments alone, we are now defaulting on what we owe to the Federal Reserve.

That is by far the least painful solution. The sooner our Treasury Dept disconnects from the private Federal Reserve, the quicker this monster can be slayed…. In any case, much financial pain is unavoidable.


7 posted on 10/19/2023 4:58:32 AM PDT by delta7
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To: SaveFerris

Pretty much.

Buy votes with other peoples money.


8 posted on 10/19/2023 4:58:43 AM PDT by Red6
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To: Kaiser8408a

Runaway train never coming back, run away on a one-way track...


9 posted on 10/19/2023 5:36:59 AM PDT by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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To: Kaiser8408a

We’re going to have to come up with all the money this azho spent once the bass turd croaks.


10 posted on 10/19/2023 5:57:44 AM PDT by FlingWingFlyer (Palestanians are not "refugeez". They are muslim terrorists. Remember 9/11/2001.)
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To: All

wsj.com
James Freeman
Oct. 18, 2023

Government Bubble Burst
Treasury bond investors have been taking a historic beating.

pic-—Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen’s signature appears on bills at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing’s Western Currency Facility in Fort Worth, Texas in 2022. PHOTO: LM OTERO/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stung by historic losses in recent years, long-term bond investors are showing a diminishing desire to lend to the U.S. government. Or maybe it’s just that the government is trying to borrow too damn much. Even in the congressional chamber controlled by Republicans, the leadership debate revolves around how many spending expansions the next speaker will jam into another debt-fueled bill.

Interest-rate math hasn’t yet intruded into politics even though it has already meted out severe punishment in the markets. Investors are now demanding more compensation in return for financing Washington’s historic fiscal recklessness. The Journal reports:

The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield topped 4.9% intraday Wednesday for the first time since July 2007.

The Journal’s Sam Goldfarb notes:

In recent months, the Treasury Department has both increased its borrowing forecasts and boosted the size of its longer-term debt auctions by more than investors had been expecting.

During the unprecedented monetary adventures following the mortgage crisis of 2008, the U.S. and other governments around the world drove interest rates down to near zero. They managed this feat in part by having their own central banks buy up government debt issued at such rock-bottom rates—and also by using regulation to encourage large institutions to buy this paper.

Some overseas locales even embraced the insanity of negative interest rates, in which bond investors had to pay government borrowers for the privilege of loaning them money. In 2016 James Grant of the indispensable Grant’s Interest Rate Observer noted that such a situation had not previously occurred in all of recorded history.

At the time, your humble correspondent called it the “5,000-Year Government Debt Bubble” but now vindication is not much fun when pondering the dangers of the current moment. The massive debt piles accumulated while governments were artificially holding interest rates at or below rock bottom are quickly becoming much harder to bear.

In the U.S., the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget recently noted:

Although most of our national debt was issued when interest rates were low, that debt is quickly rolling over into a high-rate debt environment, and further borrowing continues. Without corrective action, interest costs could total more than $13 trillion over the next decade and $1.9 trillion per year by 2033.

Relying on the CRFB’s work, Neil Irwin at Axios writes:

If current rates stay high and fiscal policy matches current forecasts, the cost of servicing [federal debt] will surpass defense spending in 2025 and top Medicare spending in 2026.
In the current fiscal year, interest spending is on track to surpass $800 billion, more than double 2021’s $352 billion figure. In 2026, the government’s net interest expense would reach 3.3% of GDP, the highest on record.

As for Mr. Grant, next month he will publish the 40th anniversary edition of his eponymous newsletter and he freely admits that he didn’t expect the era of extremely low interest rates to last as long as it did. But he’s come to appreciate that Rome “wasn’t unbuilt in a day.”

In the U.S., the long unbuilding project has involved massive government spending and borrowing enabled by the Federal Reserve’s artificially easy money. Trying to tame the resulting inflation then necessitated the Fed’s rapid increase in interest rates and a halt to its bond-buying binge. So now outside investors have more say in the price of credit, and the price says that they’re less eager to be Washington’s creditor.

Mr. Grant recently wrote about the virtues of market-based interest rates versus those manufactured by governments:

In the first place, a proper price, i.e., one discovered in the market, conveys information. To be sure, it is kaleidoscopic information, volatile and fast-changing, but it’s information drawn from people who risk their money to express an opinion. An arbitrary price also conveys information, but only the static, uninteresting kind that tells you what the rate-setters intended when they fixed the price (without, of course, writing a check for the privilege).

He’s now hoping for a day when a new gold standard will replace the current “Ph.D. standard” guiding U.S. monetary policy. Until then, let’s hope the country can find a way to muddle through despite Washington’s titanic mistakes. Of course Washington must first acknowledge these mistakes and start debating how to reduce, not increase, federal spending.

Mr. Grant for his part has learned that interest-rate cycles tend to last a very long time, so anyone hoping for an imminent return to the era of rock-bottom interest rates may be deeply disappointed.

***

James Freeman is the co-author of “The Cost: Trump, China and American Revival” and also the co-author of “Borrowed Time: Two Centuries of Booms, Busts and Bailouts at Citi.”

***


11 posted on 10/19/2023 6:18:38 AM PDT by Liz (“The only time Biden gets his hands dirty is when he’s taking cash from foreign countries." Trump)
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To: Kaiser8408a

Just to level set, here’s what the numbers really mean.

A thousand seconds is a coffee break
A million seconds is a vacation
A billion seconds is a career
A trillion seconds is about 315 centuries.

The US national debt is about $100,000 per capita. That’s for every man, woman and child in the US.


12 posted on 10/19/2023 9:18:04 AM PDT by muir_redwoods (Freedom isn't free, liberty isn't liberal and you'll never find anything Right on the Left)
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To: Kaiser8408a

if you want to get your family financial house in order

you always give the checkbook to

grandpa who has dementia


13 posted on 10/19/2023 10:08:48 AM PDT by joshua c (to disrupt the system, we must disrupt our lives, cut the cable tv)
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To: Kaiser8408a

bump for later


14 posted on 10/19/2023 10:10:02 AM PDT by GOPJ
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To: Kaiser8408a


Blnk
15 posted on 10/19/2023 12:53:45 PM PDT by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy everything now)
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