Recently, the global financial world has been watching one number: by 2026, the US will face $8 trillion in debt maturities.
It sounds frightening—everyone from retail investors to institutions is calling it a "time bomb," believing the US government simply can't pay it off, and that the global financial system might collapse. But if you think that way, you're falling into the trap of mainstream narratives.
**The truth might be quite the opposite.**
The US government won't "pay off" the debt; it has been "rolling over" it continuously. This strategy has been in place for decades. The bulk of this $8 trillion is actually short-term bonds issued during the emergency of 2020-2021 pandemic. From the start, these are "roll-over" debt instruments.
The real issue lies elsewhere—**the interest rate regime has changed.**
Rising from an ultra-low interest rate era to a high-interest rate era, using higher costs to roll over this astronomical debt has clear consequences:
- The fiscal deficit will grow larger, and the scale of government bond issuance must increase. But this directly challenges the goal of "maintaining low real interest rates." Political pressure will be intense—everyone wants growth and liquidity, no one wants austerity.
Historical experience shows that at this stage, decision-makers usually have only one option—**to loosen, not tighten.**
Lower real yields, sustained liquidity support, and gentle dilution of capital purchasing power—under this big backdrop, risk assets are not doomsday; in fact, they are the most likely to benefit. The recent softening of the Federal Reserve's stance may be paving the way for this "liquidity re-filling."
**The asset allocation watershed has arrived.**
In this cycle, traditional cash holders and fixed income investors will be the invisible losers. Conversely, stocks, physical assets, commodities, and liquidity assets like cryptocurrencies will present allocation opportunities.
It's not that there are no risks, but that the nature of risks is changing. If the policy direction truly is "loose + liquidity," then the story for the crypto world and risk assets may just be beginning.
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OffchainOracle
· 2025-12-19 14:12
The tactic of rolling renewal has been played out for so long. Now it's just a matter of who can buy the dip. The opportunity in the crypto circle might really be here.
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MetadataExplorer
· 2025-12-19 00:51
You're again playing with the 8 trillion dollar ticking time bomb. Wake up, this trick has been played for decades.
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FlashLoanLord
· 2025-12-19 00:51
The rollover renewal trick has been played for decades, and now it's happening again. People in the crypto circle have long seen through it.
View OriginalReply0
RektHunter
· 2025-12-19 00:28
Starting to talk about the debt cycle again. Basically, it's just printing money. Wait for my coin to take off.
What is the market panicking about?
Recently, the global financial world has been watching one number: by 2026, the US will face $8 trillion in debt maturities.
It sounds frightening—everyone from retail investors to institutions is calling it a "time bomb," believing the US government simply can't pay it off, and that the global financial system might collapse. But if you think that way, you're falling into the trap of mainstream narratives.
**The truth might be quite the opposite.**
The US government won't "pay off" the debt; it has been "rolling over" it continuously. This strategy has been in place for decades. The bulk of this $8 trillion is actually short-term bonds issued during the emergency of 2020-2021 pandemic. From the start, these are "roll-over" debt instruments.
The real issue lies elsewhere—**the interest rate regime has changed.**
Rising from an ultra-low interest rate era to a high-interest rate era, using higher costs to roll over this astronomical debt has clear consequences:
- The fiscal deficit will grow larger, and the scale of government bond issuance must increase. But this directly challenges the goal of "maintaining low real interest rates." Political pressure will be intense—everyone wants growth and liquidity, no one wants austerity.
Historical experience shows that at this stage, decision-makers usually have only one option—**to loosen, not tighten.**
Lower real yields, sustained liquidity support, and gentle dilution of capital purchasing power—under this big backdrop, risk assets are not doomsday; in fact, they are the most likely to benefit. The recent softening of the Federal Reserve's stance may be paving the way for this "liquidity re-filling."
**The asset allocation watershed has arrived.**
In this cycle, traditional cash holders and fixed income investors will be the invisible losers. Conversely, stocks, physical assets, commodities, and liquidity assets like cryptocurrencies will present allocation opportunities.
It's not that there are no risks, but that the nature of risks is changing. If the policy direction truly is "loose + liquidity," then the story for the crypto world and risk assets may just be beginning.