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We know; it's pretty much GG for pretty much all government. I'm enjoying the show.
Funny opening:

"Government bond for sale: will accept any reasonable offer."

it is getting increasingly difficult to find automatic buyers of their bonds.
in the 2010s it was easy; zero yields and captive capital markets made for endless quantity and zero price. Add a money-printing bonanza and high inflation + spending later, and it's a different story:
who will buy the debt? That wasn’t much of a problem during the 2010s. Governments were able to finance their deficits with ease; sometimes they were even able to issue bonds at negative yields, meaning that those who bought them were doomed to suffer a loss (in nominal terms, at least) if held till maturity.
The latest OECD report on government debt estimates that sovereign bond issuance by the group’s countries will be $17tn in 2025, up from $14tn in 2023. Some of that will, of course, be used to refinance existing debt, but the total amount of debt outstanding is expected to rise to $59tn, or about 84 per cent of the GDP of those countries.
...and no buyers:
central banks have stopped QE and are unwinding their holdings in programmes dubbed quantitative tightening. The more bonds central banks sell via QT, the more other investors have to buy, on top of new supply from governments.
...and they're all coming up to refinancing -- the U.S. more immediately than most others -- and pretty much all of them at higher rates. An austerity force-function from capital markets -- ouw, a kid can dream, eh.
The obvious answer might be to cut the deficit. But politicians face considerable problems when they try to do so. Many have promised to spend more on defence. Cutting spending or pushing up taxes risks alienating electorates, which seem increasingly willing to vote for populist, or nativist, parties

We're all fucked, basically

In the short term, the basic arithmetic of bond markets has deteriorated; more supply coupled with a reduction in both reliable and speculative demand. And that means higher bond yields look probable, forcing governments to pay more to fund their ever-growing deficits. The maths of governing developed countries looks likely to get increasingly difficult.
Enjoy the decline, frenz.

Who's gonna break first?
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The U.K.
Britain is fucked.
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My bet is on Japan
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109 sats \ 0 replies \ @nikotsla 15h
Good news.
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22 sats \ 1 reply \ @BlokchainB 12h
This is why Powell must lower rates!
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Makes Mr. Orange's ranting less self-serving/ridiculous at least
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38 sats \ 1 reply \ @OT 16h
Maybe stablecoin issuers can be the new buyer coming in?
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no, they're WAAAAAY too small. They help a little along the margins, but uh-hu
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Absolutely right. The era of cheap financing is over, central banks are pulling the rug out from under governments, and now the bill is due — with heavy interest.
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party OOOOON!
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The debt of every single country is most likely never going to get paid meaning either default or continual print. Defaulting will drastically worsen the economy specially for lower income individuals. Printing will inflate everything which will also make things worse for the low income individuals either way the poor will be worse off. The only way any individual or country could defend against either is through Bitcoin. Bitcoiners will still have the same amount of Bitcoin (or sats) whether countries default or print.
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In coming times ahead the more relevant question would be who's selling next. This whole of bond ship has got so many irreparable holes, it's over....almost over... The next ten or twenty years, it'll sink.
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stackers have outlawed this. turn on wild west mode in your /settings to see outlawed content.