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Ray Dalio explains how financial repression begins once the debt problem gets out of control. It starts with a simple reality: One man’s debt is another man’s asset. Government debt is not just a liability for the government. It is also the asset sitting inside pension funds, banks, insurance...

11,660 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat •via X (Twitter)

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Financial repression is the only way America can escape from its $38 trillion debt without economic collapse. And is already being implemented right now. Here’s what it is: The government inflates away the debt over 10-20 years by keeping interest rates below the inflation rate. This means the real value of debt shrinks over time, causing hyperinflation. This has to be done. Here are the 5 other options they could’ve done but would lead to an economic collapse: Option 1: Print more money → Creates hyperinflation and destroys the middle class Option 2: Austerity → Cuts Social Security, Medicare, defense by 30% and trigger a worldwide depression. Option 3: Default on the debt → Destroys reserve currency status overnight. Option 4: Raise taxes → Taxing every billionaire at 100% only raises $5 trillion, which doesn't even cover a sixth of the debt + it leaves no room for innovation for the country. Option 5: Grow out of it → Would need 6-7% GDP growth for a decade, but we haven't seen that since the 1960s so it’s a fantasy. Financial repression is the only politically viable path. This is how the US dealt with post-WWII debt. How the UK dealt with theirs. And here's what it means for you: Holding cash, bonds, or living off salary—your purchasing power gets systematically destroyed. Holding the right assets (stocks, real estate, commodities)—you preserve and grow wealth. You need to be positioned when this massive wealth transfer happens. — This is just a short breakdown from my 20-minute video covering the global debt crisis and what's coming in 2026. I also covered the 18-year cycle predicting the 2026 crash, which assets survive currency debasement, and how to position for the wealth transfer. Just comment "CRISIS" and I'll DM you the full video in the next few minutes.

Felix Prehn 🐶

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Dave Ramsey says all debt is stupid. Credit cards, student loans, car payments, borrowing against your house. All of it. He says your income is your number one wealth-building tool, and the second you hand it to someone else, you give up your economic future. He is half right. On credit cards, I agree completely. You are paying 28 to 30% on that. But notice what he never mentions. Cost of capital. That is the whole game, and he skips it. High-priced student debt, fine. But my own loans were at 3%, and they were the only way I got into college. I paid them back over time. That was a good investment, not a stupid one. Where he is dead wrong is real estate. Debt on real estate lets you use other people's money to buy an asset that pays for itself. That is what he misses. His whole philosophy depends on you earning more income. But with wages growing 3% while inflation runs 3%, you never get ahead. You run in place like a rat in a wheel, the exact thing he is warning you about. The only way out is to own hard assets that produce cash flow, and you buy those with debt. Here is the difference between us. He thinks all debt is bad. I think debt is a tool. Good debt and bad debt, high cost and low cost, and that difference is everything. He once said he would not take a billion dollars at zero interest. A billion dollars, costing him nothing. Put it in Treasuries and that is 30 to 40 million a year for doing nothing. He said he would pass. That is lunacy. When I borrow on real estate, someone else covers it. Always. The office building you work in and the Starbucks you walk into all carry debt, and the tenants pay it back. I own a single-family house, my tenant pays off the loan. I do not pay it. I do not need more income. I just need to keep a good tenant in that house. And yes, you get vacancies and turnover and the occasional problem tenant, but that is what management is for. He never had to learn that, because he does not use debt. And here is the part almost nobody gets. It is your money anyway. The cash sitting in your retirement account or your bank is yours. You are just borrowing it back at a lower rate and finding a tenant to cover it. That is why I disagree with him on debt. Used right, it is not the enemy. It is the entire engine.

Ken McElroy

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Technical Analyst and Market Strategist Michael Oliver says everyone is watching the Iran war, but the real crisis is already forming inside the U.S. bond market, and when it breaks, it could hit everything. For decades, investors have treated U.S. government bonds as the safest asset on Earth. Michael says that assumption is beginning to crack. He argues the real crisis isn't inflation, it isn't recession, it isn't even the Middle East. It's the growing possibility that confidence in government debt starts to break down. If that happens, the Federal Reserve will have to create even more money to support the bond market. And he believes investors are already starting to prepare for that shift by quietly moving into real assets: gold, oil, industrial commodities, and agriculture. Assets that can't simply be created with another round of monetary expansion. He also pointed to something that rarely gets discussed. The biggest bubble is the belief that government debt will always remain the world's safest investment. If that confidence disappears, the consequences won't stay inside the bond market; it will ripple through virtually every corner of the financial system. Most of the world is focused on the next missile strike on Iran, but he's watching the next Treasury auction. Because in his view, history won't remember the Iran war as the event that changed the markets. It'll remember it as the distraction that kept everyone looking in the wrong direction while the real crisis was gathering underneath their feet. Momentum Structural Analysis

Mario Nawfal

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Donald Trump Is Talking About Plans The Eliminate The Income Tax El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele Says The IRS & Excessive American Tax System Are COMPLETELY UNNECESSARY “You pay high taxes only to uphold the illusion that you are funding the government, which you are not” “The financial situation of the United States. When I talk to my conservative friends right here, they always tell me that the problem is high taxes, but they're wrong. Of course, high taxes are extremely high here in the United States. I give you that. You're right in that. But that's not the real problem. ‌ The real problem is not the high taxes themselves, but the fact that they are not even really funding the government. But even those high taxes, higher than a lot of places in the world, not even those taxes are really funding the government. So who's financing the government? Government is financed by Treasury bonds, paper. ‌ And who buys the Treasury bonds? Mostly the Fed. And how does the Fed buy them? By printing money. But what backing does the Fed have for that money being printed? ‌ The Treasury bonds themselves. So, basically, you finance the government by printing money out of thin air. Someone could ask someone could ask, well, so if the government can print the limited amounts of money out of their error, why did they collect taxes? I mean, in theory, it would make sense. Right? ‌ If they can put unlimited amounts of money, why would they need taxes for? The answer is simple, but it's very shocking. The real problem is that you pay high taxes only to uphold the illusion that you are funding the government, which you are not. It's shocking, but it's true. The government is funded by money printing, paper backed with paper, a bubble that will inevitably inevitably burst. ‌ The situation is even worse than it seems because if most Americans and the rest of the world were to become aware of these bars, confidence in your currency would be lost. The dollar will fall and the western civilization with it. If the next president of the United States doesn't make the necessary policies and the structural changes, sooner or later that bubble will burst. ‌ There's still time. You don't have to make the same mistakes we did in the sixties seventies. You can still jump before the water boils.”

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