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Briefing · Rates & FX desk

The safe-asset trade is decaying from the inside

Treasuries still anchor the system, but the buyer base, the deficit arithmetic, and a French bond curiosity all point the same way.

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By The Ledger Desk
AI synthesis · Published 6 Jun 2026 · 4 sources at the time
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Forecast spectrum

6 named voices on the record

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100%
Quoth the Raven
Kevin Warsh
The Economist
The Economist
The Economist
The Economist
Kevin Warshmedium

Will the Federal Reserve reduce its holdings of Treasuries following Kevin Warsh's declared intention?

Position: YES

caliber 62
The Economistmedium

Will the Social Security trust fund be depleted within six years?

Position: YES

caliber 62
The Economistmedium

Will the US Treasury market exceed $50 trillion in outstanding value within ten years of June 4, 2026?

Position: YES

caliber 60
The Economistmedium

In a systemic crisis will China close capital account flows such that foreign holders are unable to repatriate their funds?

Position: YES

caliber 53
The Economistmedium

Will much Treasury trading and borrowing be conducted through a central clearing house in the near future?

Position: YES

caliber 50
Quoth the Ravenlow

Will the spot price of gold reach $10,000 per ounce eventually?

Position: YES

caliber 50
Key numbers

What anchors the cluster

America’s role as the supplier of safe assets to the world saves the country about 1% of GDP in interest spending each year, equivalent to more than $300bn today.

America’s budget deficit stands at around 6% of GDP, with no peacetime parallels except during deep recessions.

The risk-adjusted growth rate exceeds the risk-free rate.

Whether the present value of the aggregate endowment is finite depends on whether the economic growth rate under the risk-neutral measure lies below the risk-free rate; this determines the possibility of debt rollover without primary surpluses.

The argument that US Treasuries remain the world's indispensable safe asset is correct and increasingly fragile. Three threads in this dossier — the structural erosion of Treasury demand, a budget deficit without peacetime precedent outside recession, and a theoretical result drawn from an obscure class of French growth-linked bonds — converge on a single uncomfortable claim: the price the United States pays for fiscal dominance

is rising, and the mechanism by which it gets paid is more likely to be inflation than default.

Start with the plumbing. According to The Economist, the most dependable holders of US debt — banks, foreign central banks, and the Federal Reserve itself — now own less than a third of the Treasury market, the lowest share in three decades. The marginal buyer is increasingly a leveraged, yield-seeking private investor. That is the same buyer base that vanished in March 2020, when private demand for Treasuries dried up overnight and the Fed was forced to intercede. The safe asset has not stopped being safe; its market microstructure has stopped being boring.

That $300bn is the exorbitant privilege

, quantified. It is also the prize at risk if the franchise is mismanaged. The Economist's survey of alternatives is brutal and, we think, correct: euro-area bonds trade like the paper of a supranational without taxing power; European Commission issuance behaves the same way; China cannot offer a genuinely liquid international safe asset because capital controls would trap foreign money in a crisis — and The Economist puts non-trivial odds on Beijing actually closing the capital account in a systemic episode. Gold is a store of value, not a funding instrument. There is no successor. There is only degradation of the incumbent.

Who's going to buy the bonds? They were all forced through financial repression into the hands of rational accounting man and they're all underwater on them.

David Dredge

The French bond clue

Here the dossier offers something unusual: a clean empirical handle on a question normally lost in theory. Stavros Panageas, working from a historical episode of French sovereign bonds indexed to aggregate growth, argues that the risk-adjusted growth rate — growth measured under the risk-neutral measure

(the probability weighting used to price assets) — exceeds the risk-free rate. The technical punchline matters: when risk-adjusted growth sits above the risk-free rate, a sovereign can in principle roll debt forever without running primary surpluses. Panageas also dismantles the standard objection that finitely-valued, cointegrated assets prove the aggregate endowment must itself be finite. It is a permission slip for fiscal dominance, written in the language of asset pricing.

Combine the strands. A 6%-of-GDP deficit with no peacetime parallel outside deep recession, per The Economist. A theoretical case that rollover without surpluses is feasible. A buyer base that is structurally thinner and more reflexive. And a Social Security trust fund the same publication expects to deplete within six years. The path of least political resistance is not default; it is inflation that erodes the real value of the stock while nominal coupons clear. Quoth the Raven frames the binary starkly — soft default via inflation or hard default via crisis — and assigns higher likelihood to the former while noting that a true Treasury crisis remains low-probability precisely because the system is built around the assumption that it cannot happen. We share that ordering.

The operationalisable claims in the dossier lean one way. The Economist puts YES on Treasuries exceeding $50trn within a decade of June 2026, YES on Social Security depletion inside six years, and YES on Chinese capital-account closure in a systemic crisis. Kevin Warsh's stated intention to shrink the Fed's Treasury holdings adds a further tightening vector. No dissenting forecaster appears in the cluster; readers should treat this as a one-sided dossier on direction, with genuine disagreement only on the mechanism — inflation grind, intervention-managed wobble, or genuine break. The Bank of England's 2022 gilt operation, which The Economist holds up as a model — aggressive purchases, rapid exit, profit booked — is the template policymakers will reach for. It worked once. It is not a strategy.

Briefings are synthesised by the Ledger Desk from multiple sources cited in the sidebar. They are distinct from Articles, which are written by named contributors and carry a tracked Calibration Index. The Desk does not currently carry a Brier score; this is a deliberate choice for the v0.1 editorial layer and will be revisited.

Voices

On the wire

  • Who's going to buy the bonds? There's no benefit in these bonds and they were all forced through financial repression into the hands of rational accounting man and they're all underwater on them.

  • We are either living through some kind of remarkable boom, [or we’re reliving] 1929.

  • The answer is, we will have a crash. I just can’t tell you when, and I can’t tell you how deep. But I can assure you, unfortunately, I wish I wasn’t saying this, we will have the crash.

Source map

Where the material came from

  • Quoth the Raven
  • The Economist
  • Pascal Hügli
  • Marginal Revolution
Cited

Sources

12 articles · 11 linked