No one can stay on the sidelines; when the avalanche comes, every snowflake is falling.
The situation is far more severe than it appears on the surface. Recently, some things have been quietly changing, and various data points are pointing to the same upcoming node.
The bond market is not as stable as it seems. The MOVE index (a measure of bond market volatility) has indeed fallen recently, but that’s just a deep breath, not a sign of calm. The long end of the Treasury curve remains the biggest source of pressure since the beginning of the year.
Foreign investors’ appetite has also waned. China is gradually reducing its holdings, and although Japan’s holdings are still sizable, they are extremely sensitive to exchange rate fluctuations and policy signals. In the past, foreign buyers would step back, and U.S. debt issuance could absorb that. Now? There’s simply no room left.
Japan’s issues can no longer be just background noise. The yen’s persistent weakness continues to push the central bank into action. Every adjustment triggers a rebalancing of global arbitrage trades and shifts in sovereign debt flows. Arbitrage unwinding never stays quiet in just one place—the pressure will eventually transmit, and U.S. Treasuries are often the next landing point.
Connecting these lines, the picture becomes very clear:
Real yields remain high, the term premium shows no signs of collapsing, liquidity continues to tighten, and risks are already being priced into sovereign financing.
The stock market can continue its slow climb, gold can hit new highs, and commodity futures can follow suit, but none of these can hide what’s accumulating beneath the surface. When GDP data materializes or recession news floods in, the asset re-pricing will have already been completed.
2026 is not simply a year of economic slowdown risk. It’s more like the year when sovereign financing pressures finally erupt. By then, central banks will have no choice but to step back into the fire.
The timeline still aligns, and the pressure is beginning to build up from familiar places. Keep an eye on bond movements; other assets will follow suit.
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VitalikFanboy42
· 8h ago
The bond market has long been something to understand clearly. Yet, there are still people watching the ups and downs of the stock market. Truly unbelievable.
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AirdropBuffet
· 8h ago
Bonds are about to blow up, it's a fact. The situation for 2026 has been in the making for a long time.
It feels like this round of arbitrage and closing positions could collapse the entire system.
The US debt can't be absorbed; who will take over?
In the end, the central bank still has to foot the bill, looping and layering.
Gold is surging so strongly now because it's hedging against these risks.
Don't be fooled by the stock market's modest decline; the bond market is the real mirror.
Basically, just a little loosening by the Bank of Japan and the global capital chain starts to shake.
The 2026 sovereign debt crisis is coming; if you don't start accumulating gold and hard assets now, you'll miss out later.
Signs of liquidity tightening have long been evident, yet some are still sleepwalking.
The fall in the MOVE index is just an illusion; it's the calm before the storm, and the next second will bring a downpour.
Real, the term premium remains high and consolidating, indicating the market is actually waiting for an ignition point.
This wave of pressure transmission to US bonds is inevitable, no ifs or buts.
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Degentleman
· 8h ago
In 2026, you need to start buying bonds early; don't wait until everyone else reacts before taking action.
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NFT_Therapy
· 8h ago
The bond market is really starting to become unsustainable; taking a deep breath won't fool anyone.
2026... we need to be prepared.
The liquidity of US bonds is truly gone, and Japan's interference makes it impossible for anyone to escape.
No matter how much stocks and gold rise, they can't hide the underlying collapse; a correction is inevitable sooner or later.
When risk starts being priced at the financing level, everything else is just an illusion.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-4745f9ce
· 8h ago
Bonds are the real truth; the stock market's small gains are just an illusion.
No one can stay on the sidelines; when the avalanche comes, every snowflake is falling.
The situation is far more severe than it appears on the surface. Recently, some things have been quietly changing, and various data points are pointing to the same upcoming node.
The bond market is not as stable as it seems. The MOVE index (a measure of bond market volatility) has indeed fallen recently, but that’s just a deep breath, not a sign of calm. The long end of the Treasury curve remains the biggest source of pressure since the beginning of the year.
Foreign investors’ appetite has also waned. China is gradually reducing its holdings, and although Japan’s holdings are still sizable, they are extremely sensitive to exchange rate fluctuations and policy signals. In the past, foreign buyers would step back, and U.S. debt issuance could absorb that. Now? There’s simply no room left.
Japan’s issues can no longer be just background noise. The yen’s persistent weakness continues to push the central bank into action. Every adjustment triggers a rebalancing of global arbitrage trades and shifts in sovereign debt flows. Arbitrage unwinding never stays quiet in just one place—the pressure will eventually transmit, and U.S. Treasuries are often the next landing point.
Connecting these lines, the picture becomes very clear:
Real yields remain high, the term premium shows no signs of collapsing, liquidity continues to tighten, and risks are already being priced into sovereign financing.
The stock market can continue its slow climb, gold can hit new highs, and commodity futures can follow suit, but none of these can hide what’s accumulating beneath the surface. When GDP data materializes or recession news floods in, the asset re-pricing will have already been completed.
2026 is not simply a year of economic slowdown risk. It’s more like the year when sovereign financing pressures finally erupt. By then, central banks will have no choice but to step back into the fire.
The timeline still aligns, and the pressure is beginning to build up from familiar places. Keep an eye on bond movements; other assets will follow suit.