TRUMP Goes Nuts as He Realize China & Japan Could Cripple US Economy by Selling $2 Trillions US Debt

In this 10-minute episode, we explore:
-Why US Treasury bonds are viewed as “safe haven” assets,
-Which countries hold the largest share of US debt— focusing on Japan, China, and others,
-How this interconnected finance shapes trade disputes, “bond bombs,” and possible economic leverage,
-What it means for the global economy and the stability of the dollar,
-Why investors worry about a “sell-off scenario” from major creditors like China.

Key Topics to Cover
Background: US Debt & Its Global Status
Why the US issues Treasuries: financing deficits, the dollar’s reserve currency role.
How US bonds became “risk-free” or “reference” assets.

Top Foreign Holders & Their Motives
A rundown of major creditors: Japan, China, UK, Luxembourg, Ireland, Switzerland, Cayman, Taiwan, India, etc.
The scale of each holding and why they buy (trade surplus recycling, safe returns, currency stability).

China & Japan: The Two Giants
How each got to hold around 1 trillion dollars in Treasuries.
The “trade atomic bomb” scenario if China sells off large chunks.

New Tensions & Potential Moves
Recent talk of “China possibly dumping bonds” in a trade war context.
The threat to the dollar’s global reserve currency status.

Implications for the US & Global Economy
Rising rates in the US, possible inflation or slowdown.
Reactions from other countries (EU, Japan) if “bond bombs” occur.
Why no one wants a meltdown—but might be forced into strategic moves.

Future Outlook: Stalemate or Shift?
Could countries diversify away from the dollar?
The line between “mutual interdependence” and “weaponizing debt.”

Chapters:
00:00 – Introduction & Headlines
00:45 – Why US Treasuries Dominate Global Debt
02:00 – Who Holds America’s IOUs?
04:00 – The China & Japan Factor
05:30 – The ‘Bond Bomb’ Risk & Trade Wars
07:00 – Impact on the US & Global Economy
08:00 – Future Outlook: Diversification & Reserve Currency Debate
09:00 – Conclusion & Final Insights

31 Comments

  1. I wonder how the USA would manage if ALL countries holding US debt were to sell off 1-2% of their bond shares? Trump behaving like a Mafia Don as a building developer (which is what he did) is very different from playing the same game with trade and the economy on a Global stage. Somebody should be urging Trump to start CALLING OTHER world LEADERS "begging for a deal"!!

  2. American government can buy American government bonds.
    Then when the bonds mature, the American government can cash it in.
    Then the American debt can be paid off. (more bonds bought, the faster the debt can be paid off)

  3. So he might not be the stable genius that he claims to be? I listen to a lot of his comments and he is not widely read, nor does he have wide experience of the world. Not a man who should have ever made it to the White House, that is of course unless you are a greedy oligarch!

  4. I hope they do it. Just like America waiting for the British Empire to be weakened during WWII before they joined and could claim super power status. China is doing the same now to America.

  5. The US is effectively owned by others, China is not the enemy, just a shareholder like Japan and Canada. DoofUS is an idiot if he did not understand that. The guy went to Wharton right?? One wonders if he actually attended classes.

  6. The USA never won anything without bombs and war during their entire history.. not in your history books but true. All wars since WW2 were started by the USA. China building infrastructure and moving their people out of poverty.. It's the USA billionaires that went to China for profits and FUCKED the American Middle class and ordinary citizen.. USA loosing again and may started another war military.

  7. But does this mean that Trump may someday realize that it’s the US that’s been living off the rest of the world for the past 80 years?

  8. Trump thinks he’s holding most of the good cards. Problem is he’s playing blackjack while the rest of the world is playing happy families.

  9. Japan was selling U.S. treasury bonds from a business point of view considering the American domestic and global financial situation, while China is now selling them to punish America for tariffs; but the impacts are the same!