Fed vs Trump
Fed vs Trump

For years, investors have been taught to fear inflation, rising interest rates, and central bank tightening. But beneath the surface of today’s macro environment lies a far more uncomfortable truth: the United States can no longer afford high interest rates.

This is not a political statement. It is a mathematical one.

As U.S. public debt accelerates beyond historic norms, interest rates themselves have become a systemic risk. The question is no longer whether rates will come down — but how, when, and at what cost.


1 ) America’s Debt Problem Is No Longer About Debt

U.S. federal debt has now exceeded $38 trillion, rising by more than $15 trillion in just five years. The pace of borrowing is accelerating, not slowing.

However, the real danger is not the absolute size of the debt — it is the cost of servicing it.

Annual U.S. interest expenses are approaching $1.5 trillion, roughly 5% of GDP, the highest level in nearly three decades. In practical terms, the government is increasingly borrowing not to invest, but simply to pay interest on past debt.

This is what economists call a debt spiral.

At elevated interest rates, the system feeds on itself:

At a certain point, fiscal sustainability collapses under its own weight.


2) The Fed, Politics, and an Uncomfortable Reality

The tension between Donald Trump and Jerome Powell reflects a deeper structural conflict.

The Federal Reserve is mandated to fight inflation and maintain price stability. But the U.S. Treasury must refinance trillions of dollars of debt — much of it short-term — at prevailing market rates.

In an environment of high debt, monetary independence becomes fragile. This phenomenon is often described as fiscal dominance: when central banks are indirectly pressured to accommodate government financing needs.

The uncomfortable conclusion?
Persistently high rates are incompatible with today’s U.S. debt structure.


3) Why Rates “Must” Come Down

This does not mean rate cuts will be smooth or risk-free.

Lower rates reduce the immediate burden of debt servicing, but they come at a price:

History suggests governments often choose financial repression — keeping rates below inflation — as a politically palatable way to manage excessive debt.

For investors, this environment is neither bullish nor bearish by default. It is unstable.


The Investment Consequences: Volatility Over Certainty

Markets dislike instability. And when investors begin to question the sustainability of fiscal and monetary policy, volatility becomes structural rather than cyclical.

Several asset classes tend to benefit from such regimes:

1. Long-Duration Bonds

Counterintuitively, falling rates support long-term government bonds — especially once rate cuts begin. However, volatility remains elevated during the transition.

2. Gold and Real Assets

Gold historically performs well during periods of:

This is why institutions such as World Gold Council consistently frame gold as a monetary hedge rather than a speculative asset.

3. Equities — Selectively

Equities can benefit from lower discount rates, but not uniformly. Companies with:

are far better positioned than highly indebted or speculative growth firms.


4) Why Diversification Is No Longer Optional

In a world where:

single-asset strategies become fragile.

This is why frameworks such as permanent or all-weather portfolios regain relevance — not because they maximize returns, but because they minimize regret.

Capital preservation becomes as important as capital growth.


5) Final Thoughts

The U.S. debt problem is not theoretical. It is active, measurable, and accelerating.

Interest rates will likely fall — not because inflation is conquered, but because the system demands it.

For investors, the challenge is not predicting the exact timing of rate cuts, but positioning for a regime where volatility, inflation risk, and policy constraints coexist.

In such an environment, discipline, diversification, and realism outperform optimism.


Disclaimer

This article reflects the author’s opinions and interpretations of publicly available information. It is not investment advice. Investing in commodities and financial markets involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research or consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.


Sources

Sources & Further Reading

U.S. Debt, Fiscal Sustainability & Interest Costs


Monetary Policy, Federal Reserve & Interest Rates


Inflation, Financial Repression & Currency Risk


Investment Implications: Bonds, Gold & Equities


Market Data & Macro Visualization


Portfolio Construction & Risk Management