03-28-2026Price:

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War and bond vigilantes expose the US fiscal trap

Saturday, March 28, 2026 · from 3 podcasts, 4 episodes
  • Geopolitical conflict is morphing into financial warfare, with Iran threatening holders of U.S. debt.
  • Bond markets are revolting, exposing a U.S. fiscal position with no room for major war.
  • Analysts see capital fleeing paper promises for hard assets, with Bitcoin poised as a neutral commodity.

Geopolitical conflict is no longer about troops - it's about Treasuries. The bond market rout shows the U.S. is financially overstretched, unable to sustain a major war without triggering a market crisis.

Jack Mallers argues the U.S. is mathematically insolvent, with debt interest consuming more than all tax receipts. This time is different: adversaries like Iran are targeting the Treasury market, not the Pentagon. Mallers sees Bitcoin as the only uncorrelated asset left in a system breaking under its own debt.

Jack Mallers, The Jack Mallers Show:

- This time is different mathematically.

- The United States can't perpetually borrow money forever anymore.

Eric Yakes on *What Bitcoin Did* frames this as a global credit inflection. Since the 2022 sanctions on Russia, sovereigns have accelerated a shift out of dollar reserves and into hard commodities like gold. Japan’s 2024 pullback from Treasuries exposed a structural flaw: there are no ready buyers for endless U.S. debt. Yakes calls this an “opting out of the credit game,” a trend that benefits scarce, neutral assets.

On *Bitcoin And*, the immediate volatility reveals a confused market. Bitcoin trades in near-perfect inverse lockstep with oil prices, a sign of frantic hedging. Meanwhile, Iran’s parliamentary speaker explicitly threatened financial institutions holding U.S. debt, weaponizing the bond market.

Marty Bent, TFTC.io:

- A state official with direct ties to the IRGC is publicly threatening sovereign wealth funds.

- Publicly threatening sovereign banks. Publicly threatening institutions that hold United States Government debt.

The consensus is that traditional safe havens are compromised. The Fed cited Middle East conflict as a reason to hold rates, proving the fragility is now operational. Bitcoin’s narrative is shifting from speculative tech to a sovereign store of value - a hedge for when the music stops.

Entities Mentioned

Marathon DigitalCompany
PolymarketCompany

Source Intelligence

What each podcast actually said

Homes For Bitcoin | Bitcoin NewsMar 26

  • Bitcoin traded in a near-perfect inverse lockstep with crude oil prices amid geopolitical conflict, according to minute-by-minute charts shown by David Bennett.
  • David Bennett noted the current conflict lacks a clear narrative, creating volatile market behavior unlike the defined expectations of the 2003 Iraq war.
  • Marathon Digital sold a significant portion of its Bitcoin holdings to restructure debt, adding sell pressure to the market.

Also from this episode:

Elections (4)
  • The Stand With Crypto advocacy group, backed by Coinbase, is deploying media campaigns in six battleground races to influence the 2026 midterms.
  • Despite Republicans currently being seen as more pro-crypto, prediction markets give Democrats an 85% chance of retaking the House in 2026.
  • Rep. Seth Moulton banned his personal staff from prediction markets like Polymarket to prevent insider trading on non-public military or regulatory plans.
  • Moulton argues prediction markets create a 'perverse incentive structure' where insiders can profit from bets on wars, elections, or deaths of public figures.
War (1)
  • David Bennett warned that prediction markets could telegraph US military strategy if odds for a specific action spike rapidly based on insider information.

I Ran From Iran | Bitcoin NewsMar 23

  • This threat emerges amid a historic global bond rout, with the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield climbing above 4.4%, an eight-month high, and similar sell-offs occurring in Japan and India.
  • J.P. Morgan's EU team is rapidly adjusting forecasts in a stagflationary direction, expecting rate hikes from the ECB and Bank of England, according to the summary.
  • The host characterizes the market's relief over a temporary military pause as naive, arguing the underlying pressures of a weaponized bond market and stagflationary central bank policy are just beginning.

Also from this episode:

Politics (3)
  • Marty Bent reports that Iranian parliamentary speaker Mohamar Baghir Golboth, a senior IRGC figure, is publicly threatening sovereign wealth funds and banks that hold U.S. Treasury debt.
  • This represents a new phase of financial warfare where a state actor directly targets confidence in U.S. government bonds, the core instrument of global finance.
  • Host of Bitcoin And argues that the current confusion, where the U.S. claims productive talks with Iran while Iranian officials deny them, is more dangerous for markets than a clear military escalation.
Fed (1)
  • Fed Governor Christopher Waller cited the Middle East conflict as his reason for holding off on a rate cut last week, proving the geopolitical link to monetary policy is already operative.
What Bitcoin Did
What Bitcoin Did

Peter McCormack

The Commodity Shift, Credit Crisis & Bitcoin | Eric YakesMar 24

  • Eric Yakes argues the global shift to physical commodities represents a systemic opt-out from a credit system where the gap between paper claims and real-world value has widened to a crisis point.
  • Yakes states that coordinated global stress and unsupportable debt will force a historic-scale monetary printing event or direct sovereign aggression, as traditional pressure release valves no longer function.
  • The post-2008 era established a trend of sovereigns increasing commodity holdings and reducing exposure to US Treasuries, with Japan's shift away from funding US debt being a symptom of this structural move.
  • Yakes sees Bitcoin as the primary rotation target for technology capital and gold-focused investors once traditional asset euphoria peaks, citing its status as a hard asset outside the credit system.
  • Yakes predicts that sovereign adoption will be the next major catalyst for Bitcoin, expecting more nation-state headlines as its market cap approaches $5 trillion.
  • The $5 trillion market cap threshold could serve as a 'suddenly' moment where Bitcoin's systemic role becomes undeniable to global capital structures, not just niche communities.
  • Yakes contends that crises erupt when the accounting reality of debt departs from the paper claims, causing panic, a dynamic he sees accelerating into an unavoidable inflection point.

When the Music Stops: Why Bitcoin Is NextMar 24

  • Jack Mallers argues the U.S. is functionally insolvent with $40 trillion in debt and interest payments exceeding 130% of tax receipts, making sustained military conflict financially untenable.
  • Jack Mallers claims the real conflict is not military but financial, with adversaries like China and Iran targeting the U.S. Treasury market rather than the Pentagon.
  • Market reactions to geopolitical events - such as oil spikes, bond sell-offs, and Bitcoin rising 5% - reflect a shift in pricing in the fragility of the U.S. fiscal position, not just risk-off behavior.
  • The U.S. can no longer mobilize industrial capacity during crises due to decades of offshoring, weakening its ability to respond to shocks with production as it did in past wars.
  • Jack Mallers asserts that 'this time is different mathematically,' emphasizing that the U.S. can no longer rely on perpetual borrowing to finance deficits without severe market consequences.
  • Bitcoin represents the only monetary system without counterparty risk, debt, or central planning, making it the sole uncorrelated asset when the fiat system fails under its own structural imbalances.
  • The bond vigilantes are reawakening, punishing fiscal irresponsibility in real time, a dynamic that constrains U.S. policy options far more than in previous geopolitical crises.

Also from this episode:

Politics (1)
  • Iran can exert geopolitical pressure without nuclear weapons by disrupting oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, triggering inflation and testing U.S. financial credibility instead of military readiness.
Adoption (1)
  • Jack Mallers views Bitcoin not as 'digital gold' but as a settlement layer for a post-fiat world, where it doesn't decline during systemic collapse but instead becomes the unit of account.