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.


