The Federal Reserve is out of ammunition. Across four macro and Bitcoin-focused podcasts, analysts argue the U.S. government’s debt load has created a fiscal ceiling, paralyzing monetary policy just as energy shocks threaten a new wave of inflation.
John Arnold explained on TFTC that federal interest expense is already at its limit. Even if Middle East instability drives oil prices higher, hiking rates would threaten Treasury solvency long before it tamed consumer prices. The Treasury market's volatility, measured by the 'move index,' is spiking to levels seen during the 2023 banking crisis, threatening leveraged hedge funds and systemic liquidity.
John Arnold, TFTC: A Bitcoin Podcast:
- The Fed does not have the leeway to get substantially more aggressive or more restrictive across its different facilities and different tools on the strategy market and on rates.
- I think broadly, that's a theme that I would fade as we go forward this year, that the Fed's just going to respond mechanically to higher inflation with higher rates.
This fiscal dominance isn't a future event - it’s the current reality. Lyn Alden noted on What Bitcoin Did that the U.S. shifted into this environment around 2018, when deficit spending outside a recession first exceeded all new private bank lending. Recessions now become inflationary, not disinflationary, because the government cannot afford to stop spending.
The consensus breaks on how the Fed should respond. Fed Governor Miran, on Forward Guidance, argued the inflation panic is overblown, citing AI and deregulation as persistent disinflationary forces. He believes the Fed should look through temporary oil shocks, as their impact typically vanishes within 12-18 months.
But others see a policy trap. Peter St Onge warned on BTC Sessions that Jerome Powell risks mistaking an oil supply shock for monetary inflation and hiking into a recession - a risk flagged by a Deutsche Bank study. The deeper threat is to dollar hegemony. St Onge called the freezing of Russian central bank assets the single biggest hit to the dollar in 50 years, signaling to global holders that the reserve currency is a political weapon.
When the physical economy falters, monetary tools fail. Alden emphasized that the Fed cannot print oil. A closure of the Strait of Hormuz would take 20% of global energy offline, a physical shortage that no liquidity can fix. In that scenario, macro theory ends and revolution begins.
The endgame may resemble the 1940s more than the 1970s. Arnold suggested that, faced with unsustainable debt, the Fed and Treasury could coordinate to cap yields - as they did by pegging the 10-year at 2.5% - and manage the resulting inflation with price controls and rationing. The choice isn't between inflation and stability, but between a functional bond market and a stable currency. The analysts expect the Fed to choose the bonds.



