The market thinks rate hikes are on the table. The government’s balance sheet says they aren’t.
The debt crisis is not a future event; it's a slow-motion process that began in 2018. On What Bitcoin Did, Lyn Alden argued that was the year U.S. deficits, for the first time outside a recession, outstripped all new lending from private banks combined. This is fiscal dominance: the government’s borrowing needs now dictate monetary policy. The system is trapped.
John Arnold, speaking on TFTC, calls this a “fiscal ceiling.” The government’s interest expense is so high that any further rate hikes would threaten Treasury solvency long before they tame inflation. This pressure is already visible. Arnold points to the Treasury market's volatility index, the MOVE, spiking to levels seen during the 2023 banking crisis. This threatens leveraged hedge funds and risks a systemic liquidity crunch.
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.
Beyond fiscal limits, there's a risk of a major policy error. Peter St Onge noted on BTC Sessions that a recent Deutsche Bank study flagged the Fed’s tendency to panic over oil price spikes as the single biggest risk for a recession. When energy prices jump due to supply shocks, the Fed often reacts as if it’s a demand problem, hiking rates into a slowing economy and manufacturing a downturn.
Fed Governor Miran offers a counter-narrative. Speaking on Forward Guidance, he argued that persistent disinflationary forces from AI and deregulation provide a powerful buffer. He estimates deregulation alone could shave 0.3% to 0.5% off inflation annually. In his view, the Fed should “look through” temporary energy shocks, as their effects fade before monetary policy can even kick in.
But the ultimate constraint isn't financial. Lyn Alden draws a sharp line between ledger entries and physical molecules. The Fed can print money to plug a hole in the private credit market - a $500 billion problem amounts to just three months of deficit spending. It cannot, however, print oil.
Lyn Alden, What Bitcoin Did:
- If people can’t get to work, if they can’t get the lights on, that’s when you get revolution.
- The Fed can’t print oil.
If a geopolitical crisis closes the Strait of Hormuz, 20% of the world's energy supply vanishes. That is a physical problem no central bank can solve. The choice facing the Fed is no longer between stable prices and a mild recession. It is between a functional bond market and a stable currency. Analysts like Arnold expect they will choose to protect the bonds.



