The Federal Reserve is out of runway. An oil shock from Middle East conflict is colliding with a pre-existing US sovereign debt crisis, paralyzing monetary policy.
John Arnold argues on TFTC that the government's interest expense has hit a hard fiscal ceiling. Hiking rates to combat energy inflation would threaten Treasury solvency long before it cooled prices. This forces the Fed into a defensive posture, protecting the bond market's functionality above all else.
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.
Lyn Alden notes the US entered this fiscally dominant era around 2018, when deficit spending first eclipsed total private bank lending outside a recession. The system is now on autopilot, 'pre-stimulating' just to stay solvent. Recessions will no longer be disinflationary.
The immediate risk is a policy error. Peter St. Onge cites a Deutsche Bank study identifying Fed panic over oil prices as the single biggest recession trigger. Governor Miran of the Federal Reserve agrees, arguing central banks should 'look through' temporary supply shocks as their impact fades within 18 months.
History offers a grim template. Arnold suggests the 1940s, not the 1970s, is the correct analog. Then, with debt-to-GDP soaring, the Fed and Treasury coordinated to cap the 10-year yield at 2.5% and imposed price controls and rationing to manage inflation.
The Fed's real constraint is physical, not financial. As Alden states, the central bank can print dollars to backstop shadow banks, but it cannot print oil. A closure of the Strait of Hormuz would take 20% of global energy offline, a scenario where macro theory fails and social stability cracks.
With its traditional tools broken, the system's path points toward financial repression, yield management, and accepting a slower currency decline - because the alternative is a bond market collapse.



