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Bond crisis signals monetary reset as Iran conflict shuts oil lifeline

Friday, May 22, 2026 · from 3 podcasts
  • US spending on interest and entitlements now exceeds total tax revenue, eliminating the budget for defense.
  • A closed Strait of Hormuz threatens a 40% drop in US motor oil supply, grounding logistics and forcing the Fed to print.
  • AI displaces high-wage jobs that provide half of federal tax receipts, eroding the sovereign's ability to service its debt.

The US Treasury is mathematically insolvent. Luke Gromen calculates annual spending on Social Security, healthcare, and interest payments at $4.8 trillion, exceeding total federal receipts of $5.2 trillion. This leaves no money for the $1.1 trillion defense budget or any other discretionary spending. The political impossibility of cutting 20% from both defense and entitlements means the Federal Reserve’s only viable move is to cap bond yields by printing money.

“When the government cannot cut spending and cannot afford interest, printing money to buy its own debt becomes the only remaining option. Gromen believes this leads to a ‘Brazil 2000’ scenario: massive inflation hidden behind manipulated data.”

- Luke Gromen, TFTC: A Bitcoin Podcast

Geopolitical conflict accelerates this fiscal reckoning. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed, with Iran retaining fire control over the shipping lane. An internal AutoZone memo warns of a 40% drop in lubricant supply, the largest shortage in modern US history. Gromen applies Liebig’s Law - the absence of a single critical component like motor oil can stall the 70% of US goods moved by truck. The Fed must now choose between letting rates rip into an oil shock or printing into an inflation spike.

Parallel stress is emerging in Japan, where government bond yields have hit 30-year highs. Nick Bhatia and Joe Consorti see this as a threat to the global yen carry trade. As yields rise, investors who borrowed cheap yen to buy US assets are forced to unwind, creating a recursive selling pressure that could eventually bleed into American equities. The US policy of 'higher for longer' rates is a deliberate attack on the offshore Eurodollar system, pulling dollar liquidity back onshore to reassert monetary control.

This monetary reset coincides with a structural erosion of the US tax base. AI productivity gains are hollowing out the high-salaried white-collar jobs that provide 50% of federal receipts. In the 1990s, tech drove both productivity and employment growth. Today, Gromen argues, companies borrow to build infrastructure that replaces six-figure roles, starving the sovereign of revenue just as debt service costs explode.

The political response is disconnect. President Trump recently told reporters that American financial stability does not motivate his Iran policy “even a little bit,” and pointed to record stock market highs when confronted with voters struggling with $4.50 gas. With nearly 80 countries under emergency economic measures due to the energy crisis, the administration’s framing of ‘short-term pain’ fails a base in years-long distress.

“Washington’s current demands are strategically delusional. The U.S. is demanding Iran ship its enriched uranium to America while offering zero sanctions relief or asset unfreezing. This isn't a negotiation. It's a pretext for the return to kinetic action.”

- Krystal Ball, Breaking Points

In this landscape, neutral reserve assets gain strategic urgency. Iran’s recent launch of a Bitcoin-backed insurance policy, following the freezing of $400 million in Tether, signals a pivot to sanctions-proof settlement. Bhatia notes that even US figures have acknowledged Bitcoin and gold as necessary neutral assets. The long-term trend points toward sovereigns, including the US, building strategic Bitcoin reserves. When the dollar ceases to be the world’s primary reserve asset, a digital, non-sovereign commodity is positioned to become the base layer of global accounting.

The bond market’s ticking clock is now synchronized with a supply chain shock and a collapsing tax base. The coming monetary response - printing to cap yields - is not a policy choice but a mathematical inevitability. The only remaining variable is how fast the inflation follows.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

‘Bond Market Fire Alarm’ The Next Financial Crisis | Bhatia & ConsortiMay 21

  • Nick Batia says the global bond market crisis is localized, with US Treasuries relatively stable but Japanese, UK, and German bond price action deeply concerning due to policy-driven money creation.
  • Nick Batia argues a strong US economy, with nominal GDP growth near 8% and a historic capex boom, is fueling demand-side inflation alongside the oil price shock from the Strait of Hormuz closure.
  • Joe Consorti notes the 10-year Japanese Government Bond yield is at its highest level since 1996, threatening to unwind decades of yen-funded carry trades that underpin global equity positions.
  • Joe Consorti frames the bond market sell-off as a fire alarm, but argues acute crisis is avoided for now because equity markets have only corrected 2-3% and hope exists for a near-term Iran peace deal.
  • Nick Batia re-frames the 'Trump Always Chickens Out' (TACO) narrative, arguing the administration has clear objectives and uses Scott Bessent as a 'Secretary of Volatility' to dial back policy only when markets hit a genuine breaking point.
  • Nick Batia assesses the probability of a US Treasury market breakdown triggering a broad financial crisis as low, below 33%, citing functioning repo markets flush with cash as a sign of flight-to-safety rather than funding stress.
  • Joe Consorti highlights Iran's launch of a Bitcoin-backed insurance policy days after having $400M in Tether frozen, calling it perhaps the most important geopolitical Bitcoin development as it demonstrates a seizure-resistant tool for international trade.
  • Nick Batia cites former Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's 2023 statement that gold and Bitcoin are needed as neutral reserve assets, framing this governmental recognition as the critical bullish angle for Bitcoin's next decade.
  • Joe Consorti argues Bitcoin is a superior neutral reserve asset to gold for settling high-frequency international trade, a distinction now being formalized by US regulators like the CFTC classifying it as a digital commodity.
Also from this episode: (3)

BTC Markets (3)

  • Nick Batia claims US policy, including high rates and the Strait of Hormuz crisis, constitutes an attack on the Eurodollar system by aiming to drain offshore dollar liquidity and reorient global trade flows through onshore US channels.
  • Joe Consorti sets a probabilistic Bitcoin price target, stating if the Iran war ends by mid-June, a new all-time high up to $150k by year-end is likely, but a prolonged conflict increases the risk of an inflationary recession and lower prices.
  • Nick Batia agrees with Joe Consorti's probabilistic framework but is slightly more conservative, placing the year-end distribution between current prices and $150k and rating the odds of a new all-time high by year-end at around 50%.

#748: The Bond Market Says Tick Tock with Luke GromenMay 20

  • Gromen says reserve asset diversification will start with gold, facilitated by China's offshore yuan clearing banks in global gold hubs, enabling commodity producers to net-settle trade in gold.
  • He notes US policy contradictions, where promoting stablecoin demand for Treasuries is undermined by actions like sanctioning Tether and attacking Iran, which hikes food and energy costs for the emerging market buyers needed to purchase those Treasuries.
  • Gromen's base case is that the Fed under Kevin Warsh will cut rates, lie about true inflation running at 12-15%, and attempt to cap gold and Bitcoin prices to funnel capital into the tech sector, leading to a period of high inflation but controlled long-term yields.
  • Marty Bent observes that Iran's reported move to use Bitcoin for Strait of Hormuz safe passage insurance comes just weeks after OFAC coordinated to freeze Iranian Tether assets, highlighting a contradictory US approach to digital asset weaponization.
Also from this episode: (7)

Politics (4)

  • Luke Gromen argues the US must print money to cap soaring bond yields, as political cuts to defense and entitlements are mathematically impossible without causing a deeper recession and even larger deficits.
  • He predicts the Iran conflict has accelerated the bond market crisis, forcing the Fed to choose between cutting rates or printing money directly into an inflation spike, which he believes will lead to double-digit inflation.
  • Gromen states the Strait of Hormuz remains closed because Iran retains significant fire control over the Gulf, contradicting Western media narratives and creating severe supply chain bottlenecks for critical goods like motor oil.
  • He argues the US push away from Middle Eastern fossil fuels benefits China, which dominates the EV, solar, and battery supply chains, and that recent geopolitical moves have pushed other nations toward Chinese-manufactured green energy solutions.

Business (1)

  • Gromen calculates that annualized US federal spending on interest and entitlements totals $4.8 trillion, exceeding total annual receipts of $5.2 trillion, leaving no room to fund defense without running massive deficits.

AI & Tech (2)

  • Gromen contends that AI is a systemic threat due to high sovereign debt levels, as it will disintermediate high-paying service jobs and erode the tax base at a time when the US government cannot afford any revenue loss.
  • He believes the current tech bubble differs from 2000 because companies are now borrowing to spend on AI while undermining the government's tax base, all against a backdrop of 120% debt-to-GDP and foreign selling of Treasuries.

5/18/26: Iran War On Verge Of Resuming, Trump Attacks Voters On The EconomyMay 18

  • National gas prices are hitting $4.50 per gallon, with California exceeding $6. Krystal predicts Memorial Day travel will force Americans to confront sticker shock, potentially serving as a turning point in public sentiment.
  • Lindsey Graham advocated for renewed US airstrikes on Iran, specifically targeting its energy infrastructure, arguing the status quo of a closed Strait of Hormuz strengthens Iran.
  • Krystal highlights the disconnect between Trump's stock market boasting and economic reality, noting only about 50% of workers have a 401k. Self-employed individuals and gig workers are least likely to benefit from market gains.
  • Mike Johnson claimed Republican economic policies will lead to bigger paychecks, but argued gas prices and kitchen-table issues can only be addressed after the Strait of Hormuz situation is resolved.
  • An internal AutoZone memo warned of the largest supply shortage of lubricating fluids in modern US history, with average available supply expected to drop by 40%.
  • Financial Times reports nearly 80 countries have introduced emergency economic measures due to the energy crisis driven by the Iran war, with analysts warning of potential famine pushing 45 million more people into crisis.
Also from this episode: (4)

War (3)

  • Trita Parsi's analysis indicates Tehran expects a US attack within the next forty-eight hours, suggesting the Middle East is teetering on the brink as Trump appears to reignite war with Iran.
  • Saagar notes the stark disparity between US and Iranian demands in any potential negotiation. US demands include no reparations, transfer of 400kg of enriched uranium, and only one operational nuclear facility, while Iran demands war cessation, sanctions lifting, and sovereignty over the Strait.
  • Open-source intelligence indicates a $30 million MQ-9 Reaper drone was struck by Houthis in Yemen. At least 24 such drones have been downed over Iran, with about 20 by the Houthis.

Politics (1)

  • Trump dismissed voter concerns about gas prices, stating he doesn't think about Americans' financial stability and focusing solely on preventing a Iranian nuclear weapon. He later told struggling voters he was disappointed in them, citing record stock market highs.