The Federal Reserve is now “monetizing the debt.” It’s straight up money printing. Here’s what’s up:

Published May 20, 2025

  • YouTube Video Transcript

    00:02 Everyone, the Federal Reserve is now
    00:04 doing what’s called monetizing the debt
    00:06 for the US government. Uh monetizing the
    00:09 debt is where the Federal Reserve steps
    00:11 in and buys US government debt straight
    00:15 up without even bothering to go through
    00:18 uh a bank or an investment bank or
    00:21 something like that. Uh what normally
    00:23 happens is the Federal Reserve uh they
    00:25 if they want to manipulate interest
    00:27 rates they buy or sell government debt
    00:31 uh in the open market from companies
    00:33 like Goldman Sachs or JP Morgan or
    00:35 whoever. Uh but I’ve been saying for a
    00:39 long time look at some point the US
    00:40 government’s going to want people to buy
    00:42 their debt and people are not going to
    00:44 be willing to buy their debt. So slowly
    00:46 slowly over the last uh decade or so, c
    00:50 countries have been dropping out. So
    00:52 Japan and China and other countries that
    00:56 have historically owned a lot of US
    00:59 government debt, meaning they’ve loaned
    01:00 the US government a lot of money. those
    01:03 countries are starting to drop out,
    01:05 meaning they’re, you know, pairing back
    01:07 and saying, “Hey, instead of uh um
    01:10 instead of buying additional new
    01:12 government debt and sort of ramping up
    01:13 how much government debt we own, we’re
    01:16 going to slowly pair that back.” And
    01:18 part of the way they do that is they
    01:19 just start buying less and less. And
    01:22 then as the debt they already own comes
    01:24 to maturity, they just uh take the
    01:27 proceeds and rather than sell the debt,
    01:29 they take the proceeds and just, you
    01:31 know, sit on them or convert them back
    01:33 to their local currency or whatever it
    01:34 is they decide to do. So, as of the last
    01:37 uh week or two, the Federal Reserve,
    01:40 there’s been a couple one or more, I
    01:43 can’t remember how many, one or more
    01:44 failed Treasury auctions. So, what is a
    01:47 failed Treasury auction? Well, that is
    01:49 when the government says, “Hey, we’re
    01:52 going to auction off uh, you know, $20
    01:55 billion of, you know, uh, 5year
    01:58 government debt and another $30 billion
    02:01 of 10year government debt and whatever
    02:03 $40 billion of, you know, 30-year
    02:06 government debt.” And of course, each
    02:08 different um each different uh duration
    02:11 has a different interest rate. So, those
    02:14 interest rates have been creeping up.
    02:15 The government is trying to put push
    02:17 them down um because they have to
    02:20 refinance about $9 trillion this year,
    02:23 which is absolutely insane. About one
    02:25 quarter of all of the US government debt
    02:28 comes due this year, which means they
    02:29 have to because they’re not going to cut
    02:31 back spending. Clearly, there’s zero
    02:33 appetite in Washington DC to cut
    02:35 spending. Even after Elon Musk and all
    02:37 the, you know, the Doge, you know,
    02:39 finding of all the waste and fraud and
    02:42 abuse and all that sort of stuff,
    02:43 they’re not cutting any of that. Um the
    02:46 big, you know, the so-called big
    02:48 beautiful bill in Washington DC, which
    02:50 is a load of crap, uh is is not a big
    02:53 beautiful bill. It’s a continuation of
    02:55 every stupid thing the government has
    02:57 ever done, and then it adds more
    02:59 spending. I mean, it’s absolutely insane
    03:01 that Republicans have zero appetite to
    03:05 cut the deficit, cut the debt, balance
    03:08 the budget. Like, nobody they act like
    03:10 it’s all free money. It’s just I mean
    03:12 it’s free money so why would you bother
    03:15 you know why would you bother balancing
    03:16 your budget you know they act like the
    03:18 debt doesn’t matter. It’s ridiculous.
    03:20 Well anyway the uh the Treasury the US
    03:23 Treasury who uh does the bond issuances
    03:25 they had announced that they were going
    03:27 to auction off a certain amount of US
    03:29 government debt. And the problem is that
    03:32 there were not enough buyers. And there
    03:34 were not enough buyers because too many
    03:37 people had decided that the US
    03:38 government was now not a great credit
    03:41 risk. You know, obviously I don’t know
    03:44 why it took them so long. But um I mean
    03:47 it’s not that you’re not going to get
    03:48 paid off. You’re just going to get paid
    03:50 off with printed money out of thin air
    03:51 that’s worth less than you know the
    03:53 value of the money you gave the
    03:55 government. So, uh, you know, if the if
    03:57 the government takes your money at a 5%
    03:60 interest rate and then turns around and
    04:01 prints 7% more money to pay your
    04:03 interest, well, then your go your money
    04:05 ultimately is going to be worth, you
    04:07 know, 7% less, then you get your 5%
    04:09 interest and you’re still 2% worse off.
    04:12 Well, that’s what’s happening. Um, and
    04:14 the only reason they’re still getting
    04:15 away with it at all is most people are
    04:17 still just asleep and they’re not paying
    04:19 attention and they don’t know what’s
    04:20 going on and all of that. But uh anyway,
    04:22 so the Treasury had a failed bond
    04:24 auction which was they ran out of buyers
    04:28 and they don’t ever want to do that. The
    04:30 Treasury never never never wants to
    04:33 announce that they are going to auction
    04:35 off a certain amount of government debt.
    04:38 Uh and then have it not enough buyers.
    04:41 Uh so what happens in that situation is
    04:44 the Federal Reserve steps in because
    04:46 they have unlimited money because they
    04:47 are the ones that print money out of
    04:49 thin air. the Federal Reserve uh steps
    04:52 in and starts bidding uh for the that
    04:55 government debt and then it buys that
    04:57 government debt straight up onto its own
    04:59 balance sheet. Um so it would be the
    05:02 equivalent of let’s assume you know one
    05:04 of my kids started a lemonade
    05:06 stand, you know, every time they make,
    05:09 you know, a gallon of lemonade and then
    05:11 they go try to sell it, you know,
    05:13 wherever. And let’s assume that usually
    05:17 there is uh you know there’s enough
    05:20 buyers so they sell their gallon of
    05:22 lemonade. They announce they’re going to
    05:23 make a gallon of lemonade. They make it.
    05:24 They go sell it. They come back. They’ve
    05:26 got 20 bucks or whatever. And then uh
    05:29 and then eventually uh they you know
    05:31 let’s say the the lemonade gets watered
    05:33 down, right? That’s the equivalent of
    05:34 the US government debt. Nobody wants it
    05:36 because it’s becoming less and less
    05:38 quality. So, you know, the kids go out
    05:40 and they decide they’re going to do, you
    05:42 know, half lemonade, half water or
    05:44 something like that. So, they’re just
    05:45 going to water it down. People stop
    05:47 buying the lemonade because it’s all
    05:49 watered down. But I always noticed that
    05:51 somehow they always sell out of
    05:53 lemonade. And so, I ask them, you know,
    05:55 well, hey kids, you know, I I know
    05:57 you’re sort of, you know, mixing the
    05:59 lemonade with water. Uh, you know, how
    06:02 do you keep selling the entire gallon?
    06:03 And they’re like, “Well, after we sell
    06:05 the first $10, we just use the $10 we
    06:08 got to buy the the other $10 of lemonade
    06:11 from ourselves. That way, we always sell
    06:13 $20 of lemonade.” It’s like, uh,
    06:17 okay, let’s think about this. So, you’re
    06:20 you’re taking money and then you’re
    06:23 basically buying the lemonade from
    06:25 yourself because the market doesn’t want
    06:28 your lemonade. And then you say, “Well,
    06:30 the great thing about our lemonade is
    06:31 there’s always enough demand to buy a
    06:34 whole gallon of lemonade.” And the truth
    06:36 is, no, there’s not. There’s enough
    06:38 money to buy half of your lemonade, your
    06:40 watered down lemonade, because enough
    06:41 people like lemonade enough that they’re
    06:43 willing to buy, you know, half a gallon
    06:46 of water down lemonade, but then you run
    06:48 out of buyers and you’d have to, you
    06:49 know, lug the other half gallon back in,
    06:51 you know, you know, back home and, you
    06:54 know, tell me how you failed. Um, but
    06:56 instead you just use the first $10 to
    06:58 buy the second $10 of lemonade from
    07:00 yourselves. And if that doesn’t work,
    07:02 you just take some monopoly money out
    07:05 um, you know, to the lemonade stand and
    07:07 however much money you know you can’t
    07:09 sell of lemonade, you just use the
    07:11 monopoly money to buy the rest of it
    07:13 from yourself. So that’s basically
    07:14 what’s happening right now with the US
    07:17 government debt auctions is when the
    07:20 marketplace runs out of real people with
    07:23 real money that that want to buy US
    07:25 government debt, the Federal Reserve
    07:27 steps in and just buys it with madeup
    07:30 money out of thin air. Now the Federal
    07:33 Reserve has been doing this the last
    07:35 couple weeks. I mean tens of billions of
    07:38 dollars. We’re not talking small small
    07:39 amounts of money here. The Federal
    07:41 Reserve has been buying government debt,
    07:43 which is called monetizing the debt. Uh
    07:45 they’ve been doing that with tens of
    07:47 billions of dollars, which indicates
    07:50 that people just are not willing to
    07:51 trust the US government anymore. Now,
    07:54 this is not a problem unique to the US
    07:55 government. Uh bond yields, which is the
    07:57 amount of money the government has to
    07:59 pay for people to buy their long-term
    08:01 debt, are getting higher and higher and
    08:04 higher. So, in Japan, which is notorious
    08:06 for having borrowed just ridiculous
    08:08 amounts of money, uh their debt to GDP
    08:11 is much higher than the United States,
    08:13 um in Japan, uh they’ve got, uh their
    08:17 interest rate for 30-year and 40-year uh
    08:20 bonds just hit the highest it’s ever
    08:22 been in history, uh as of the last
    08:24 couple days, meaning Japan now has to
    08:27 pay people more interest in order to be
    08:30 willing to buy their debt than they’ve
    08:32 ever had to pay in the history of Japan.
    08:35 Um, and bond uh bond yields around the
    08:38 world are high because again it’s not
    08:41 unique to the United States. Just people
    08:43 are increasingly concerned that go that
    08:46 all governments are not going to be able
    08:48 to pay their debts and so they’re
    08:50 demanding higher and higher interest
    08:51 rates. So where does this go? Well, it
    08:53 just keeps I mean it keeps going where
    08:56 eventually you get the central bank just
    08:58 starts buying more and more of the debt
    09:01 issuance and that’s how you get
    09:03 hyperinflation. Uh you get
    09:05 hyperinflation because as soon as
    09:06 nobody’s buying the debt anymore, the
    09:08 Federal Reserve is buying the debt. So
    09:10 instead of the government being funded
    09:13 partially by taxes, partially by um uh
    09:17 by borrowed money, which pulls money out
    09:19 of the economy, and partially by printed
    09:22 money, which is the three ways they fund
    09:23 the federal government, which is it’s
    09:25 ridiculous that you know, tax money,
    09:27 even when they take, you know, 40% of
    09:29 all of our money is still not enough.
    09:31 So, uh, the way the government works is
    09:33 they tax as much of the of your money
    09:35 off of you as they possibly can get away
    09:37 with, and then they borrow as much money
    09:41 out of the economy as they could
    09:43 possibly get away with. And when that
    09:45 fails, they print the rest of the money
    09:46 just out of thin air. So, that’s three
    09:48 ways the government gets money. Uh, all
    09:50 of which are bad for
    09:52 you because when they borrow money out
    09:54 of the economy, it makes it harder for
    09:56 you to borrow money in the economy
    09:57 because you’re competing with the
    09:58 government to borrow money. And the
    10:01 government can print money out of thin
    10:02 air. So people are more likely, you
    10:04 know, initially to give money to the
    10:06 government because they’re like, well,
    10:07 you know, at least I know I’ll get the
    10:09 dollars back. They may not be worth as
    10:10 much, but at least I know I’ll give them
    10:11 back because the government can just
    10:12 make them out of thin air. Uh so anyway,
    10:15 uh you know, things are bad when the
    10:17 government has resorted, you know,
    10:19 increasingly to the third category,
    10:21 which is, hey, nobody even wants our
    10:23 debt anymore. We’re just going to make
    10:24 the money up out of thin air. So, as of
    10:26 the last couple weeks, that’s been
    10:28 happening more and more with the US uh
    10:30 the Federal Reserve monetizing the debt
    10:32 by just straight up printing money and
    10:34 buying the debt with it. So, why is that
    10:36 inflationary? Well, uh they’re loaning
    10:39 money to, you know, they’re buying
    10:40 government debt, which is the equivalent
    10:42 of loaning money, and then the US
    10:44 government, which is completely out of
    10:46 control what they’re spending, no
    10:47 discipline whatsoever, uh they go spend
    10:50 that into the economy. So as the US
    10:53 government dumps money into the economy
    10:55 by spending and spending and spending
    10:56 and spending that those dollars are then
    10:59 increasing the money supply which means
    11:02 there are more dollars facing the same
    11:04 amount of goods and services which means
    11:06 the price of those goods and services
    11:08 goes up. So now you’re competing with
    11:10 the government not just to borrow money.
    11:12 You’re also competing with the
    11:13 government to just buy stuff because
    11:15 everything you want to buy, someone in
    11:17 the government wants to buy and they
    11:18 they’re buying it with madeup money and
    11:20 you’re buying it with money you worked
    11:22 hard for. And so it’s harder and harder
    11:24 to buy the things you want to afford
    11:27 because you’re having to compete with
    11:28 people who didn’t do any work to to
    11:31 create the money that they’re using.
    11:33 Their their money was made up out of
    11:34 thin air. yours you had to work for. But
    11:37 both of those dollars are now chasing
    11:40 for the things you want to buy. So the
    11:42 things you want to buy, the prices of
    11:44 what you want to buy are now going up
    11:47 because of supply and demand. Now, uh
    11:49 you may not notice that in the near
    11:51 term, but long term you will because
    11:53 when money is printed out of thin air,
    11:55 it always eventually shows up as
    11:57 inflation. Uh sometimes there’s a time
    11:59 lag. Usually there’s like a 12 or
    12:01 18month time lag. Um because that’s how
    12:04 long it takes for the uh you know the
    12:06 money to sort of filter through the
    12:08 economy and to start bidding up prices.
    12:10 But anyway, all of that is bad news for
    12:12 governments and all of that is bad news
    12:14 for you unless you have Bitcoin. If you
    12:16 have Bitcoin, at some point you can sit
    12:19 in a Zen state and not worry about the
    12:22 fact that a bunch of people are doing
    12:24 stupid stuff that Washington, you know,
    12:27 is going to pass or has passed, I don’t
    12:29 know, this big beautiful bill, which is
    12:31 garbage that is full of just ridiculous
    12:34 spending. It doesn’t make any spending
    12:36 cuts and it spends way more money. So,
    12:39 not only are they not cutting anything
    12:41 that Doge found, they’re adding more
    12:43 money on top of it, which is just
    12:45 absolutely insane, absolutely
    12:47 ridiculous. So, at some point, if you
    12:49 got Bitcoin, you can sit back in a Zen
    12:51 state and say, “Well, they’re screwing
    12:52 everybody, but they’re not screwing me.”
    12:54 Uh, because they’re printing money that
    12:56 everyone else is using, but I’m using
    12:58 money that they can’t print more of. So
    13:00 as they print more money, the p the
    13:03 value of my money goes up because more
    13:05 people switch from the money that’s
    13:07 getting printed out of thin air to the
    13:08 money that cannot be printed out of thin
    13:10 air. So uh monetizing the debt is you
    13:14 know typically something governments do
    13:16 in the late stage of their life as in
    13:19 it’s something they do when a government
    13:21 is in decline because they’ve gotten so
    13:24 proflegate, so fat, so dumb, so happy
    13:27 that um you know they just don’t have
    13:29 any discipline whatsoever at all left
    13:32 anymore. And we have clearly arrived at
    13:34 that place in Washington DC. So they are
    13:36 monetizing the debt. the Federal Reserve
    13:38 is straight up printing money out of
    13:40 thin air and buying government debt with
    13:42 it. Um, and that’s a very bad sign. And
    13:46 the same is happening in other countries
    13:47 because the debt is u the bond, you
    13:51 know, the the the price of money that
    13:53 the government borrows is going up is
    13:55 really really high in all countries
    13:58 right now, which tells you all countries
    14:00 are in a bad way with fewer people
    14:03 trusting them. And that is part of the
    14:05 reason Bitcoin is sitting at $105,000
    14:07 per coin is because more and more of the
    14:10 money um is has decided that they do not
    14:13 want to buy government debt and instead
    14:15 they’re going to buy something else and
    14:18 you know a percentage of that’s going
    14:19 into Bitcoin. Over time it will be more
    14:21 and more. So good luck out there and I’m
    14:24 here for anything you need on any front
    14:26 as always. Thanks everyone.

The Federal Reserve is now “monetizing the debt.” They are doing that because demand for US government debt has gotten too low to maintain the US government spending levels. It is straight-up money printing. Here’s what is happening:

**Originally recorded 5/20/25**

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The content provided in this post is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. I am not a licensed financial advisor, and all opinions expressed are my own. Always conduct your own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Investing in Bitcoin or any other assets carries risk, and you should never invest more than you can afford to lose.

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