The US debt bill has set a new record—$30 trillion. This number is no longer a warning; it’s reality.



Looking back, this curve has been rising nonstop since 2006, and after 2020, it hit the accelerator. In just a few years, it doubled the scale of 2018. The pressure on the Treasury? It’s written into every report.

This speed of debt expansion will force a policy shift—whether to loosen or tighten monetary policy, whether to stimulate or contract fiscally, all have to be reconsidered. The more direct reaction is in the market—funds are flocking to asset classes that can withstand inflation, and risk-averse sentiment is quietly brewing.
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RugPullProphetvip
· 11h ago
30 trillion? This isn't over yet, we still need to see what the Fed does next. --- If it doubles, it doubles. Anyway, small investors like us are just waiting to buy the dip. --- To put it bluntly, they've printed money to the point where there's no other way out. It's inevitable that funds will flow into precious metals and Bitcoin. --- What's the point of those Treasury reports? They won't change anything. If it's going to crash, it'll crash. --- So what's the point of still holding onto USD now? Might as well get on board. --- With this momentum, a policy shift is already inevitable. It's just a matter of who reacts first. --- Risk-off sentiment brewing? I think the market isn't being subtle anymore, it's openly fleeing. --- It started back in 2006. I can't wait any longer—I'm going all in on crypto.
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GateUser-00be86fcvip
· 11h ago
Daring to print 30 trillion, who could possibly finish writing this US debt story? --- That jump in 2020 was a straight-up double, absolutely outrageous. --- Instead of waiting for policy shifts, it's better to bottom-fish inflation-hedged assets—that's the real way to go. --- The Ministry of Finance's report is probably the same old routine; no matter how big the numbers get, nothing really changes. --- Funds flowing into safe-haven assets show that the smart money saw this coming a long time ago. --- It hasn't stopped rising since 2006—who can handle that? --- Monetary tightening? Impossible, unless they're really ready for surgery. --- The US debt issue has already shifted from being a risk to being a fate. --- The market is piling into safe havens, everyone's making their bets—retail investors just follow the crowd, as usual. --- A 30-trillion-dollar black hole—sooner or later, it has to be filled.
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NeonCollectorvip
· 11h ago
30 trillion? Seriously? How long will it take to pay that off? --- Doubled after 2020. Is the US treating the printing press like a piggy bank? --- Basically, they're just waiting for inflation assets to take over. Isn't it a bit late to get in now? --- When debt explodes like this, it's always ordinary people who end up footing the bill. It's just speechless. --- Feels like the US is betting that future economic growth will cover this hole. If the bet pays off, everyone’s happy; if not... --- Calling it "risk-off sentiment brewing" is just a euphemism. I see it as a mad dash for chairs. --- The debt doubling since 2018 sounds scary, but the market seems pretty calm about it? Maybe we're just overthinking it. --- Who actually reads those Treasury reports anyway? Life goes on regardless.
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pumpamentalistvip
· 11h ago
$30 trillion? The US is playing with fire, they'll have to pay the bill sooner or later. --- Doubling in just a few years, this speed is unbelievable. --- So should we be bottom fishing gold or stockpiling stablecoins now? Can someone give some direction? --- Loose and tight policies are on shaky ground, funds shifting to safe havens was inevitable. --- Debt inflation = the printing presses are running overtime, who’s to blame for inflation? --- It hasn’t stopped since 2006, this trend line is just ugly. --- On the eve of a monetary policy shift, if your money is still in the market, you’d better move fast. --- $30 trillion is just a smokescreen, the real problems are yet to come.
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TokenUnlockervip
· 11h ago
30 trillion? That’s not scary enough—the key is that it’s still rising. How many more years can the US dollar hold out? --- With the doubling speed this fast, I’m actually not worried about the debt. I’m more concerned about how we hedge against this. --- To put it bluntly, policy needs to shift direction; otherwise, the asset-side bubble will get even crazier. --- At this rate, BTC and gold are going to take off, right? --- Whenever I see data like this, I feel a bit powerless. Besides stockpiling some anti-inflation assets, what else can regular people even do? --- From 2006 until now it’s been soaring nonstop. This curve doesn’t even look like an economic indicator anymore—it’s more like a countdown to an inevitable collapse. --- Risk aversion is really spreading. All the money in the market is flowing into stable assets. That signal is pretty clear now. --- With debt expanding to this level, the next move depends on which card the Fed decides to play. --- The problem isn’t the 30 trillion itself—it’s about how much longer it can keep increasing.
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ImpermanentLossFanvip
· 11h ago
$30 trillion—that number is suffocating. I bet $5 the Fed will pretend not to see it again. --- Ha, doubled again? Feels like every time I wake up the debt's gone up by another $100 million. I'm getting numb to this pace. --- Funds are flowing into safe-haven assets, which means smart money is scared. Meanwhile, us retail investors are still buying the dip, haha. --- From 2006 until now, this line hasn't turned once—just heading straight down the elevator to hell. Who the hell dares to catch this falling knife? --- Monetary policy shift? Shift to what? You think it could even go lower? That's a joke. --- Seriously? It's doubled since 2020? Back then we were still stacking coins. Now I get it. --- Inflation assets are hot—gold and Bitcoin look ready to take off again. I'm all in and ready. --- The Treasury report is full of pressure, but no one dares to look at it. It's like willful blindness. --- At this rate of devaluation, it really feels like my dollars are shrinking. Better to switch to assets sooner rather than later. --- Is $30 trillion even a real number? The actual figure might be double that. Anyway, I can't make sense of this system anymore.
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