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The original was posted on /r/Superstonk by /u/strongdefense on 2025-01-28 02:06:57+00:00.


I am not an expert so I will happily welcome smarter apes to add their opinion and insights to this. As I understand it, much of the govt spending last year was done using T-Bills, rather than bonds. Since T-Bills have a shorter 1yr maturity, they will begin to start coming due this year. They are also less desirable so their yields will likely grow as the govt tries to unload them on the open market. The alternative is that the Fed Reserve buys them back, which essentially requires them to print more money, resulting in a negative impact on inflation. Seems I read something about this process by a certain South American Bull a couple years ago.

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