General WORLDWIDE CREDIT MARKET CRISIS

We Are Looking Down The Barrel Of A Worldwide Credit Market Crisis That Threatens To Be Absolutely Horrific


May 21, 2025 by Michael Snyder



National governments around the world are collectively more than 100 trillion dollars in debt. The United States accounts for about 35 percent of that total, China accounts for about 16 percent of that total, and Japan accounts for about 10 percent of that total. For a long time, national governments were able to fund their debt binges very cheaply, but now nervous investors are demanding higher interest rates to hold long-term government debt. This is driving up borrowing costs, and it has thrown credit markets around the globe into a state of chaos. If bond yields continue to rise at a very brisk pace, there is a risk that investors could become so nervous that credit markets actually start freezing up. If that were to happen, the entire global financial system would go completely haywire.


Yesterday, I specifically warned that we need to keep “a close eye on Japanese bond yields”.

Today, tepid demand for 20-year Japanese bonds pushed Japanese bond yields into extremely alarming territory

The Tokyo tremor began on Tuesday, when the government tried to sell 1 trillion yen (£5.2bn) of March 2045 bonds and encountered lacklustre demand.

The average bid-to-cover ratio, which measures investor appetite, dropped to 2.5 – the lowest since 2012. The 1.14-point gap between the average and lowest-accepted prices, known as the “tail”, was the longest since 1987.

Investors responded by pushing the Japanese government 20-year yield to the highest this century, and the 30-year yield to a record.
This is a monster story.

I don’t understand why this isn’t front page news all over the planet.

The shaking of the financial system in Japan is unlike anything that we have seen in decades.


Of course the U.S. financial system is being shaken as well.

Moody’s just downgraded our credit rating, and Treasury bond yields continue to rise

The 30-year Treasury bond yield last traded around 5.08%, the highest level going back to October 2023. The benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield traded at 4.59%.

Long-dated bonds sold off as traders worried a new budget bill would worsen the U.S. deficit. The measure is expected to pass as lawmakers reach a compromise on state and local tax deductions as investors head into Speaker Mike Johnson’s Memorial Day deadline. Yields spiked even higher after a poor afternoon auction for 20-year debt, raising fears investors may be losing their appetite for funding America’s deficits.
Just like we are witnessing in Japan, investors are quickly losing their appetite for our bonds.


We are already spending about a trillion dollars a year just in interest on the national debt, and now our borrowing costs could be headed a lot higher.

This is extremely bad news.

One analyst is warning that we have entered a time when “bond traders are willing to punish high-debt nations with large deficits”

“The pressure on both Japanese and US bonds this week is a sign bond traders are willing to punish high-debt nations with large deficits,” says Kathleen Brooks, an analyst at XTB.
In other words, the party is ending.

But our politicians in Washington don’t seem to have gotten the memo.

The spending bill that is currently going through Congress would add another 20 trillion dollars to the national debt in the years ahead.

That is suicidal.

We just can’t do that.

We have been able to defy the laws of economics for a long time, but now economic reality is catching up with us in a major way.

Needless to say, the Europeans are in the same boat, and Google AI says that their bond yields have been rising as well this month…

European government bond yields have generally increased this month, particularly for longer-dated bonds. For example, TradingView reports that Eurozone government bond yields rose on Wednesday due to oil price increases, with Germany’s 10-year yield up 4 basis points. Over the month, Germany’s 10-year yield has increased by 18 basis points, while the UK’s 10-year yield has increased by 19 basis points.
What we are witnessing is truly a worldwide phenomenon.

The global trade war has made everyone very jittery. GDP projections have turned negative all over the planet, and some nations such as Japan have already entered contraction territory.


In an environment where global economic activity is slower, that is going to make it even more difficult for national governments to bring in sufficient revenue to service their debts.

So investors are demanding higher rates, and that is going to push up borrowing costs.

Of course higher borrowing costs will put additional pressure on the finances of national governments.

We could potentially be entering a vicious cycle of higher rates and higher borrowing costs, and that wouldn’t be good for any of us.

If interest rates rise too quickly, that could spark a major derivatives crisis. According to Google AI, interest rate derivatives account for “about 80% of the total global OTC derivatives notional outstanding”…

The global market for interest rate derivatives (IRDs) is a significant portion of the overall derivatives market. At the end of 2023, the notional outstanding for IRDs was approximately $579 trillion. This figure represented about 80% of the total global OTC derivatives notional outstanding, as of mid-year 2023. IRDs, including interest rate swaps, forward rate agreements (FRAs), and options, are used by financial institutions to manage interest rate risk.
A major derivatives crisis would be extremely destructive.

For a moment, try to imagine a giant financial tsunami that smashes one enormous financial institution after another with no end in sight.

That is what we are potentially facing.

For years, I have been warning about the enormous amount of exposure that the largest U.S. banks have to derivatives.

But for a long time, it seemed like everything would be just fine.

Unfortunately, a day of reckoning is now upon us, and it appears that this crisis could
soon get really, really messy.
 
Well, we obviously have elected the wrong people to represent us in congress. And, to top that off, we have district U.S. judges fighting to maintain the business-as-usual condition (and getting away with it.)

No surprises here. The train wreck is just around the corner. Has everyone prepared?
 
Most people I know do not even keep informed by watching the news or reading the newspaper. Prepping has increased but not by leaps and bounds. There are even TV shows about prepping now. Our small group has known since 2004 that some type of catastrophe is going to occur in the future and have been prepping since then. The bond market rates have been increasing recently and that will no doubt lead to tighter credit and increased borrowing costs. It will also increase the interest payments on the U.S. national debt. President Trump , in his big beautiful bill, wants to raise the debt ceiling to over 40 trillion dollars and many republicans are against this in the senate. All this along with the tariffs adding to the cost of goods because retailers will be forced to pass the cost of the tariffs to the consumer. Inflation should rise along with unemployment and GDP should go down . If we are not in a recession already we should be soon. The U.S. credit rating has now be lowered by all three credit rating agencies and the dollar has been losing value. Where all this is going we will have to wait and see.