Marketdash

US Debt Crosses $38.5 Trillion as Bitcoin and Gold Investors Bet on Fiscal Dominance

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
The national debt just hit $38.5 trillion, and traders are positioning in Bitcoin and gold on expectations that Washington will pressure the Fed to keep rates low—a scenario that historically benefits hard assets over traditional currencies.

The Debt Meter Keeps Spinning

U.S. national debt crossed $38.5 trillion on Monday, which sounds abstract until you realize the debt-to-GDP ratio now sits above 120%. To put that in perspective, interest payments alone exceed $1 trillion annually—more than the entire defense budget.

The surge comes from pandemic stimulus layered on top of decades of fiscal expansion: infrastructure projects, military spending, social programs, the works. Over 70% of this debt is held domestically, with Japan, China, and the United Kingdom holding most of the rest.

The Venezuelan Oil Factor

President Trump's military action against Venezuela has thrown an interesting wrinkle into the fiscal math. The U.S. may now have access to Venezuela's oil reserves—303 billion barrels, the largest proven reserves on the planet.

At $57 per barrel, those reserves carry a theoretical value of $17.3 trillion, which happens to be more than the GDP of every country except the U.S. and China. Even if sold at half the market rate, that's $8.7 trillion, enough to eliminate nearly a quarter of U.S. national debt. Whether that's politically or practically feasible is another question entirely, but the numbers are eye-popping.

Why Hard Assets Are Having a Moment

Here's where things get interesting for Bitcoin (BTC) and gold investors. When debt balloons like this, governments face enormous pressure to keep interest rates low—otherwise, those trillion-dollar interest payments become even more painful. This dynamic is called fiscal dominance, and Trump has been vocal about wanting the Fed to slash rates to 1% or lower.

Low rates typically juice Bitcoin, gold, and other risk assets because they make holding cash less attractive. Gold (GLD) has already surged 60% in 2025 on currency debasement fears, and analysts expect Bitcoin to catch up in 2026.

The U.S. yield curve tells the same story. Long-duration bond yields are climbing while short-duration yields stay depressed—a steepening that signals the Fed may eventually need to step in as a buyer of last resort and monetize the debt. That erodes the dollar's purchasing power and sends investors hunting for alternative stores of value.

"This configuration, combined with a structurally weaker dollar, rewards assets with real or defensive characteristics," analysts at Bitfinex said.

In other words, when the government prints money to pay its bills, people reach for assets that can't be printed. Whether that's gold bars or digital coins, the playbook is the same: protect purchasing power when currencies lose theirs.

US Debt Crosses $38.5 Trillion as Bitcoin and Gold Investors Bet on Fiscal Dominance

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
The national debt just hit $38.5 trillion, and traders are positioning in Bitcoin and gold on expectations that Washington will pressure the Fed to keep rates low—a scenario that historically benefits hard assets over traditional currencies.

The Debt Meter Keeps Spinning

U.S. national debt crossed $38.5 trillion on Monday, which sounds abstract until you realize the debt-to-GDP ratio now sits above 120%. To put that in perspective, interest payments alone exceed $1 trillion annually—more than the entire defense budget.

The surge comes from pandemic stimulus layered on top of decades of fiscal expansion: infrastructure projects, military spending, social programs, the works. Over 70% of this debt is held domestically, with Japan, China, and the United Kingdom holding most of the rest.

The Venezuelan Oil Factor

President Trump's military action against Venezuela has thrown an interesting wrinkle into the fiscal math. The U.S. may now have access to Venezuela's oil reserves—303 billion barrels, the largest proven reserves on the planet.

At $57 per barrel, those reserves carry a theoretical value of $17.3 trillion, which happens to be more than the GDP of every country except the U.S. and China. Even if sold at half the market rate, that's $8.7 trillion, enough to eliminate nearly a quarter of U.S. national debt. Whether that's politically or practically feasible is another question entirely, but the numbers are eye-popping.

Why Hard Assets Are Having a Moment

Here's where things get interesting for Bitcoin (BTC) and gold investors. When debt balloons like this, governments face enormous pressure to keep interest rates low—otherwise, those trillion-dollar interest payments become even more painful. This dynamic is called fiscal dominance, and Trump has been vocal about wanting the Fed to slash rates to 1% or lower.

Low rates typically juice Bitcoin, gold, and other risk assets because they make holding cash less attractive. Gold (GLD) has already surged 60% in 2025 on currency debasement fears, and analysts expect Bitcoin to catch up in 2026.

The U.S. yield curve tells the same story. Long-duration bond yields are climbing while short-duration yields stay depressed—a steepening that signals the Fed may eventually need to step in as a buyer of last resort and monetize the debt. That erodes the dollar's purchasing power and sends investors hunting for alternative stores of value.

"This configuration, combined with a structurally weaker dollar, rewards assets with real or defensive characteristics," analysts at Bitfinex said.

In other words, when the government prints money to pay its bills, people reach for assets that can't be printed. Whether that's gold bars or digital coins, the playbook is the same: protect purchasing power when currencies lose theirs.