JUAN O SAVIN- Bond Market Collapse, ACA Obamacare- NINO 11 11 2025

11 days ago
17.9K

Clipped here with Subtitles: a new way to see YT. Juan explains in better detail that certain places like NYC and LA are going to be hit hardest by the Bond Crisis, due to the 20-30 year bonds that built infrastructure coming due. With nothing to back them up, the kickbacks and grift gone, and no new money to bail them out, things will be allowed to fall apart. Many cities with bonds that were created and most of the money gone to the "middle men"—nothing of value exists. This was particularly bad under Obama, and the ACA is in about the same circumstances. The collapse of these "institutions" may actually be a hardship on many people, but the real situation is we are removing the cold dead fingers of the FED off of our honest money. But for the short term, stock up on commodities and understand that at the end of this event things will look vastly different.

And with the government back to work, it hinges on Obama's reason for a government shutdown due to forcing through something that was never about health—it was about the middle man: the insurance we paid way too much for and the middle men that took over our health care, which was neither about health nor about care.

"WHEN I AM DONE IT'LL BE LIKE YOU WERE NEVER EVEN HERE." And President Trump means it.

About the Bond market
The mechanics are brutal. When a company loses its investment-grade rating, large institutional funds — pension plans, insurers, and mutual funds — are often forced to sell. That selling pressure drives bond prices down and yields up, tightening credit conditions for everyone else. The result is a self-reinforcing spiral where borrowing becomes more expensive just when companies most need access to cash.

Read more at:
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/us/42-billion-in-corporate-bonds-just-turned-to-junk-hits-decade-high-is-this-a-signal-of-us-corporate-debt-crisis/articleshow/125113256.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

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