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"I have always depended on the kindness of strangers," said Blanche DuBois,
in the final words of the play A Streetcar Named Desire. Well, don't
we all.
Many citizens probably still cling to the old saw that public debt doesn't
matter because "we owe it to ourselves." Wrong. Debt always matters. And as
for whom we owe it to, it is a lot of kind (or, at least, not yet unkind) strangers.
As recently as 1970, foreign holders of U.S. debt were essentially non-existent.
But their slice of our obligation pie has steadily increased, especially over
the past two decades, until now foreign governments and international investors
hold about 35% of Treasuries, as the following chart reveals.

Of about $11 trillion in U.S. debt, foreigners have about $3.8 trillion, with
China in the lead at nearly $1 trillion and Japan not far behind at around
$750 billion.
Most likely, though, this trend has already leveled off. The Chinese, Japanese,
Russians, and Indians have openly announced their decision to cut back on further
purchases and existing holdings of U.S. government debt. Beyond that, the source
of funds previously allocated to their purchases -- trade surpluses -- has
declined sharply with the recession. As a consequence, going forward, foreign
buying is more apt to shrink than increase.
While foreigners are continuing to show up for the record-sized Treasury auctions,
it's due to the dollar retaining its status (albeit shakily) as the world's
reserve currency. But they have become quite cautious, generally investing
towards the front end of the yield curve, which is a vote of no confidence in
the buck's future. As the chart below illustrates, sales of long-term bonds
to foreigners are way down.

So what does all this mean?
It means that a big chunk of our prosperity during the past twenty years was
due to a trade deficit that put billions of dollars into the hands of foreigners,
who then turned around and bought Treasuries with them, helping the U.S. government
finance its massive deficit spending. That's over -- and the unwinding process
has just begun.
Yet federal deficit spending, far from reflecting this reality, has grown
by leaps and bounds. But who will finance it? Let's extend our first chart
out a few years.

As you can see, we project that foreign participation has plateaued. U.S.
private domestic investors can probably increase their holdings moderately,
now that households are consuming less and saving more, and financial institutions
have money to invest in Treasury paper. The agencies and trusts (like Social
Security) are really not a part of the equation, but rather reflect programs
on "auto-pilot" and quickly headed to the point where they will negatively
impact, not help, the deficits.
Adding it all together, even under the most conservative of assumptions, there
are simply not enough buyers to cover the accelerating federal deficits. That
leaves the lender of last resort, the Federal Reserve, as the only remaining
candidate to satisfy the government's grotesque appetite for funding. There
is no viable alternative.
The Fed will take up the slack in the only way open to it, by printing money
out of thin air and exchanging it for promises from the Treasury. That means
an escalation of monetary inflation and, somewhere down the road, serious price
inflation as well. We don't know exactly when that will happen, only that it
must.
The editors of The Casey Report have been alerting subscribers to this
very possible scenario for quite some time. If foreigners stop buying U.S.
government debt, the whole house of cards will come crashing down. But you
can do a lot to protect yourself financially - run with the trend instead of
swimming against it. Find out more about the accurate predictions of trend
hunter Doug Casey and his team, and how to profit from them... click
here.
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