Accidentally Defi

J. Cole, Lawsn, J. Johns

Crypto. Philosophy. All in One Place

  1. 12/09/2025

    Japan or Seppuku

    The Savings Glut vs. Spending Glut: Savings Glut (e.g., Japan, China): Nations that save aggressively and saturate domestic banks, forcing them to export capital overseas to find returns. This dynamic exports deflation to other countries.Spending Glut (e.g., USA): Nations driven by consumption (70% of US GDP) that rely on foreign debt to maintain their standard of living.The relationship is described as a "drug dealer" (saver) and "junkie" (spender) dynamic; without the saver buying debt, the spender would face uncontrolled inflation and skyrocketing interest rates.Japan’s Economic Reality: Japan holds approximately $2.6 trillion in US assets, including roughly $1.5 trillion in long-term debt, accumulated through decades of trade surpluses.The country is suffering from demographic deflation due to an aging population (savers/sellers) and a lack of young people (borrowers/spenders).To survive, Japan has relied on Yield Curve Control (YCC)—printing money to buy government debt—to suppress interest rates and keep the economy afloat. This has created a "zombie economy" where companies survive on artificially low rates.The "Japan or Seppuku" Dilemma: Japan faces a catch-22: It needs to defend its currency (the Yen) but also keep bond yields low to prevent fiscal bankruptcy.Defending the Yen: Requires selling US Treasuries (which drives US yields up) or raising domestic interest rates (which would crash their bond market and bankrupt the fiscal budget).Defending the Bond Market: Requires printing more money, which devalues the Yen.Japan cannot save both; saving one means killing the other.The Only Way Out: Augustus argues that Japan's only hope is for the value of their US Treasury holdings to break even.This requires the US Federal Reserve to aggressively cut rates and restart Quantitative Easing (QE) to drive bond yields down.The host predicts the Fed will be forced to act—not out of charity to Japan, but to prevent a massive sell-off of US assets by Japan, which would trigger a reverse wealth effect and send the US into a recession.

    11 min
  2. 03/11/2025

    Dissecting the Economy: Jobs, Robots, and Recession

    Summary In this episode, Augustus delves into the current state of the economy, focusing on job market trends, the impact of automation, recession predictions, and monetary policy dynamics. He highlights the challenges posed by automation on employment, the implications of recent job reports, and the potential for a recession as demand recedes. Augustus also discusses the evolving landscape of fiscal dominance and the upcoming changes in monetary policy, urging listeners to stay informed and adaptable in these uncertain times. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Economic Dissection 00:55 Job Market Analysis and Trends 03:49 The Impact of Automation on Employment 05:50 Recession Predictions and Economic Indicators 09:17 Monetary Policy and Market Dynamics Takeaways The job market is showing signs of stagnation with low job creation. Healthcare and finance are leading job growth, but not in a sustainable way. Long-term unemployment remains a concern, with 20.9% of unemployed individuals seeking jobs for over 27 weeks. Automation is significantly impacting job availability, particularly in manufacturing and finance. Recession predictions are influenced by declining demand and inflation rates. The Federal Reserve's monetary policy will play a crucial role in shaping the economic landscape. Deflation could emerge if inflation continues to drop due to reduced market demand. The upcoming inflation report will be critical for understanding economic trends. Investors should remain cautious and adaptable in the current market environment. A new era of fiscal dominance is emerging, with significant implications for global economics.

    11 min

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4.3
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Crypto. Philosophy. All in One Place