Book a call: https://remnantfinance.com/calendar Out Print the Fed with a 1% target per week: https://remnantfinance.com/options Email us at info@remnantfinance.com or visit https://remnantfinance.com for more information FOLLOW REMNANT FINANCE Youtube: @RemnantFinance (https://www.youtube.com/@RemnantFinance) Facebook: @remnantfinance (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61560694316588) Twitter: @remnantfinance (https://x.com/remnantfinance) TikTok: @RemnantFinance Don't forget to hit LIKE and SUBSCRIBE _____________________________In this episode, Hans explains the macroeconomic reality most people feel right now. Your purchasing power is quietly declining, and it’s not by accident. From the rise of AI replacing real economic value to the mechanics of the national debt, this episode walks through how the system actually works. He explains who we’re really in debt to, why the U.S. can’t stop borrowing, and how the constant refinancing of trillions in debt creates a self-reinforcing loop. As interest rates rise and more debt comes due, the Federal Reserve and Treasury are left with fewer and fewer options. That leads to one likely outcome: yield curve control. A policy where the Fed steps in to cap interest rates and buy bonds with newly created money. Chapters: 00:00 – Opening segment 02:27 – Why understanding the Fed actually matters 04:18 – Treasuries, global demand, and dollar fear narratives 06:52 – AI replacing jobs and collapsing value of labor 09:18 – Introduction to the national debt mechanics 14:02 – Why rising rates are a massive problem 16:48 – The $10 trillion rollover problem explained 20:18 – Why the U.S. must keep borrowing (no way out) 25:18 – Interest payments and the compounding loop 28:42 – The $12 trillion annual borrowing reality 31:22 – QE vs Yield Curve Control (key distinction) 36:05 – What this means for cash, savings, and bonds 37:12 – Impact on gold, Bitcoin, stocks, and real estate 39:08 – Practical strategy: protecting and positioning capital 45:20 – Closing segment Most people don’t realize their standard of living is being propped up by a system that’s changing. If your job can be replaced by cheaper labor or AI, your income is no longer tied to real economic value, and that gap is starting to close. The U.S. doesn’t “pay off” its debt. It refinances it. Roughly $10 trillion in debt comes due in a single year, and the government must borrow new money at current rates just to pay back old bondholders. The Fed has limited options left. Cutting spending isn’t realistic, raising taxes won’t close the gap, and growing out of the debt isn’t happening fast enough. That leaves one primary tool. Yield curve control is likely the next move. Instead of controlling how much it buys, the Fed sets a target interest rate and buys whatever amount of bonds it takes to keep rates there. This policy quietly erodes purchasing power. Savings accounts, cash, and fixed-income assets lose ground over time as inflation stays higher than the returns they generate. Hard assets and productive assets respond differently. Stocks, real estate, gold, and Bitcoin tend to rise in nominal terms while the value of the dollar declines. You can’t control the system, but you can control your position within it. Understanding how money is created, how debt is managed, and where your capital sits determines whether you keep up or fall behind.