The $10 trillion question: Can Europe weaponize its U.S. holdings?
With geopolitical tensions mounting and trade rhetoric intensifying, Europe holds a massive card—$10 trillion in American bonds and equities. But playing it? That's the hard part.
Here's the dilemma: If European policymakers offload these assets to apply pressure, U.S. Treasury yields spike. Borrowing costs climb. But the collateral damage cuts both ways—European portfolios take hits, and the broader financial system feels the tremor.
It's a classic standoff in macro strategy. Big positions look powerful until you realize moving them moves markets—including your own.
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BankruptcyArtist
· 14h ago
Basically, Europe is holding 10 trillion in chips but dares not to move, it's awkward.
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FlatlineTrader
· 14h ago
Basically, it's a hot potato. Europe holds $10 trillion but can't do anything about it.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 14h ago
ngl, this feels like "even nuclear bombs are kept in the fridge, and no one dares to take them out and use them"...
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MetadataExplorer
· 14h ago
Basically, Europe is holding 10 trillion in chips but can't do anything, it's really damn embarrassing.
The $10 trillion question: Can Europe weaponize its U.S. holdings?
With geopolitical tensions mounting and trade rhetoric intensifying, Europe holds a massive card—$10 trillion in American bonds and equities. But playing it? That's the hard part.
Here's the dilemma: If European policymakers offload these assets to apply pressure, U.S. Treasury yields spike. Borrowing costs climb. But the collateral damage cuts both ways—European portfolios take hits, and the broader financial system feels the tremor.
It's a classic standoff in macro strategy. Big positions look powerful until you realize moving them moves markets—including your own.