Two ZeroHedge analyses dropped on the same day argue the Federal Reserve’s reputation for foresight is a marketing exercise — and that the U.S. sovereign-debt arithmetic has crossed a threshold from which there is no graceful exit. NewsRescue walks through the numbers behind the alarm.
Two analyses landed on ZeroHedge on Thursday that, together, capture a critique of U.S. economic policy increasingly heard outside the consensus financial press. The first, ‘The Fed’s Great Illusion,’ argues that the Federal Reserve is not the all-seeing ‘economic Jedi master’ the financial media presents, but a slow, reactive bureaucracy that consistently lags the very crises it is supposed to anticipate. The second, ‘The Debt Doom Loop Just Hit the Point of No Return,’ argues that the United States has crossed a line in its sovereign-debt arithmetic from which graceful exits are no longer mathematically available.
The ‘Great Illusion’ argument is structural. Despite the Fed’s claim to data-driven precision, every major monetary turning point of the last two decades — the 2008 housing collapse, the 2020 pandemic shock, the 2022 inflation spike, and most recently the 2025-26 stagflation episode — was met by Fed action that arrived months after the underlying data had already turned. The institutional cost is not just credibility; it is the implicit assumption baked into nearly every asset price that the Fed will catch markets before they fall. ZeroHedge contends that this assumption is now load-bearing, and increasingly fragile.
The ‘Debt Doom Loop’ argument is arithmetical. With federal debt held by the public approaching 130% of GDP, average interest costs above 4%, and a deficit running near 7% of GDP in a peacetime, full-employment economy, the math compounds against itself: more debt requires more issuance, which raises rates, which raises interest costs, which raises deficits, which requires more debt. The ‘point of no return’ framing is provocative, but the underlying observation — that interest expense has now eclipsed the entire defense budget — is empirically straightforward.
Mainstream economists push back on both narratives. Defenders of the Fed argue that no central bank can foresee Black Swan events and that institutional caution is a feature rather than a bug. Defenders of fiscal policy argue that U.S. debt remains sustainable so long as nominal GDP growth exceeds the average rate paid on debt — a condition that, until recently, generally held. Both rebuttals rely on the assumption that the next decade will look something like the last decade. Neither addresses the harder scenario: what if it does not?
What makes the ZeroHedge framing useful, even for readers who reject its libertarian priors, is that it forces a question the consensus narrative often elides. If interest rates do not return to the post-2008 zero-bound regime — and the bond market is currently telling us they will not — then the entire fiscal architecture of the United States, including Social Security solvency, the Medicare trust funds, and the implicit promise of low-cost government borrowing, has to be rebuilt around a higher baseline. That is a political project, not a monetary one.
NewsRescue’s read: the alarm is overstated in tone, understated in implication. The ‘doom loop’ will not snap shut tomorrow. But the assumption that the United States can grow its way out of an interest-cost spiral while simultaneously expanding entitlements, raising defense spending toward $1.5 trillion, and underwriting $665 billion in private-sector AI capex, is — to use ZeroHedge’s word — an illusion. The mathematical operation that has to be performed at some point is one of three: spending cuts, tax increases, or inflation that quietly reduces the real value of the debt. Each of those has political owners, none of whom are eager to claim it.




