This is the Weekend Edition of Bloomberg Opinion Today, a roundup of the most popular stories Bloomberg Opinion publishes each week based on web readership. New subscribers can sign up here; follow us on Bluesky, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn and Threads. The US Treasury is considering making a bet on the future of interest rates, potentially breaking a long tradition of market neutrality in the hopes of reducing America’s large and rising debt-service costs. It’s a risky proposition that could end up costing taxpayers dearly. The US most definitely has a debt problem. In January, the Congressional Budget Office forecast that chronic federal deficits would add almost $22 trillion to America’s sovereign obligations over the next decade, pushing net interest payments to 4.1% of gross domestic product in 2035, from 3.2% in 2025. Since then, the outlook has worsened: Interest rates are higher than what the CBO assumed, and the Big Beautiful Budget Bill is expected to increase the 10-year deficit further, by more than $3 trillion. The obvious solution: Spend less, increase tax revenue or both. Unfortunately, that isn’t happening. So the Trump administration is searching for other solutions. Even congressional legislation on stablecoins might play a role by requiring dollar-denominated digital tokens to be fully backed by Treasury securities — potentially creating an added source of demand for short-term US government debt. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has advocated a different approach: shifting issuance of government debt toward short-term bills.
Read the whole thing. Epstein Conspiracies Split Trump, Musk and the MAGAsphere — Timothy L. O’Brien US Tariffs at 30%? C’mon, Europe ... Do Something — Lionel Laurent Goldman’s Big Hedge Fund Bet Was Perfectly Timed — Paul J. Davies Bomb Moscow? Trump Surely Couldn’t Be That Reckless — Marc Champion America’s Anti-Immigrant Fever Is Starting to Break — Patricia Lopez Copper Tariffs Won’t Bring Back US Manufacturing — Matthew Yglesias Putin Finally Got Under Trump’s Skin — Andreas Kluth Mexico Is Facing a Second — and Worse — ‘China Shock’ — Shannon O’Neil Meta’s Days of Giving Away AI for Free Are Numbered — Parmy Olson More From Bloomberg Opinion | Want to test your knowledge of the week? Try out Bloomberg News’ Pointed quiz, a first-of-its-kind trivia game that allows you to place bets on your own smarts. |