Global creditors in action: The US sell-off is just the beginning
Latest international capital flow data shows that the scale of US debt held by a superpower has fallen to $7.57 trillion, the lowest level in nearly sixteen years. To put this in perspective, during the peak in 2011, this number exceeded $1.3 trillion — in just over a decade, holdings have been halved.
This is not an isolated incident but a long-term signal. Since 2011, this major creditor has been steadily reducing its US debt holdings while significantly increasing its holdings of hard assets like gold. As of November 2025, its official gold reserves have increased to 74.12 million ounces. The logic behind this is clear: optimize foreign exchange reserve structure and reduce exposure to a single asset. Deeper considerations include vigilance against US use of financial hegemony to freeze foreign assets and concerns over the long-term stability of the dollar system.
The US debt dilemma has become an obvious problem. The federal debt has surpassed $37 trillion, accounting for over 123% of GDP. A recently proposed fiscal bill has been described by lawmakers as a "ticking debt bomb" because it will add trillions of dollars to deficits over the next decade. In a high-interest-rate environment, annual debt interest payments have become one of the government’s largest fiscal burdens.
The Federal Reserve’s operations are becoming increasingly complex. After halting quantitative tightening, a new "Reserve Management Purchase" (RMP) operation was launched in 2026 to maintain market liquidity. The market generally perceives this as a form of easing, even suspected of monetizing to cover government deficits, which directly undermines the independence of the central bank. This "borrowing from Peter to pay Paul" approach is gradually eroding global confidence in the dollar.
A silent reorganization of the financial order is underway. From Washington’s debt negotiation rooms to the vaults of central banks around the world, signals are hard to ignore: when the largest creditor begins to withdraw from dollar assets, how long can the dollar-based system built on debt last?
What is your judgment — who will be the next major central bank to turn away from dollar assets?
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LiquidityNinja
· 01-21 06:21
The halving of US debt, this is no joke
Now gold is piling up wildly, how long can the dollar hold up...
Let's wait and see who will follow suit and sell off US debt next, it should be very interesting
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LidoStakeAddict
· 01-21 06:02
Not speaking out is uncomfortable. Is the dollar really about to collapse this time? Gold reserves increased by 74 million ounces. Is this guy serious about playing?
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SchrodingersFOMO
· 01-20 05:14
Gold is rising, US bonds are falling, I buy into this logic
Speaking of which, the central banks' recent moves are really aggressive, it feels like they are reducing the dollar system
How many more years can the dollar hold up? I bet on a bowl of wonton soup
I heard last year that some countries were stockpiling gold, and now it seems it's not just a signal, it's a declaration
Let's wait and see who will be the next to turn around, it seems Europe is also starting to get restless
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potentially_notable
· 01-19 13:21
U.S. debt halved, gold surges wildly. This rhythm feels off; it seems the dollar is about to have a problem.
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GweiWatcher
· 01-18 06:51
The US dollar show is about to end, and the central bankers have a clear view... Gold is the eternal faith.
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MultiSigFailMaster
· 01-18 06:46
The US dollar system is indeed a bit shaky this time, but I think the question is a bit premature... Who will be next? The Bank of Japan? The European Central Bank? It all depends on who can hold on first.
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SolidityStruggler
· 01-18 06:45
U.S. debt halved, gold stocks piling up—who exactly is getting weeded out in this wave?
View OriginalReply0
SelfCustodyBro
· 01-18 06:34
U.S. debt halved, gold surges—what's going on... Is the dollar really about to decline?
View OriginalReply0
AltcoinMarathoner
· 01-18 06:23
ngl, if we're really in mile 20 of this macro marathon... the de-dollarization play just hit different. been accumulating this thesis since 2021, these pullbacks in usd dominance are just water stations fr
$AXS $DASH $PEPE
Global creditors in action: The US sell-off is just the beginning
Latest international capital flow data shows that the scale of US debt held by a superpower has fallen to $7.57 trillion, the lowest level in nearly sixteen years. To put this in perspective, during the peak in 2011, this number exceeded $1.3 trillion — in just over a decade, holdings have been halved.
This is not an isolated incident but a long-term signal. Since 2011, this major creditor has been steadily reducing its US debt holdings while significantly increasing its holdings of hard assets like gold. As of November 2025, its official gold reserves have increased to 74.12 million ounces. The logic behind this is clear: optimize foreign exchange reserve structure and reduce exposure to a single asset. Deeper considerations include vigilance against US use of financial hegemony to freeze foreign assets and concerns over the long-term stability of the dollar system.
The US debt dilemma has become an obvious problem. The federal debt has surpassed $37 trillion, accounting for over 123% of GDP. A recently proposed fiscal bill has been described by lawmakers as a "ticking debt bomb" because it will add trillions of dollars to deficits over the next decade. In a high-interest-rate environment, annual debt interest payments have become one of the government’s largest fiscal burdens.
The Federal Reserve’s operations are becoming increasingly complex. After halting quantitative tightening, a new "Reserve Management Purchase" (RMP) operation was launched in 2026 to maintain market liquidity. The market generally perceives this as a form of easing, even suspected of monetizing to cover government deficits, which directly undermines the independence of the central bank. This "borrowing from Peter to pay Paul" approach is gradually eroding global confidence in the dollar.
A silent reorganization of the financial order is underway. From Washington’s debt negotiation rooms to the vaults of central banks around the world, signals are hard to ignore: when the largest creditor begins to withdraw from dollar assets, how long can the dollar-based system built on debt last?
What is your judgment — who will be the next major central bank to turn away from dollar assets?