Wall Street Truthbombs Podcast
Welcome to the Wall Street Truthbombs channel where we cover financial news, break down the markets, and deliver hard-hitting analysis with no corporate spin. We break down complex Wall Street stories and economic developments in a way that’s clear, direct, and unfiltered — so our audience gets the truth, not the talking points.
Wall Street Truthbombs is led by its host and creator, Mark Malek, a fearless financial commentator known for cutting through media noise, and delivering bold insights on what’s really happening in the markets. With a fast-growing audience of viewers tired of watered-down finance news, brings honesty, urgency, and edge to every episode.
Wall Street Truthbombs Podcast
The U.S. Debt CRISIS EXPLODED...DATA INDICATES NO RETURN
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America is heading toward a $2 trillion federal deficit, but that's not the real story. The real danger is the government's exploding interest bill, now approaching $1 trillion per year. As debt continues climbing and Treasury issuance accelerates, investors are beginning to ask whether the bond market can continue absorbing America's borrowing without demanding significantly higher yields.
In today's Wall Street Truthbomb, Mark Malek explains why the bond market—not Washington—is setting the rules, why mortgage rates, stock valuations, and your retirement portfolio all depend on Treasury demand, and the three indicators every investor should be watching before the next major market move.
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The United States government is spending $88 billion a month just to pay interest on its own debt. Not defense, not Medicare, not Social Security, not roads or bridges or any of the things governments are supposed to spend money on. Just the interest bill. Let that land for a second. $88 billion a month. That's $2.88 billion every single day. That clock does not stop when markets are closed. It doesn't stop on weekends. It doesn't stop during recessions. It just runs. By the end of this video, you're going to understand exactly why the $2 trillion deficit is not just a political talking point, it's a structural market risk that is already affecting your mortgage rate, your bond portfolio, and your 401k, whether you're paying attention to it or not. And you're going to understand what to actually watch because the media is covering the wrong number. Okay, the headline is this the United States is on track to run a $2 trillion deficit in fiscal year 2026. The CBO says $1.9 trillion. The White House projects $2.1 trillion. And bond market participation participants are splitting the difference at roughly $2 trillion. Whatever the final number is, it is going to rank among the largest deficits in American history, my friends. The national debt stands at $39.2 trillion as of June 2026, and it grew by $2.99 trillion in the last 12 months alone. The first eight months of this fiscal year, that's October through May, already added $1.2 trillion to the deficit. And we're not done yet. I want to give you both sides of this debate. The pro-spending argument isn't stupid. This is investment in infrastructure and defense in a period of geopolitical competition with China, where falling behind is more expensive than borrowing. There are serious economists who make this case, and that their cases actually sound pretty good if you heard them. And they're not wrong that there are things worth borrowing for. The deficit hawk argument, though, is also not stupid. Compound interest doesn't care about your rationale. The math, it's just math, does not care who is in office or what they were trying to accomplish. The interest compounds, whether the spending was wise or even if it was wasteful. But here's the thing: I'm not interested in the politics. Both sides of this argument are focusing on the wrong number. The right number tells a completely different story. Here's where I want to slow down. Because when I talk about the deficit, people hear a political argument. I'm not interested in politics. You know, here we do policy, not politics. I'm interested in what this does to your money. And the number that tells the story is not the deficit, it's the interest bill. Before I get into it further, if you like this type of content, please click like and don't forget to subscribe. It's important to be in the know, and this is how you do it. Okay. In fiscal year 2026, the United States will pay approximately $1.039 trillion in net interest on the national debt. That's not a projection. The CBO has confirmed it. That works out to $88 billion per month, $2.88 billion per day. Every single day, whether markets are open or closed, whether it's a recession or a boom, the interest clock just keeps running. Net interest is now the third largest line item in the federal budget. It's bigger than defense. It's behind only Social Security and Medicare, net of receipts. By 2028, it overtakes Medicare. Let that register. The single fastest growing line item in the federal budget is not some new program, uh program Congress voted for. It's the cumulative cost of every dollar we have borrowed and not paid back. The average interest rate on marketable federal debt is 3.39% as of June 2026. That sounds low, but apply it to $39.2 trillion, and you get a number that makes your eyes water. And here's the crucial point that rate is locked in on debt that's already been issued. As old low rate, as the older low rate debt matures and is now replaced by newer debt at current rates, the average cost goes up. Even if the Fed cuts, even if yields fall, the legacy debt just rolls over, the interest bill just keeps growing. Now, here's the shadow data. You know I love the shadow data. This is the stuff that nobody's covering right now. Over the next decade, the CBO projects $16.2 trillion in interest payments alone. Not debt, just the interest. And it grows every year from $1 trillion in 26 to $2.1 trillion by 2036. That means in 10 years, the United States will be paying more in annual interest than the entire current federal discretionary budget, twice over. Meanwhile, debt held by the public is already at 101% of GDP. The record was 106%, 106% right after World War II. Obviously different times. We're going to blow past that now. By 2036, CBO projects 120%. We will hold the record. And unlike after World War II, where a booming post-war economy grew us out of it, there is no obvious growth catalyst on the horizon that gets us out from under this without either higher taxes, deep spending cuts, or higher inflation that erodes the debt in real terms. None of those outcomes are painless. Now, here's the other number that the media buried. The statutory debt ceiling is 41.4 trillion. The national debt is now 39.2 trillion. The math just puts a collision, just puts a collision with that ceiling somewhere around November 2026, right in the middle of guess what? Election season. Right when the bond market will be watching every vote on the floor of the Senate. Debt ceiling standoffs historically create short-term volatility in treasury markets. And this one lands at the worst possible moment. And connected to this week's data, June's jobs report showed only 57,000 payrolls from last Friday. It's less than half the 115,000 expected. It's the lowest since March 2021. The Fed under WARSH wants to hold rates higher. You know that. But a softening labor market with $2 trillion deficit creates a trap. Raise rates and crush the jobs recovery. Hold rates and let fiscal excess inflate its way through the bond market. There is no clean exit here. Look, I've been watching the bond market my entire career, and I've been around for a minute. And I want to tell you something directly. The bond market has been the quiet buyer of the American debt for a long time. It's absorbed an enormous amount, but every buyer has a price. And the question is not whether the bond market will eventually push back. The question is exactly when. This is not abstract. Here is how it hits you direct. The 30-year treasury yield is not set by the Fed. It's set by the bond market, by every buyer of long-dated US government debt around the world, pricing in the risk that they're taking on. When deficit spending forces Treasury to issue more bonds to fund the gap, supply goes up. When supply goes up without a corresponding increase in demand, yields rise, right? Bond prices go up, yields go down. When 30-year mortgages rise, mortgage rates rise as well. Corporate borrowing costs also rise. The discount rate on future earnings also rises, which means equity valuations, well, they can compress, particularly in rate-sensitive sectors like real estate, utilities, and now tech, everyone's favorite. Your 401k is not insulated from this. Every target date fund, every bond sleeve, every balanced portfolio in America is implicitly making a bet that bond markets keep buying U.S. treasuries at prices that do not break the system. That bet has been right for 40 years. The question serious investors need to ask right now is this what's the price of being wrong? What should you actually watch? Well, three things. First, tenure treasury yields. If it starts moving above 5% on fiscal concerns rather than Fed expectations, that is the signal. Not the Fed meeting, not the jobs report, the yield curve itself, moving for reasons that are not about the business cycle. Second, Treasury auction bid-to-cover ratios. These measure how many buyers show up for each dollar of debt the government sells. When bid-to-cover ratios fall, well, that tells us that demand is weakening. Treasury has to raise yields to attract buyers. That's the bond market pushing back in slow motion. And most retail investors will never see it coming because nobody covers it. And third, any foreign central bank selling of U.S. treasuries, that's a real important one. Japan and China together hold roughly $2 trillion in U.S. government debt. If either of them starts reducing holdings in size, that is the bond market pushing back in real time. That's the signal that the dynamic has changed. And that's the signal that will certainly move your portfolio before the anchors on TV get around to explaining it. So your truth bond for today is this: the $2 trillion deficit is not the risk. The $1 trillion interest bill growing to $2 trillion by 2036 is. And the bond market has been absorbing it quietly for so long that most investors have forgotten what happens when it stops. Join me every day for Wall Street Truth Bombs, where I drop them right here for the market. Figures them out.