5 year bond auction fails. Its already happening.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/152523-u-s-5-year-bond-auction-effectively-fails
http://seekingalpha.com/article/152523-u-s-5-year-bond-auction-effectively-fails
Quote from poborsky:
5 year bond auction fails. Its already happening.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/152523-u-s-5-year-bond-auction-effectively-fails
Quote from ivanbaj:
Imagine you have the problem of managing $100,000,000,000. Where will you put them? In gold? Oil? Europe? Stocks?
US is the bank of choice. There are no other banks. Monopoly for years to come.
Quote from fhl:
The title of the thread is 'what if US is unable to sell treasuries?'.
The answer is 'we'd be <i>royally screwed</i>'. And no amount of sugar coating is going to get around that.
Quote from piezoe:
Essentially, that's what happened to Argentina. After many years of politically-motivated deficit spending, ridiculous military expenditures, and a costly and insane war (sound familiar?) with Great Britain in the Faulkllands that put the final icing on the debt cake, no one would step forward to buy their bonds. Even the Argentinian people would not buy them, and they had no choice but to print money. I saw a PBS program last night that claimed that they printed so much money that for a brief period they ran out of paper to print it on! Inflation was running at 100%/month.
Quote from piezoe:
Essentially, that's what happened to Argentina. After many years of politically-motivated deficit spending, ridiculous military expenditures, and a costly and insane war (sound familiar?) with Great Britain in the Faulkllands that put the final icing on the debt cake, no one would step forward to buy their bonds. Even the Argentinian people would not buy them, and they had no choice but to print money. I saw a PBS program last night that claimed that they printed so much money that for a brief period they ran out of paper to print it on! Inflation was running at 100%/month.

Quote from Specterx:
Make the interest rate high enough and they'll sell, if you could buy US govt debt yielding 6-7% right now, wouldn't you jump on it?
Of course, that would have dire consequences for the budget...