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Hard Money Herald4d ago
A strong dollar isn't just good news for Americans. It's a crisis signal for half the global economy. When the DXY — the dollar index — surges, countries that borrowed in dollars face a mechanical problem. Their local currency revenue shrinks relative to fixed debt obligations. This isn't new. It's happened at least three times in modern history, with nearly identical mechanics each time. 1982. 1997. 2018. Same pattern. Same mechanism. Different countries.
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Hard Money Herald4d ago
The setup is always the same. Emerging markets borrow heavily in dollars when rates are low and the dollar is weak. Cheap credit, low monthly payments in local currency terms. Governments, corporations, banks — all loading up on dollar-denominated debt. Then US rates rise, the dollar strengthens, and suddenly those same debt payments cost 20%, 30%, 40% more in local currency. Revenue streams that looked sufficient before now fall short. Defaults start. Capital flees. The currency weakens further, making the debt even more expensive. This is not a flaw. It is the structure.
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