
Alpha Exchange The Shock Heard ‘Round the World: US Government Bonds
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Mar 31, 2026 The conversation questions whether US government bonds still act as a safe insurance asset when the US itself may be a growing source of risk. It covers how AI and fast tech shifts, fractured consensus, and liquidity strains can trigger violent repricings. Geopolitical tensions, polarized institutions, trade leverage, and fiscal stress are explored as forces that could reshape global reserve behavior and bond demand.
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U.S. Politics Now Generates Market Risk
- U.S. political dysfunction is becoming a material source of market risk rather than just absorbing external shocks.
- Dean Curnutt links rapid tech shifts, geopolitical engagement, and fractious politics to a new, compound risk environment for asset prices.
Treat Liquidity Risk As Real And Costly
- Don't underprice liquidity risk; maintain allocations that can meet redemption stress during fast repricings.
- Curnutt recalls gated private funds and past crises like LTCM and the GFC to show liquidity mismatch dangers.
Treasuries Losing Their Insurance Feature
- The Treasury market's historical insurance role is weakening when U.S. policy and politics themselves create shocks.
- Examples include Treasury sell-offs during risk spikes like the tariff tantrum and the 2025 Iran-related moves.
