China’s recent directive to limit the purchase of U.S. Treasuries is more than a financial footnote—it’s a clear signal that the world's second-largest economy is actively decoupling from the U.S. dollar system.
As of November 2025, China holds approximately $682.6 billion in U.S. debt, ranking third behind Japan and the UK. But that number is shrinking. Chinese regulators quietly ordered banks to curb their U.S. bond holdings, marking a strategic shift in reserve management away from dollar-denominated assets.
What followed? The yuan surged to a 2023 high, trading at 6.91 per U.S. dollar—its strongest position since May 2023. This isn’t just a currency fluctuation. It’s economic warfare through reserve allocation.
Peter Schiff, a veteran economist, didn’t mince words:
“That will send consumer prices soaring.”
If China won’t buy our debt, who will? The likely answer: The Federal Reserve. But this path leads straight to monetized debt and inflation—a tried and failed recipe that destroys middle-class savings and purchasing power.
Senator Elizabeth Warren also warned of higher rates for car loans and mortgages if foreign demand for Treasuries collapses. She’s right—but she’s only scratching the surface.
We’re watching the early signs of a confidence crisis in the U.S. debt market. The Fed can either raise rates to attract buyers (crashing the economy), or print money to buy its own debt (crashing the dollar).
This move from China is not in isolation. It fits into a much broader BRICS strategy of de-dollarization—a deliberate, slow-motion pivot away from dollar-based systems like SWIFT, FedWire, and even U.S. Treasury markets.
China’s action follows similar moves by Danish pension fund AkademikerPension, which dumped U.S. Treasuries over concerns about America’s long-term creditworthiness.
“The US is basically not a good credit,” noted CIO Anders Schelde.
Let that sink in. Institutional money is fleeing U.S. debt—the same debt that underpins global dollar liquidity.
Foreign governments used to hold nearly 40% of U.S. debt in 2010. Today? That number has collapsed to around 15%. The trust is evaporating—and fast.
As trust in Treasuries declines and the digital yuan gains traction, the United States is moving rapidly toward programmable money, financial surveillance, and cashless compliance systems.
FedNow is already operational. CBDC pilot programs are expanding. Why? Because the government knows it must maintain control as the dollar loses its global grip.
If foreign demand for the dollar collapses and the public turns to alternative stores of value (like gold, Bitcoin, or even foreign currencies), the only option left is control—and that’s where CBDCs come in.
If you're holding dollars in a traditional bank account, a 401(k), or even in Treasury-heavy funds, you are exposed to the fallout from this geopolitical shift.
This isn’t about fear. It’s about awareness and action.
This article is your early warning—but awareness is just the first step.
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Your sovereignty is under siege. Prepare accordingly.
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