Ah, February—a cruel month when snow chills the bones and tariffs pierce like icy needles. While Washington, with the subtlety of a ham-fisted puppeteer, slapped a 10% tariff on anything bearing the scent of ancient Chinese spices, the Celestial Empire laughed quietly… or rather, they bought more of Uncle Sam’s IOUs. According to the omniscient scribes of the Treasury International Capital (TIC) system, China found themselves clutching a delightful $784.3 billion in U.S. debt, a modest step up from their previous $760.8 billion. One might suspect the dear CCP is playing the long game, sipping tea smugly as tariffs escalate.
Meanwhile, Japan, that other poor soul caught in this tariff tornado, didn’t exactly throw their hands in despair. No, like a lesson learned from countless samurai tales, they too sneaked a bit more cash into the U.S. Treasury coffers. Lou Brien, a market strategist with a name that sounds like a villain’s henchman, opines this is all a grand act of self-preservation. Imagine the horror if China or Japan decided to offload those Treasuries—markets would scream, headlines would shriek, and economists would spill tea (not the Chinese kind).
So here we are: the trade war heats up, but the bond-buying party only gets louder. It’s like saying, “I’ll punch you in the face, but here—take some money first.” Isn’t international relations just a delicious farce? 🎭
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2025-04-19 08:57