The Fix is In
Wall Street made billions in profit by lending too much money to far too many people who couldn’t pay it back. Then, when the chickens came home to roost, the voters took the losses.
Tuesday, February 03rd, 2026
Bill Bonner, from Rancho Santana, Nicaragua
The question from yesterday remains an unsolved mystery. Why would a dovey “Low Interest Rates” Trump appoint a supposed ‘hawk’ to lead the Fed?
This leads, of course, to follow-on questions: is he trying to lose the mid-terms...has he lost his mind...or our favorite, is the fix in?
Passing judgement before listening to the arguments, our so-far- unchallenged hypothesis is that Mr. Trump has an historical mission of which he is unaware. It is to wreck the empire. That mission will be best served by giving the big donors what they want – more money and more war. Debt and inflation will rot the empire from the inside. Alienating friends and unnecessary wars will topple it from the outside.
In that light...
Youngish. Good looking-ish. Harvard. Wall Street. Rich. Warsh seems like the perfect person to lead the Fed to catastrophe.
But let’s look more closely to see if he’s really the man for the job.
Warsh was on the Fed board previously. As a former Morgan Stanley banker, he was ‘Bernanke’s bridge to Wall Street’ during the 2008 mortgage finance crisis. An insider, he was able to work with Bernanke to make sure Wall Street’s mistakes were suffered by someone else.
You’ll recall that during the great real estate bubble of 2003-2007 — caused by the Fed’s recklessly low rates — Wall Street made billions in profit by lending too much money to far too many people who couldn’t pay it back. Then, when the chickens came home to roost, the great and the good figured out how to make the dumb cluck voters take the losses.
Remember TARP? The feds took $700 billion of taxpayers’ money and gave it to Wall Street, essentially transferring the big banks’ bad bets onto the public. Bernanke shamelessly told a credulous Congress that ‘we won’t even have an economy,’ unless the legislation were passed. The Fed did its part too, cutting its key rate down to a nub, which caused another huge credit-financed bubble.
Rather than correct the problem, in other words, Warsh, Paulson, Bernanke et al made it worse. And now Warsh will slip into the shoes previously worn by the scalawag Greenspan and the rascal Bernanke and will come upon the same can, bigger and heavier than ever. Greenspan kicked it down the road in 2001 and Bernanke did the job in 2008. Now it’s Warsh’s turn.
Trump’s confrontational win/lose politics makes enemies. The last thing he wants is for those enemies to control key Congressional committees. They’d start looking into his business deals...his unconstitutional policies...and his use of federal police power to pester his opponents. They might even want to see the full Epstein files!
A credit boom is about the only thing that might juice the economy enough to keep Republicans in control of Congress. Warsh, most likely, has already made a deal; he will provide lower interest rates as soon as he is able.
And the next can-kicking session may be approaching fast. Japanese bond yields have risen to the highest levels in at least a quarter of a century. The bubble finance window — in which you could borrow yen at almost no carry cost...and use the money to speculate on stocks, cryptos, bonds...silver – seems to be closing. Japanese speculators are now being squeezed out of their positions, forcing them to sell speculative assets in order to repatriate the money into yen and pay their debts. Bloomberg:
Japan Bond Crash Unleashes $7 trillion Risk for Global Economy
The recent bond market turmoil in Japan has...pushed the 40-year yield to 4.24 percent, the first time any Japanese sovereign maturity has breached the 4 percent threshold in over three decades. This situation has not only affected Japan but has also reverberated across global financial systems, challenging decades of conventional wisdom about the world’s safest haven for low-cost funding.
Any day now could bring an avalanche of collapsing prices. And by the end of the year, the Democrats may be back in power in Congress...asking a lot of uncomfortable questions. Will Warsh stand tall and firm, like Paul Volcker, resisting both Congress and POTUS, leaving Fed policy unchanged? Remember, even Volcker couldn’t have done what he did without President Reagan’s support.
What we conclude from this is that no matter how the election goes, Mr. Warsh’s hawkish wings will be clipped. Maybe they already have been.
Regards,
Bill Bonner
Research Note, by Dan Denning
You know it’s getting serious for the ‘reindustrialization of America’ argument when Robert Frieland has the floor in the Oval Office to extol the virtues of the mining industry. Frieland, who’s been banging the table about copper for the last year and is a frequent guest at Rick Rule’s Natural Resource Symposium, was among those standing behind President Trump at a press conference. You couldn’t pick a better giant of the industry to make the case on the national stage.
The President, by the way, announced ‘Project Vault’, a $12 billion critical mineral stockpile designed to reduce US alliance on Chinese supply of certain metals and minerals deemed critical to national security. According to Bloomberg:
‘President Donald Trump is set to launch a strategic critical-minerals stockpile with $12 billion in seed money, a bid to insulate manufacturers from supply shocks as the US works to slash its reliance on Chinese rare earths and other metals.
‘The venture — dubbed Project Vault — is set to marry $1.67 billion in private capital with a $10 billion loan from the US Export-Import Bank to procure and store the minerals for automakers, tech firms and other manufacturers.
‘US rare-earths stocks jumped in premarket trading upon news of the administration’s plan, including USA Rare Earth Inc., Critical Metals Corp., United States Antimony Corp. and NioCorp Developments Ltd.’
Whether the US can actually reverse decades of supply chain decline in critical minerals and rare earths in just a few short years remains to be seen. In the meantime, we’ll be keeping an eye on the key stocks in the sector. Look for more in Investment Director Tom Dyson’s update tomorrow and mine on Friday (available to paying subscribers only).



So "Project Vault" is designed to do what, exactly. If it's to buy metals and sell them at market price, what's the advantage? Reducing supply chain worries? OK, so then we have to imagine that the Feds are better at managing supply chains than private business.
Do any of us believe that's true?
Or do they sell to businesses at a loss when prices go "too high?" Again, a limited command economy with the Feds picking winners and losers. Not my first choice.
Am I missing something here?
I'm curious Bill, I presume you do not believe Warsh when he speaks of the need to return the FED to its original mission with a much smaller and appropriately sized balance sheet? You know, get rid of the Greenspan put, reverse the financialization and normalize our markets and economy. If you take him for his word it sounds like he seeks a managed collapse rather than a chaotic and disorderly collapse. Never-the-less pain will be had. On another note, the Democrats have been after Trump for 10 years, aggressively I might add, if there was a there there wouldn't they have already taken him down... after all they know all about abuse of power, corruption and fraud, just like everyone else in DC. One cannot have an excess of cynicism when it comes to DC and our tricked up economy.