Author: arndxt Compiled by AididiaoJP, Foresight News 2025 is a turning point in the economic cycle. The market is caught in a paradox. Beneath the surface calm of soft landing optimism, the global economy is quietly fracturing, unfolding along the lines of trade policy, credit expansion and technological overextension. The next dislocation in the global economy will not arise from a single failure—neither from tariffs nor from AI debt—but from feedback loops between policies, leverage, and beliefs. We are witnessing the late stages of a supercycle, in which technology underpins growth, fiscal populism replaces trade liberalism, and trust in currency is slowly eroding. The boom is not over yet, but it has begun to break. This week's fluctuations are small but significant. The Volatility Index experienced its biggest surge since April as concerns about US-China tariffs reignited, before retreating before the weekend following President Trump's confirmation that the proposed 100% import tariffs would be "unsustainable." Equity markets breathed a sigh of relief; the S&P 500 stabilized. However, this relief was superficial; the deeper narrative was one of exhausted policy tools and overstretched optimism. The illusion of stability The July US-EU trade agreement was intended to anchor a fragile system. Yet it is now unravelling amidst the climate regulation controversy and US protectionism. Washington’s demand for US companies to be exempted from ESG and carbon disclosure rules highlights a growing ideological divide: decarbonisation in Europe versus deregulation in the US. Meanwhile, new Chinese restrictions on rare earth exports, including a ban on magnets containing trace amounts of the metal from China, exposed strategic vulnerabilities in global supply chains. The US responded by threatening to impose a 100% tariff on Chinese imports, a political gesture with global consequences. Although the threat was later withdrawn, it served as a reminder to markets that trade has become weaponized finance, leveraging domestic sentiment rather than economic rationality. The World Trade Organization’s warning of a sharp slowdown in goods trade by 2026 reflects a reality: companies are no longer investing in supply chains with confidence but with contingency plans. AI Super Cycle Meanwhile, in the AI economy, a second narrative is unfolding that is more subtle but potentially more consequential. We are crossing from productive expansion to speculative finance, where "supplier financing is surging and coverage is thinning." Hyperscale companies are now leveraging their balance sheets faster than their revenues can justify, a classic sign of late-cycle exuberance. This is nothing new. Of the 21 major investment booms since 1790, 18 have ended in collapse, usually when the quality of financing deteriorated. Today's AI capital spending frenzy resembles the telecom bubble of the late 1990s: real infrastructure gains entangled with credit-fueled speculation. Special purpose vehicles, vendor financing, and structured debt—the tools that once inflated mortgage-backed securities—are making a comeback, this time disguised as "computing power" and "GPU liquidity." The irony? The AI boom is productive, just unevenly distributed. Microsoft financed its expansion with traditional bonds, a sign of confidence. CoreWeave, through a special purpose vehicle, a sign of stress. Both are expanding, but one is building enduring capabilities; the other is building fragility. Fluctuating symptoms The surge in the VIX reflects deeper market unease: policy uncertainty, concentrated equity leadership, and credit stress beneath a veneer of booming valuations. When the Fed now signals rate cuts amid slowing growth, it's not stimulus, it's risk management. The two-year Treasury yield, which has fallen to its lowest level since 2022, tells us that investors are pricing in a deflation of confidence, not just interest rates. Markets may still cheer every dovish turn, but every rate cut undermines the illusion that growth is self-sustaining. General: Trade, Technology and Trust The connecting thread between tariff politics and the excitement over AI is trust, or more precisely, the erosion of trust. The government no longer trusts its trading partners. Investors no longer trust policy consistency. Companies no longer trust demand signals, so they overbuild. Gold's breakout above $4,000 isn't so much about inflation as it is about the erosion of faith in the fiat currency system, in globalization, and in institutional coordination. It's a hedge, not against price inflation, but against policy entropy. The Road Ahead We are entering a “fractured boom”: a period of nominal growth and market highs juxtaposed with structural vulnerabilities: AI investments will drive GDP in the same way that railroads did in the 19th century. Trade protectionism stimulates local production while draining global liquidity. Financial volatility oscillates between euphoria and policy panic. At this stage, risks are cumulative. Every tariff rollback, every capital spending announcement, every rate cut prolongs the cycle but compresses its eventual collapse. The question is not whether the AI or trade bubble will burst, but how intertwined the two have become when they do.Author: arndxt Compiled by AididiaoJP, Foresight News 2025 is a turning point in the economic cycle. The market is caught in a paradox. Beneath the surface calm of soft landing optimism, the global economy is quietly fracturing, unfolding along the lines of trade policy, credit expansion and technological overextension. The next dislocation in the global economy will not arise from a single failure—neither from tariffs nor from AI debt—but from feedback loops between policies, leverage, and beliefs. We are witnessing the late stages of a supercycle, in which technology underpins growth, fiscal populism replaces trade liberalism, and trust in currency is slowly eroding. The boom is not over yet, but it has begun to break. This week's fluctuations are small but significant. The Volatility Index experienced its biggest surge since April as concerns about US-China tariffs reignited, before retreating before the weekend following President Trump's confirmation that the proposed 100% import tariffs would be "unsustainable." Equity markets breathed a sigh of relief; the S&P 500 stabilized. However, this relief was superficial; the deeper narrative was one of exhausted policy tools and overstretched optimism. The illusion of stability The July US-EU trade agreement was intended to anchor a fragile system. Yet it is now unravelling amidst the climate regulation controversy and US protectionism. Washington’s demand for US companies to be exempted from ESG and carbon disclosure rules highlights a growing ideological divide: decarbonisation in Europe versus deregulation in the US. Meanwhile, new Chinese restrictions on rare earth exports, including a ban on magnets containing trace amounts of the metal from China, exposed strategic vulnerabilities in global supply chains. The US responded by threatening to impose a 100% tariff on Chinese imports, a political gesture with global consequences. Although the threat was later withdrawn, it served as a reminder to markets that trade has become weaponized finance, leveraging domestic sentiment rather than economic rationality. The World Trade Organization’s warning of a sharp slowdown in goods trade by 2026 reflects a reality: companies are no longer investing in supply chains with confidence but with contingency plans. AI Super Cycle Meanwhile, in the AI economy, a second narrative is unfolding that is more subtle but potentially more consequential. We are crossing from productive expansion to speculative finance, where "supplier financing is surging and coverage is thinning." Hyperscale companies are now leveraging their balance sheets faster than their revenues can justify, a classic sign of late-cycle exuberance. This is nothing new. Of the 21 major investment booms since 1790, 18 have ended in collapse, usually when the quality of financing deteriorated. Today's AI capital spending frenzy resembles the telecom bubble of the late 1990s: real infrastructure gains entangled with credit-fueled speculation. Special purpose vehicles, vendor financing, and structured debt—the tools that once inflated mortgage-backed securities—are making a comeback, this time disguised as "computing power" and "GPU liquidity." The irony? The AI boom is productive, just unevenly distributed. Microsoft financed its expansion with traditional bonds, a sign of confidence. CoreWeave, through a special purpose vehicle, a sign of stress. Both are expanding, but one is building enduring capabilities; the other is building fragility. Fluctuating symptoms The surge in the VIX reflects deeper market unease: policy uncertainty, concentrated equity leadership, and credit stress beneath a veneer of booming valuations. When the Fed now signals rate cuts amid slowing growth, it's not stimulus, it's risk management. The two-year Treasury yield, which has fallen to its lowest level since 2022, tells us that investors are pricing in a deflation of confidence, not just interest rates. Markets may still cheer every dovish turn, but every rate cut undermines the illusion that growth is self-sustaining. General: Trade, Technology and Trust The connecting thread between tariff politics and the excitement over AI is trust, or more precisely, the erosion of trust. The government no longer trusts its trading partners. Investors no longer trust policy consistency. Companies no longer trust demand signals, so they overbuild. Gold's breakout above $4,000 isn't so much about inflation as it is about the erosion of faith in the fiat currency system, in globalization, and in institutional coordination. It's a hedge, not against price inflation, but against policy entropy. The Road Ahead We are entering a “fractured boom”: a period of nominal growth and market highs juxtaposed with structural vulnerabilities: AI investments will drive GDP in the same way that railroads did in the 19th century. Trade protectionism stimulates local production while draining global liquidity. Financial volatility oscillates between euphoria and policy panic. At this stage, risks are cumulative. Every tariff rollback, every capital spending announcement, every rate cut prolongs the cycle but compresses its eventual collapse. The question is not whether the AI or trade bubble will burst, but how intertwined the two have become when they do.

Macro Dilemma: Trade War, AI Bubble, and Political Rifts

2025/10/22 09:00
4 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

Author: arndxt

Compiled by AididiaoJP, Foresight News

2025 is a turning point in the economic cycle.

The market is caught in a paradox.

Beneath the surface calm of soft landing optimism, the global economy is quietly fracturing, unfolding along the lines of trade policy, credit expansion and technological overextension.

The next dislocation in the global economy will not arise from a single failure—neither from tariffs nor from AI debt—but from feedback loops between policies, leverage, and beliefs.

We are witnessing the late stages of a supercycle, in which technology underpins growth, fiscal populism replaces trade liberalism, and trust in currency is slowly eroding.

The boom is not over yet, but it has begun to break.

This week's fluctuations are small but significant.

The Volatility Index experienced its biggest surge since April as concerns about US-China tariffs reignited, before retreating before the weekend following President Trump's confirmation that the proposed 100% import tariffs would be "unsustainable." Equity markets breathed a sigh of relief; the S&P 500 stabilized. However, this relief was superficial; the deeper narrative was one of exhausted policy tools and overstretched optimism.

The illusion of stability

The July US-EU trade agreement was intended to anchor a fragile system.

Yet it is now unravelling amidst the climate regulation controversy and US protectionism. Washington’s demand for US companies to be exempted from ESG and carbon disclosure rules highlights a growing ideological divide: decarbonisation in Europe versus deregulation in the US.

Meanwhile, new Chinese restrictions on rare earth exports, including a ban on magnets containing trace amounts of the metal from China, exposed strategic vulnerabilities in global supply chains. The US responded by threatening to impose a 100% tariff on Chinese imports, a political gesture with global consequences. Although the threat was later withdrawn, it served as a reminder to markets that trade has become weaponized finance, leveraging domestic sentiment rather than economic rationality.

The World Trade Organization’s warning of a sharp slowdown in goods trade by 2026 reflects a reality: companies are no longer investing in supply chains with confidence but with contingency plans.

AI Super Cycle

Meanwhile, in the AI economy, a second narrative is unfolding that is more subtle but potentially more consequential.

We are crossing from productive expansion to speculative finance, where "supplier financing is surging and coverage is thinning." Hyperscale companies are now leveraging their balance sheets faster than their revenues can justify, a classic sign of late-cycle exuberance.

This is nothing new. Of the 21 major investment booms since 1790, 18 have ended in collapse, usually when the quality of financing deteriorated. Today's AI capital spending frenzy resembles the telecom bubble of the late 1990s: real infrastructure gains entangled with credit-fueled speculation. Special purpose vehicles, vendor financing, and structured debt—the tools that once inflated mortgage-backed securities—are making a comeback, this time disguised as "computing power" and "GPU liquidity."

The irony? The AI boom is productive, just unevenly distributed. Microsoft financed its expansion with traditional bonds, a sign of confidence. CoreWeave, through a special purpose vehicle, a sign of stress. Both are expanding, but one is building enduring capabilities; the other is building fragility.

Fluctuating symptoms

The surge in the VIX reflects deeper market unease: policy uncertainty, concentrated equity leadership, and credit stress beneath a veneer of booming valuations.

When the Fed now signals rate cuts amid slowing growth, it's not stimulus, it's risk management. The two-year Treasury yield, which has fallen to its lowest level since 2022, tells us that investors are pricing in a deflation of confidence, not just interest rates. Markets may still cheer every dovish turn, but every rate cut undermines the illusion that growth is self-sustaining.

General: Trade, Technology and Trust

The connecting thread between tariff politics and the excitement over AI is trust, or more precisely, the erosion of trust.

The government no longer trusts its trading partners.

Investors no longer trust policy consistency.

Companies no longer trust demand signals, so they overbuild.

Gold's breakout above $4,000 isn't so much about inflation as it is about the erosion of faith in the fiat currency system, in globalization, and in institutional coordination. It's a hedge, not against price inflation, but against policy entropy.

The Road Ahead

We are entering a “fractured boom”: a period of nominal growth and market highs juxtaposed with structural vulnerabilities:

AI investments will drive GDP in the same way that railroads did in the 19th century.

Trade protectionism stimulates local production while draining global liquidity.

Financial volatility oscillates between euphoria and policy panic.

At this stage, risks are cumulative.

Every tariff rollback, every capital spending announcement, every rate cut prolongs the cycle but compresses its eventual collapse. The question is not whether the AI or trade bubble will burst, but how intertwined the two have become when they do.

Market Opportunity
Polytrade Logo
Polytrade Price(TRADE)
$0,03859
$0,03859$0,03859
-1,58%
USD
Polytrade (TRADE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

MoneyGram launches stablecoin-powered app in Colombia

MoneyGram launches stablecoin-powered app in Colombia

The post MoneyGram launches stablecoin-powered app in Colombia appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. MoneyGram has launched a new mobile application in Colombia that uses USD-pegged stablecoins to modernize cross-border remittances. According to an announcement on Wednesday, the app allows customers to receive money instantly into a US dollar balance backed by Circle’s USDC stablecoin, which can be stored, spent, or cashed out through MoneyGram’s global retail network. The rollout is designed to address the volatility of local currencies, particularly the Colombian peso. Built on the Stellar blockchain and supported by wallet infrastructure provider Crossmint, the app marks MoneyGram’s most significant move yet to integrate stablecoins into consumer-facing services. Colombia was selected as the first market due to its heavy reliance on inbound remittances—families in the country receive more than 22 times the amount they send abroad, according to Statista. The announcement said future expansions will target other remittance-heavy markets. MoneyGram, which has nearly 500,000 retail locations globally, has experimented with blockchain rails since partnering with the Stellar Development Foundation in 2021. It has since built cash on and off ramps for stablecoins, developed APIs for crypto integration, and incorporated stablecoins into its internal settlement processes. “This launch is the first step toward a world where every person, everywhere, has access to dollar stablecoins,” CEO Anthony Soohoo stated. The company emphasized compliance, citing decades of regulatory experience, though stablecoin oversight remains fluid. The US Congress passed the GENIUS Act earlier this year, establishing a framework for stablecoin regulation, which MoneyGram has pointed to as providing clearer guardrails. This is a developing story. This article was generated with the assistance of AI and reviewed by editor Jeffrey Albus before publication. Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters: Source: https://blockworks.co/news/moneygram-stablecoin-app-colombia
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:04
Ripple share buyback program values the firm at $50 billion

Ripple share buyback program values the firm at $50 billion

The post Ripple share buyback program values the firm at $50 billion appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ripple, the blockchain company closely associated with
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/12 12:44
The Smarter Web Company boosts Bitcoin holdings to 346 BTC after doubling fundraising target

The Smarter Web Company boosts Bitcoin holdings to 346 BTC after doubling fundraising target

The Smarter Web Company has expanded its BTC treasury to over 346 coins, following a a highly successful fundraise that brought in nearly double its initial target. On June 19, London-listed technology firm The Smarter Web Company announced that it had…
Share
Crypto.news2025/06/19 16:28