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I'm Sorry, But The Fed Has Run Out Of Road
There is no painless option left. It's deflationary depression or crippling inflation.
BY QUOTH THE RAVEN | March 29, 2026
There is a special kind of denial that only financial markets can sustain. It is the quiet insistence that everything is fine because the S&P is only down about 10%, as if that number alone captures the health of an entire financial system. It is the belief that until equities are in full free fall, nothing truly serious can be happening underneath.
But as we know, underneath, things are already starting to break.
That is the part people are not fully appreciating. If a modest correction is enough to expose fragility in private credit that is already spilling over to counterparties and sectors like real estate, what exactly happens when there is a real downturn, the kind that actually forces price discovery instead of delaying it?
It does not stop at private credit. Private credit flows into private equity, which depends on leverage to generate returns. Private equity flows into commercial real estate, which is already dealing with structural problems that have nothing to do with interest rates and everything to do with demand. Commercial real estate flows into regional banks, which hold the debt and rely on valuations that have not fully adjusted.
It is a chain reaction waiting for a trigger. We knew this heading into 2026.
At the same time, inflation has refused to cooperate with the Federal Reserve's plan. U.S. CPI is holding at 2.4% year over year as of February 2026, and core inflation is at 2.5%. That is not an emergency level, but it is also not the 2% target the Fed has spent years insisting is non negotiable.
Central banking is not about being approximately correct. It is about maintaining credibility, and credibility does not come from saying close enough.
So the Fed is staring at a system where financial stress is building and inflation is still above target, as I've been writing they would face for years now. That combination removes the easy answers, and all of a sudden the Fed runs out of road.
The next phase of this cycle is almost certainly deleveraging. Not the slow and orderly kind that policymakers like to describe in speeches, but the forced kind. The kind where lenders pull back, refinancing becomes difficult, and assets that were priced for perfection suddenly have to reflect reality. When that process begins in earnest, it tends to accelerate because falling prices create more pressure, which creates more selling, which creates more falling prices. Then, like we are seeing in private credit, psychology eventually breaks and the blame game starts. Who could have seen this coming?
Once that process starts, there are only two broad paths.
The first path is to let it happen. Credit contracts, defaults rise, asset prices fall, and the system works through its excesses the old fashioned way. The problem is that the amount of leverage in the system today is enormous, and it has been built during a period of unusually low rates. When you combine high debt levels with higher interest costs, the math becomes unforgiving very quickly. That kind of deleveraging does not look like a mild recession. It starts to resemble something much more severe, potentially deflationary, potentially prolonged.
The second path is intervention. The Fed steps in (stop me if you've heard this one before), provides liquidity, and expands its balance sheet aggressively. Quantitative easing returns, possibly at a scale that makes previous rounds look restrained. Asset prices stabilize, credit markets function again, and the immediate crisis is contained. This is what my friend Larry Lepard refers to as "the big print".
But here is where the situation becomes genuinely problematic. The Fed cannot cleanly choose the second option, though I think it's the way they will head.
They cannot do it with inflation still running above target without major inflationary consequences. Injecting massive liquidity into a system that has not fully extinguished inflationary pressure risks reigniting it. Not gently, not in a controlled way, but in a way that forces a much harsher response later. The entire credibility of the central bank rests on the idea that it will not tolerate persistent inflation above its target. If it abandons that stance in order to stabilize markets, it risks unanchoring expectations in a way that is very difficult to reverse.
Watch the below clip at 50:02 until 52:47 if you want a 2 minute explanation of the direction we will keep heading if we go the inflation route.
Please go to substack to continue reading.
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DEBT CLOCK: "Federal Debt has surpassed $39 Trillion. Of a US Workforce of 162 million people (30 million of which are part time) and 72 million children under the age of 18, 62 million retirees, some 82 million disabled, and 14.3 million unemployed there simply isn't enough inflow to support America. There are 36.8 million people living in poverty yet 87.5 million receiving Medicaid - the single largest COST of the Treasury Statement* - I don't consider payments for SS a Cost given it was forcibly taxed."
The Trump Effect: Make America's Billionaires Bigger Again
Why not just say it out loud? We are in deep, deep shit:
Catherine Austin Fitts Nails the Essence of Trump🎯
— Sense Receptor (@SenseReceptor) March 29, 2026
"Trump does not have agency. He's not in charge... he's doing what he's told."
"Trump authorized [Warp Speed]... [which has] killed a million or more Americans and disabled 5 million or more. That's a mass atrocity."
"If you… pic.twitter.com/IBSIefDJqO
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