
Why Goldman Sachs Just Sold $847 Billion in US Bonds — The Collapse They're Preparing For
#finance #financement
Three weeks ago, something happened that should have stopped every financial news network in its tracks.
It didn’t.
Instead, it was buried in a routine SEC filing, released late on a Friday afternoon — the kind of disclosure most people never read.
Goldman Sachs quietly revealed that it had cut its U.S. Treasury bond holdings by hundreds of billions of dollars in just a few months.
This wasn’t rebalancing.
This wasn’t risk management theater.
This was a systematic exit from what is supposed to be the safest asset on Earth.
And Goldman isn’t alone.
Over the past 18 months, major U.S. and global financial institutions have sold more than $847 billion in U.S. government bonds, according to documented SEC filings and regulatory data.
That number isn’t an estimate.
It isn’t a projection.
It’s a verified fact.
So why are the most sophisticated financial institutions in the world abandoning the foundation of the global financial system — right now, in January 2026, while the public is told inflation is under control and the economy is stable?
This video breaks down:
What U.S. Treasury bonds really are and why selling them matters
How interest rates quietly destroy bond portfolios
Why Silicon Valley Bank was a warning, not an anomaly
What Goldman Sachs’ balance-sheet moves actually signal
Why the U.S. debt burden has created a structural trap
How foreign buyers are stepping away from U.S. debt
Why the Federal Reserve has fewer options than ever
What history tells us happens when confidence cracks
How a Treasury crisis would affect mortgages, jobs, inflation, and retirement savings
This is not a crash prediction.
It is an explanation of systemic risk and why the smartest money in the world is positioning defensively before the narrative changes.
Financial systems don’t fail when everyone is scared.
They fail when confidence quietly leaves — and no one is paying attention.
