GSI Banner
  • Free Access
  • Contributors
  • Membership Levels
  • Video
  • Origins
  • Sponsors
  • My Account
  • Sign In
  • Join Now

  • Free Access
  • Contributors
  • Membership Levels
  • Video
  • Origins
  • Sponsors
  • Contact

© 2025 Grey Swan Investment Fraternity

  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
  • Whitelist Us
Beneath the Surface

Here Comes Yield Control

Loading ...Mark Jeftovic

October 1, 2025 • 3 minute, 57 second read


Fedyield curve control

Here Comes Yield Control

“I’d throw dollars out of helicopters if I had to, to stimulate the economy.”

—Ben Bernanke

October 1, 2025 — Jerome Powell had signalled capitulation – and on September 17th, the Fed made it official with a 25bp cut, the first one since a quarter point cut in December ’24.

They also did it with dovish talk, and only dissenter being Stephan Miran – the new Trump interim appointee – who had actually called for -50bp.

The Bank of Canada also cut a quarter point the same day – after holding steady for six months. The Bank of England held steady the next day, but as we also noted last month, they’d made five cuts in a row before then.

What did all these cuts have in common? The yield on both the US and Canadian 10-year government bonds went the wrong direction, practically instantly.

Turn Your Images On

Coming out of the September Fed meeting, there was a sudden surge in awareness around the Fed’s elusive “third mandate.”

It’s the lesser-known component of The Fed’s congressional directive, alongside the well-known “dual mandate” of price stability and maximum employment.

Since it was amended (in 1977), The Federal Reserve Act tasks the Fed with three goals (originally two): stable prices, maximum employment, and moderate long-term interest rates.

This third goal has historically been downplayed, as it’s often seen as a byproduct of achieving the other two, but Stephan Miran, the aforementioned Fed Board nominee and prominent critic of rate policy, brought it up at his confirmation hearing – and then Powell talked about it at the FOMC presser.

Originally, in the language of the 1977 Federal Reserve Reform Act, “moderate” was an adjective — it was a word describing the desired state of long-term rates.

But now, (at least in practice), it’s become a verb — something the Fed must do.

In FedSpeak, that translates to Yield Curve Control.

We’ve been saying for a long time that when it came time to rev up the money printer again, the Fed would do it under some other rubric than “Quantitative Easing” (QE), because by now, everybody knows what that is. YCC? Not so much.

What it means is that the Fed will buy unlimited bonds out at the long end of the yield curve in order to keep yields under some arbitrary line in the sand.

Japan has been doing this for decades. And every time a crisis flares up there — like last summer’s “Black Monday” carnage — it’s usually triggered by a breach of their yield threshold, requiring some emergency BoJ intervention.

The entire Everything Bubble that ran from the end of the GFC and went vertical through COVID was because of interest rate suppression.

At the end of the day, YCC is more of that – pushing rates below where an unfettered market would clear them.

We’ve been writing for a year how yields the world over are defying central bank cuts to their respective benchmark rates; what the Fed is signalling here, is the necessity to get out front and “moderate” the long end of the curve.

The Fed is now cutting rates, with stocks, Bitcoin and gold all at or near all-time highs. Meanwhile, bond yields are signalling less appetite for government debt, and fissures are beginning to appear in the consumer debt markets.

Mark Jeftovic
The Crypto Capitalist & Grey Swan Investment Fraternity

P.S. from Addison: Tomorrow, Mark will join us on Grey Swan Live! As you can see from today’s excerpt from his latest Crypto Capitalist newsletter, the timing is critical for protecting and growing your wealth.

Trump is about to commit the single greatest act of creative destruction ever.

We call it the Dollar 2.0. And again, history repeats…

🗓️ 1971: By flooding the system with an endless trove of physical dollars, Nixon’s actions led directly to the boom in gold prices… thus hatching an entire generation of gold millionaires.

And now…

🗓️ 2025: By flooding the system with an endless trove of digital dollars, stablecoins will lead directly to a Dollar 2.0 boom… thus hatching an entire generation of digital-dollar millionaires.

Due to the (official) arrival of government-mandated stablecoins — by way of the newly-passed GENIUS Act — the price of the “Dollar 2.0” could double over 20 times.

To prepare, Mark Jeftovic is joining us tomorrow on Grey Swan Live! Mark has been watching this all unfold for years. And he’s going to show how you can position your portfolio, even if you’ve never bought an individual cryptocurrency or token.

See you tomorrow at 2 p.m. ET. Sign up now if you’re not a member yet.

If you’d like, you can drop your most pressing questions right here: Feedback@GreySwanFraternity.com. We’ll be sure to work them in during the conversation.


Markets Hate Thursdays and Fridays

November 14, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

Stocks have developed a habit of selling off into the weekend before rebounding this year.

One big explanation might be that traders don’t want to be leveraged going into two days where the market’s closed in New York – but stay open online. 

Any random Trump tweet can and has moved the market!

Ostensibly, if the weekend is quiet, stocks can recoup their Thursday/Friday declines.

Markets Hate Thursdays and Fridays
Joe Withrow: The Hollow Class, Part III

November 13, 2025 • Andrew Packer

What we’ve seen since 2008 is nothing short of a theft of the commons. Except it happened in little pieces that seemed unrelated at the time. But if we look at the story holistically, it all comes together.

When we step back and view the entire picture, what emerges is not just a story of market excesses and economic shifts. What we see is the gutting of middle America – be it intentional or otherwise.

Now the question is – are we going to see the restoration of the American middle class in the coming years… or are we going to watch everything devolve into a modern redux of the War Between the States, more commonly but mistakenly known as the American Civil War?

Joe Withrow: The Hollow Class, Part III
Performative Clowns

November 13, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

Today’s Washington isn’t governed so much as stage-managed.

Politicians don’t solve problems; they perform them.

The current fixation is affordability — a word that will be repeated ad nauseam from now through the 2026 midterms, until it becomes as meaningless as “bipartisan.”

The script hasn’t changed in decades: promise relief, pass a law that raises costs, blame capitalism, hold hearings, fundraise, repeat.

Performative Clowns
A Bubble in Bubble Talk

November 13, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

Yes, Nvidia’s profits are up 500%, and its share price followed suit — a rare case where the story actually matches the math. But that’s the exception, not the rule.

Beneath the headlines, we’re starting to see the kind of financial gymnastics — circular lending, balance-sheet origami, and creative “partnerships” — that usually signal the boom is running out of breath.

If history rhymes, it looks like we’re closing in on the tail end of a mania.

A Bubble in Bubble Talk