Home Forums Investment 미국 주식이 90% 폭락하게 되는 과정 This topic has [15] replies, 0 voices, and was last updated 5 months ago by Takina. Now Editing “미국 주식이 90% 폭락하게 되는 과정” Name * Password * Email Topic Title (Maximum Length 80) U.S. stock prices, no matter what anyone claims, ultimately rise and fall based on how much money the Federal Reserve pumps into the system and how low it pushes interest rates. When the Fed floods the economy with liquidity, the “future‑value” moths rush into Tesla and other high‑growth names, and prices soar. When the Fed tightens, those same moths get scorched. The AI mania is no different. This dynamic has defined the entire post‑2008 era. After the financial crisis, the Fed carpet‑bombed the economy with money, and U.S. stocks climbed relentlessly for more than a decade. So how could a market that strong ever crash 90%? Right now, the administration is brushing off inflation concerns and searching for a rate‑cut evangelist to lead the Fed. If the Fed slashes rates and launches another round of quantitative easing, stocks will explode upward again. But inflation will surge with them. Back in the post‑crisis years, globalization—especially the flood of cheap Chinese goods—kept inflation tame even as stocks soared. That buffer is gone. Tariffs, rising labor costs in China, and geopolitical tensions mean cheap imports can no longer suppress inflation. Combine that with euphoric investors spending freely on the back of rising portfolios, and you’re pouring gasoline on an already burning fire. Inflation at 5%, 8%, 10% becomes inevitable. And when the working class—those without stocks or homes—see their purchasing power collapse, they turn to credit cards just to survive. Eventually that juggling act hits a wall, and consumption falls sharply. When people are struggling to pay rent and buy groceries, who cares about robotaxis or AI? Even if stockholders spend more, the belt‑tightening of the majority drags down total consumption. The big tech names that soared on “future value” narratives begin to slip. At first the decline is gentle, then it accelerates as exhausted investors exit the market one by one. Up to this point, the damage is a 30% correction. The next 60% depends entirely on the Fed. If the Fed tries to rescue the market again—citing employment or financial stability—the moths who learned the COVID V‑shaped rebound will rush back in, chanting the eternal upward‑trend anthem. But if the Fed props up stocks at the cost of inflation surging past 10% and toward 20%, even the boldest administration will be forced to stop the stock‑boosting freebies. And the Fed, no matter what the White House says, will have to claw back the money it sprayed. Otherwise the U.S. risks the kind of runaway inflation seen in Weimar Germany or Zimbabwe. At that point, the Fed Put dies. The moths panic and burn, others flee the market, and with no parachute left, stocks plunge again and again. One day, after years of pain, you check your brokerage account and see a 90% loss. To avoid this fate, the government and the Fed must treat inflation control as a life‑or‑death mission. But they won’t. And that’s why collapse feels inevitable. Even the recent 2.7% inflation reading that came out recently doesn’t change the underlying structural problem. I agree to the terms of service Update List