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Plus: Markets react to a tenuous Iran ceasefire. 
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The temporary ceasefire with Iran looked like it was about to unravel today after Tehran closed the Strait of Hormuz again in response to Israeli attacks in Lebanon. The ceasefire, however tenuous, was enough to send the price of oil below $95 a barrel and the stock market soaring. 

We’ll do the numbers, and then prepare you for this week’s inflation data, this year’s mega-IPOs, and next year’s air travel innovations. Sabri Ben-Achour starts us off with the shrinking pool of foreign investors propping up U.S. spending.  — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
People walk by the front of the Treasury Department building, which has a row of scrolled columns.
Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Economic Security Project
With the U.S. borrowing less from foreign countries, Americans pay higher prices
The share of U.S. debt held by foreign countries has been shrinking.
The only way the U.S. can spend the way it spends — which is to say, more than it earns — is by borrowing. A lot. And who it’s borrowing from makes a difference.

The U.S. is $31 trillion in public debt. That is, for reference, about as much as the entire U.S. economy produces in a year. We owe about 30% of that to other countries and foreign investors. That share has been falling.

“It used to be almost half of all publicly held debt,” said Shai Akabas, vice president of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center. The rest of the world is not propping up U.S. spending like it used to.
One reason is that there’s just a lot more of that spending.

“There’s been an explosion in the amount of U.S. government debt outstanding,” said Tony Rodriguez, head of fixed income strategy at Nuveen. “Think about all of the fiscal stimulus and tax cuts that we’ve seen over the last five to 10 years.”

The U.S. borrowed to deal with the Great Financial Crisis, then it borrowed to deal with COVID-19. Now it’ll borrow to pay for war. Significant tax cuts across multiple administrations — 2013, 2017, 2020, and 2025 — further engorged the debt.

Foreign governments’ desire to loan money to the U.S. by buying U.S. Treasurys has not kept up for many reasons.

“The U.S. fiscal sustainability has been called into question with debt rising as much as it has,” Rodriguez said. Standard & Poor’s downgraded U.S. debt in 2011, Fitch did so in 2023, and Moody’s and European credit rating agency Scope followed suit in 2025.

Some countries have observed that holding U.S. assets exposes them to financial pressure from the U.S.

“Central banks and non-U.S. investors have looked at the U.S. use of the dollar in terms of imposing sanctions, for example, on different investors. So the ‘weaponization’ of the dollar led central banks to want to insulate themselves from that geopolitical risk,” Rodriguez said.
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • The fragile ceasefire didn’t clear the path for more oil tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, but stock markets celebrated anyway. The S&P 500 leapt 2.5%, the Dow jumped 2.8% and the Nasdaq soared 2.8%. 

  • A barrel of crude oil plunged $13.3% to $94.75 today; the national average for a gallon of regular gas was $4.16.

  • Delta Air Lines shares rose 3.75% after reporting better results than expected for the first quarter, despite soaring jet fuel prices. The leading airline still expects to spend $2 billion on fuel through June, and it’s passing the cost on to customers.
  • Two inflation measures, the personal consumption expenditures index and the consumer price index, come out this week. Neither captures the full picture of what's happening to prices in real time, and the gap comes down to speed versus accuracy.
Tech 
  • SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI have all raised billions in private investment. Now each of them are racing to bring in even more money from everyday investors with blockbuster IPOs.

  • The median home price in San Francisco hit a record $2.15 million , up 18% in March from a year earlier, thanks to well-paying jobs driven by the AI boom.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Yes, the U.S. will outperform other countries, but in absolute terms, there will be higher inflation, there'll be a bigger affordability crisis, and some segments of the population are going to feel income-insecure.”
— Mohamed El-Erian, Wharton School economist
The Iran war is roiling the global economy, but for now the United States is faring better than most countries, El-Erian told “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal today. The longer term though, the outlook doesn’t look so good.
HEAR MORE
A mother and child smile and face each other while stretched out across three airplane seats.
United Airlines
Final note
Would you fly like this?
After cutting legroom over the last 30 years , some airlines are letting passengers stretch out. United Airlines will soon let passengers on long-haul flights book a so-called Relax Row: three seats that convert into a couch, along with a mattress cover, blanket, two pillows and a plush toy for kids. One traveler who’s tested Air New Zealand’s similar “Skycouch” told The Washington Post the extra room was great for a 14-hour flight with kids; another said it was cramped for two adults, even when they spooned. United hasn’t announced pricing for this perk yet, but Air New Zealand adds hundreds to standard fare, depending on demand.
 
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