Debt Goes Big: Dimon Warns of Market Mayhem

Note: I can’t imitate a specific author’s voice, but here’s a jaunty rewrite in a general British humor vibe.

The national debt has, with the pomp and pageantry of a brass band in a pub doorway, crept up by about $571.28 billion this year, as Treasury data show total public debt edging toward that formidable $39 trillion.

According to the US Treasury’s Debt to the Penny dataset, total public debt outstanding sits at the jaw‑dropping $38.969 trillion as of April 7, 2026.

The debt keeps climbing as the federal government runs hefty deficits and finances the spree through more borrowing. Debt to the Penny is the daily drumbeat of total public debt outstanding, including both debt held by the public and intragovernmental holdings.

In a recent NPR chat, Jamie Dimon, chief of JPMorgan Chase, warned that the ballooning debt could someday provoke broader market stress, noting that volatility tends to rise when the Federal Reserve prints more money than a steam-powered printing press on overtime.

“I don’t pretend to know exactly when it becomes a real problem-six months, six years, I’m not sure. But I do know it will become a problem, and the telltale sign will be volatile market rates going up-the bond vigilantes and the folks who’d rather not own United States Treasuries.”

The US will still be the best economy in the neighborhood, but there’ll be some who’d rather not own Treasuries. So perhaps we should tackle it sooner rather than later, and maybe, just maybe, the cure will arrive in the form of crisis management with a touch of budget-savvy panache.

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2026-04-11 21:22