Henry Paulson has blunt message on potential Treasury market shock
The man who managed the 2008 financial crisis says the next one could be harder to stop. And he wants a plan ready before it starts.
Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson appeared on Bloomberg Television's Wall Street Week with David Westin on April 16, urging U.S. authorities to prepare a contingency plan for a potential collapse in demand for government bonds.
His warning was direct. "We need an emergency break-the-glass plan, which is targeted and short-term, on the shelf, so it's ready to go when we hit the wall," he said, according to Bloomberg.
On timing, Paulson was candid about the limits of prediction. "People say, 'When are you going to hit the wall?' I obviously don't know; it's impossible to know. When we hit it, it will be vicious, so we have to prepare for that eventuality," he told Bloomberg.
The national debt now stands at $38.9 trillion, underscoring what Paulson called an increasingly fragile starting point.
Why Paulson says today's economy is worse than 2008
Paulson led the Treasury Department through the 2008 financial crisis, arguably the most severe since the Great Depression. He does not think that experience would be a useful playbook for a Treasury market breakdown.
"As bad as it was," the 2008 crisis still left the government with fiscal firepower to act. "You can come in and clean up the mess," he said, as Bloomberg reported.
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A public debt crisis would be fundamentally different. If confidence in government bonds breaks down, the very tools the government would need to respond become harder to use.
"When you hit the wall and you're trying to issue Treasuries and the Fed is the only buyer and the prices of the Treasuries are going down and interest rates are up, that's a dangerous thing," he said, according to Benzinga.
The sovereign debt doom loop Paulson is warning about
Budget experts have warned for years about a potential doom loop in U.S. sovereign debt. The scenario works like this:
- Investors begin demanding higher yields to compensate for rising fiscal risk.
- Higher yields increase the government's interest payments, which widens the deficit.
- A wider deficit makes investors more nervous, which drives yields even higher.
Paulson's warning is that the U.S. is now in a position where that loop is more plausible than ever. The U.S. national debt stood at $38.9 trillion as of April 16. The 10-year Treasury yield was running at approximately 4.3%, according to GNCrypto.
The Treasury market is the backbone of the global financial system. Corporate bonds, mortgages, and stocks are all priced relative to it. Any shock that sends yields sharply higher would ripple through every other asset class, according to CoinTelegraph.
What Paulson says the U.S. deficit fix actually requires
Paulson did not just warn. He also said the deficit problem is solvable, if the political will exists.
"There is good news, we're a rich country, and so there's plenty we could do if we begin to act" on the deficit, he said, according to Bloomberg.
The fix, in his view, requires higher revenues, closing tax loopholes, and overhauling Social Security and health care programs. "It's going to take increased revenues, taxes, and dealing with expenses," he said, as Bloomberg reported.
"You can raise the revenues without a big drag on growth, if you close preferences and loopholes in the tax code," he added.
The challenge is political. Marshaling Congress behind a plan of that scale, before a crisis forces the issue, is exactly the kind of thing that tends not to happen until it has to, Paulson acknowledged.
Key details from Paulson's Bloomberg interview:
- Interview: Bloomberg Television's Wall Street Week with David Westin, April 16, 2026
- U.S. national debt as of April 16: $38.9 trillion
- 10-year Treasury yield at time of interview: Approximately 4.3%, according to GNCrypto
- Treasury's largest single debt buyback: $15 billion of securities maturing 2026-2028, conducted April 16, CoinTelegraph noted
- Paulson's proposed fix: Higher revenues, tax loophole closures, Social Security and health care overhaul, Yahoo Finance indicated
What Paulson's warning of Treasury market vulnerability means for investors
Paulson's warning is not a prediction that a Treasury market collapse is imminent. He is explicit that timing is impossible to know. But the message for investors is that the risk is structural, not theoretical.
A Treasury market that loses investor confidence does not just affect government borrowing. It reprices every other asset in the global financial system. Mortgages, corporate bonds, equities, and emerging market debt would all feel the consequences of a sustained spike in U.S. Treasury yields.
What Paulson is asking for is simpler than it sounds: a plan on the shelf before the emergency arrives. His experience in 2008 taught him that the plans that work are the ones written before the panic, not during it.
The concern is that in a fiscal crisis, unlike a credit crisis, the government's ability to act may itself be the thing that is compromised.
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This story was originally published April 18, 2026 at 5:06 PM.