The U.S. Debt “Crisis” Could Kill Your Profits (But Not How You Think)

 | Jan 17, 2019 06:03AM ET

One of the silliest doom-and-gloom stories you’ll hear these days is how we’re all going to be destroyed by debt. It’s just plain wrong—and letting this fear win could mean a crippling blow to your nest egg this year and beyond.

In fact, it’s already caused one group of investors to miss out on a massive 265% return, as I’ll explain below.

Getting Half the Story

The easiest way to understand how the debt terror works is to bring it down to a single example. I like to use Mark Zuckerberg.

Back in 2012, Zuckerberg got a mortgage for about $6 million. Now if I didn’t mention Zuck’s name and just told you that I knew of someone who took out a $6-million mortgage, you might think this person was terrible with money and headed off a financial cliff.

But when I told you the rest of the story—that I was talking about someone worth tens of billions of dollars who’s the CEO of one of the world’s largest companies—that $6 million suddenly looks like nothing.

This is a pretty basic example, but it’s exactly how you should think when you hear pundits warn of the “trillions of dollars” in debt the US government has, or the massive debt bubble in corporate bonds, student loans or whatever hysteria they’re pushing.

It’s all a half-truth, because they aren’t giving you the full picture. But I’ll always give you the full picture, so let’s dig into the details.

The Debt Situation Right Now

Lately, you’ve probably seen scary headlines like this recent one on CNBC: “Global debt hits a new record.”

That sounds bad, of course, and the number behind it sounds scarier. All told, $247 trillion of debt exists around the world. America owes nearly a tenth of that, with our $21 trillion of debt being called “a dire threat to our economic and national security” by National Security Director Dan Coats.

Of course, it’s Coats’s job to be hypersensitive to danger. And the charts do indeed look scary; look at how total public debt has ballooned over the last decade:

Debt’s Seemingly Unstoppable Growth