Trump’s Reset Moves Into High Gear With Stephen Miran’s Fed Nomination Authored by Lau Vegys via InternationalMan.com, Recently, I wrote to you about how Trump had found βthe perfect openingβ to reshape the Federal Reserve when Governor Adriana Kugler unexpectedly resigned. What I didnβt expect was how perfectly this would confirm everything weβve been tracking aboutΒ Trumpβs Reset. Trump didnβt just fill that vacant Fed seat with any dovish voice. He appointed Stephen Miranβthe mastermind behind whatβs probably the most audacious economic strategy in modern history. If youβve been following ourΒ analysis, you already know Stephen Miranβand if you do, chances are youβll agree this appointment is the clearest sign yet that Trumpβs Reset isnβt just on the horizon.Β Itβs already underway. The Architect of Trumpβs Reset Stephen Miran is the author ofΒ A Userβs Guide to Restructuring the Global Trading Systemβthe blueprint for whatβs been dubbed the βMar-a-Lago Accord.β Published just days after Trumpβs victory last November, it outlines a comprehensive plan to flip the U.S. dollarβs reserve status from a burden into a bargaining chip. To turn Americaβs towering debt from an embarrassment into leverage. And to reorient the entire global economic structure in Washingtonβs favor. Now, to understand why Miran sees a reserve currencyβs status as a burden in the first place, you have to dig into a little-known economic paradox. Itβs calledΒ Triffinβs Dilemma, named after Belgian economist Robert Triffin, and it describes the paradox that arises when a countryβs currency also serves as the worldβs reserve currencyβlike the U.S. dollar today. To meet global demand for its currency, the issuing country must run persistent trade deficitsβexporting more of its currency than goods and services. This arrangement can help support global growth, but over time it wears down the issuing countryβs industrial base, piles on debt, and leaves the economy more fragile. If that country stops running deficits, the world can face a shortage of the reserve currencyβslowing trade and pushing others toward alternative systems. But if it keeps running them, debt and imbalances keep growing. Thatβs the bind. So if youβve ever wondered why the U.S. economy is so financialized, so reliant on debt, and so heavily tilted toward βservicesββthis is why. Triffinβs Dilemma is also why Miran refers to the U.S. dollar and Treasuries as βcostly global public goodsβ America provides to the worldβa burdensome affair he aims to address through βburden-sharing at the global level,β as he outlined in his April speech at the Hudson Institute. Hereβs a snippet from that address: βIn my view, to continue providing these twin global public goods, there needs to be improved burden-sharing at the global level. (β¦) The best outcome is one in which America continues to create global peace and prosperity and remain the reserve provider, and other countries not only participate in reaping the benefits, but they also participate in bearing the costs. By improving burden sharing, we can enhance resilience, and preserve the global security and trading systems for many decades into the future.β Now, Iβve read the whole speech, and Iβm not wild about a number of things in thereβlike the βcreate global peaceβ line in the quote above. Nevertheless, with Miran now just steps away from becoming a Fed governor, pending Senate confirmation, itβs worth recalling what this βburden-sharingβ actually looks like in his view. Hereβs a quick rundown of his plan: Accept tariffs without retaliationΒ β Let U.S. tariffs stand, generating revenue for Washington. Open their marketsΒ β End unfair trade practices and buy more American goods. Increase defense spendingΒ β Procure more U.S.-made weapons and equipment. Build factories in the U.S.Β β Set up local production and avoid tariffs altogether. Write checks to the TreasuryΒ β Yes, really. Direct financial contributions to help the U.S. fund βglobal public goods.β As far-fetched as some of this sounds, itβs worth keeping in mind that parts of Miranβs strategy are already playing out. The European Union (EU), for one, recently backed off its planned β¬93 billion (~$102 billion) in retaliatory tariffsβagreeing to a new trade framework with Washington that keeps Trumpβs duties in place while committing to buy $750 billion worth of U.S. energy and invest another $600 billion in the American economy, including U.S. military gear. Over in the corporate world, big Indian consumer packaged goods names like Amul and ITC are looking at setting up plants in the U.S. or in third countries to keep their exports flowing. Even Apple is now falling in lineβannouncing an additional $100 billion in U.S. manufacturing investments over the next four years, bringing its total U.S. investment to $600 billion. The Takeaway It was interesting to watch the marketβs reaction to Miranβs Fed nominationβ¦ The dollar slid, while gold, Bitcoin, and stocks all pushed higher. Clearly, someoneβs been reading the same breadcrumbs we have. Meanwhile, JPMorgan called it an βexistential threatβ to Fed independence. Sureβif weβre still pretending the Fed is truly independent, they might be right. But thatβs the whole pointβand exactly the bigger picture theyβre missing: this is theΒ execution phaseΒ of the most ambitious economic plan weβve seen in generations. This isnβt just about getting another dovish vote for rate cutsβTrump couldβve slotted in any of his yes-men for that. This is about installing the architect of Americaβs monetary reset directly inside the Federal Reserve. As I noted earlier, parts ofΒ Trumpβs ResetΒ have already shown up in trade deals and investment shiftsβbut with Miran inside the Fed, the playbook moves from white papers and speeches into the heart of monetary policy. Will they succeed? We donβt know. What we do know is that the reset will present big opportunities for those who see it coming and position accordinglyβand plenty of pain for those who donβt. As Matt Smith put it: βSucceed or fail, Trumpβs plan will impact all of us and our investments. I confess Iβm delighted Team Trump sees the problemβ¦ has a plan to avoid the worst, and catapult the U.S. to new prosperity. But what they need to do will not come without pain. A LOT of pain.β If you want the full picture but donβt want to slog through Miranβs dense 40-page white paper, Matt has already done the hard workβconnecting the dots, including some that were barely hinted at in the original report (because stating them outright could have caused unnecessary alarm at the time). Whatever you do, youβll want to educate yourself on the topicβbecause the reality is, if you donβt understand whatΒ Trumpβs ResetΒ is about, youβre flying blind into one of the most significant monetary shifts in modern history. *Β *Β * Stephen Miranβs appointment isnβt just another Fed nominationβitβs a signal that Trumpβs Reset is moving from theory to execution.Β The gold rush in London, the strategic accumulation in New York, and the looming overhaul of the U.S. monetary order are all part of a much bigger plan.Β If you donβt understand how this will impact your savings, investments, and standard of living, you could be flying blind into one of the most significant economic shifts in generations. To see how Trumpβs strategy could revalue gold, restructure Americaβs balance sheet, and reshape the global monetary systemβand how you can position yourself before the reset hitsβread the full briefing here:Β Get Ready for Trumpβs Monetary Reset. Tyler Durden Tue, 08/19/2025 – 15:40
Trump’s Reset Moves Into High Gear With Stephen Miran’s Fed Nomination
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