For decades, the offshore U. S. dollar system—commonly called the eurodollar market—has been treated as a neutral byproduct of global finance: a convenient, liquid pool of dollars outside the reach of the Federal Reserve. This paper argues the opposite. The offshore USD system is not merely unstable; it is structurally destined to implode first in any global monetary fracture because it is built on a hidden, leverage-based architecture powered overwhelmingly by yen-funded credit creation and dominated by non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) that operate beyond sovereign oversight. The core mechanism is a seven-step loop that has quietly dictated global monetary conditions for thirty years: The Bank of Japan is structurally forced to maintain zero interest rates, creating the world’s cheapest funding base. NBFIs borrow JPY at near-zero cost, not for investment in Japan but for global arbitrage. These borrowed yen are transformed into offshore USD (Eurodollars) via FX swaps, creating dollars the Federal Reserve does not issue and cannot regulate. NBFIs then leverage these Eurodollars 10–100×, funneling them into global asset markets. They short U. S. Treasuries (USTs) at scale, pushing yields higher. The Federal Reserve is forced to follow bond-market pricing, raising interest rates in response to a curve that NBFIs themselves distorted. NBFIs capture profit twice—first from the short position as yields rise, then again by buying USTs cheaply during forced liquidations triggered by the very stress they created. The central reason this mechanism works is scale. NBFIs today control balance sheets exceeding 250 trillion, a magnitude larger than the GDP of every nation on Earth—combined. Their aggregate firepower dwarfs central banks, overwhelms sovereign bond markets, and allows them to impose pricing on U. S. Treasuries, global yields, and ultimately the policy choices of the Federal Reserve, ECB, BOE, and BOJ. Central banks do not “set” interest rates; they chase the yields that NBFIs have already engineered through leveraged positioning and collateral flows. This loop reveals a deeper truth: global monetary policy has been partially hijacked by private leverage structures that are larger than sovereign balance sheets, faster than regulatory responses, and functionally immune to democratic control. Japan’s 30-year zero-rate regime did not simply depress domestic growth—it became the nuclear reactor powering a shadow liquidity system that allowed NBFIs to shape global interest rates, distort sovereign policy autonomy, and accumulate financial power on a scale surpassing nation-states. Offshore USD will implode first because it is the most synthetic—and the most fragile—layer of this architecture. Its “money” is not backed by deposits, collateral discipline, or a lender of last resort, but by swap lines, rehypothecated collateral chains, and the continuation of Japan’s zero-rate policy—an assumption now failing. As the yen carry trade unwinds and NBFI leverage contracts, the offshore USD system will face a structural margin cascade long before onshore dollar liquidity is affected. This paper provides the first unified framework explaining how yen carry leverage, NBFI dominance, and shadow USD creation interlock to form a self-reinforcing, globally consequential monetary machine—and why its collapse is not a possibility but an inevitability once its underlying constraints break.
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Essentia Vera
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Essentia Vera (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/699ba07072792ae9fd870146 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18718658