---
title: "Risk-Free Arbitrage and Reconstruction: The Evolution of Global Safe Asset Pricing Paradigms | Chen Xinshen"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/280071008.md"
description: "The article explores the cracks in the risk-free rate of return in the global macro financial market from 2025 to 2026, particularly the historic inversion of the ten-year government bond yields in the United States and Canada. It analyzes the applicability of the fiscal price level theory in the current economic context, pointing out the impact of fiscal expansion on the term premium of U.S. Treasuries and the changes in the global pricing system for safe assets. The author emphasizes that while the phenomenon of fiscal dominance raises concerns, it should not be viewed as direct evidence of a dollar collapse"
datetime: "2026-03-23T00:08:11.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/280071008.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280071008.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/280071008.md)
---

# Risk-Free Arbitrage and Reconstruction: The Evolution of Global Safe Asset Pricing Paradigms | Chen Xinshen

## Introduction: The Underlying Cracks of the Risk-Free Rate

In the global macro-financial market from 2025 to 2026, a striking phenomenon is profoundly reshaping our understanding of asset pricing: the yield spread between the ten-year government bonds of the United States and Canada has experienced a historically deep inversion. While the yield on U.S. long-term bonds remains high due to fiscal expansion and persistent inflation, the yield on Canadian ten-year government bonds has significantly declined. On the surface, this appears to be merely the result of a misalignment in the monetary policy cycles of the two North American economies; however, peeling back the layers of macro data reveals that this phenomenon actually uncovers an expanding crack in the global pricing system for safe assets. This crack pertains not only to the economic fundamentals of the two countries but also to the global capital's repricing of sovereign credit, liquidity premium, and geopolitical hedging functions in an era dominated by fiscal policy.

## I. The Real Reflection and Boundaries of Fiscal Price Level Theory

To understand the systematic elevation of the term premium on U.S. Treasuries, we need to introduce the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level (FTPL) as an analytical entry point. Traditional monetarism views inflation purely as a monetary phenomenon, while the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level posits that, under certain conditions, the price level is determined by the ratio of nominal government debt to the present value of future real fiscal surpluses.

### 1\. The Reality of Fiscal Dominance

Although there is fierce debate in academia regarding whether the intertemporal budget constraint of this theory holds absolutely, using it as a lens to observe the current U.S. macroeconomy is highly enlightening. As the scale of U.S. federal debt continues to expand, the market begins to worry that the independence of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy may yield to fiscal financing demands. When investors expect that future fiscal surpluses will not cover current debt expansion, long-term U.S. Treasuries are required to provide higher compensation for inflation risk, which is directly reflected in the structural rise of the term premium.

### 2\. The Boundaries of the Theory and Prudent Application

However, we must not extreme this theory as a basis for dollar collapse theories. Although U.S. fiscal expansion has weakened its credibility in controlling inflation, the complexity of the dollar system far exceeds a single fiscal equation. When applying this framework, it is essential to maintain analytical discipline: fiscal deterioration raises the holding costs of U.S. Treasuries, but this does not mean that the status of U.S. Treasuries as the cornerstone of the global financial system will collapse in the short term. The sustainability of sovereign debt depends not only on the scale of debt but also on the network effects of that country's currency in international trade and settlement systems.

## II. Cycle Misalignment, Term Premium, and Unignorable Exchange Rate Risks

The direct driving force behind the inversion of the U.S.-Canada yield spread stems from the significant divergence in economic cycles and monetary policies of the two countries.

### 1\. Policy Divergence and Asymmetry of Inflation Effects

In the face of economic resilience and potential tariff shocks, the Federal Reserve has maintained a relatively hawkish stance, raising expectations for the natural rate of interest (R-star); The Bank of Canada, facing weak domestic demand, has no choice but to adopt a more aggressive interest rate cut strategy. The changes in the global trade environment have had asymmetric effects on the two countries: for the United States, the tendency towards trade protectionism manifests more as inflationary effects that push up domestic prices; for open economies like Canada that are highly dependent on exports, it manifests more as deflationary pressures that suppress external demand.

### 2\. Repricing of Term Premiums

In this context, the long-end yields of U.S. Treasuries incorporate higher expectations of natural interest rates and inflation risk premiums. In contrast, the long-end yields of Canadian government bonds reflect more pessimistic expectations regarding future economic growth, known as recession pricing.

### 3\. Real Considerations of Exchange Rate Risk

When discussing cross-border capital flows, a core variable that cannot be ignored is exchange rate risk. For global investors, purchasing Canadian government bonds means acquiring assets denominated in Canadian dollars. In the macro environment of aggressive interest rate cuts by the Bank of Canada and recessionary pressures on the economy, the Canadian dollar is likely to face continued depreciation against the U.S. dollar. If the costs of hedging exchange rate risk or the expected extent of currency depreciation are taken into account, the actual attractiveness of Canadian government bonds to international investors may be far less significant than what the nominal yield curve inversion suggests. The cross-border allocation of capital must seek a fragile balance between nominal yield spreads and exchange rate exposure.

## III. Relative Comparative Advantages of Institutional Memory and Fiscal Discipline

The ability of Canadian government bonds to attract safe-haven funds during certain periods is partly due to their historical reputation for fiscal discipline.

### 1\. Historical Institutional Memory

In the 1990s, the Canadian government implemented stringent fiscal consolidation measures, successfully reversing a debt crisis. This historical experience has left a profound institutional memory in the international capital markets. This commitment to fiscal prudence has earned Canadian sovereign debt a valuable credit premium over the past few decades.

### 2\. Relative Rather than Absolute Advantages

However, it must be objectively noted that in recent years, the fiscal expenditures of the Canadian federal government have also seen significant expansion during its governance cycle, and the traditional fiscal anchoring framework has loosened in practice. Currently, Canada's advantage in fiscal discipline is more a relative advantage compared to the massive deficit scale of the United States, rather than an absolute sense of being flawless. The premium given to Canadian bonds by the market is an acknowledgment of its relative restraint, rather than blind trust.

## IV. True Nature of Tail Risks and Geopolitical Safe Havens

In the context of increasing global geopolitical friction, the government bonds of resource-rich countries are often endowed with additional safe-haven attributes.

### 1\. Underlying Support from Resource Endowments

As a country rich in energy and mineral resources, Canada's sovereign credit has a natural hedging function against extreme geopolitical shocks. When global supply chains face disruption risks, this resource endowment can provide implicit guarantees for the national balance sheet.

### 2\. Rational Understanding of Hedging Logic

However, viewing Canadian government bonds as a perfect geopolitical safe haven may be an exaggeration. When global systemic risks erupt, liquidity exhaustion is often the first response, at which point all non-core assets will face sell-offs. Resource endowments can provide long-term credit support, but they cannot replace the function of core safe assets during short-term liquidity crises. Relying solely on sub-sovereign debt is far from sufficient to address tail risks.

## V. Liquidity Hegemony and Convenience Yield: The Irreplaceable Moat of U.S. Treasuries

When discussing the paradigm shift of safe assets, we must honestly confront the absolute dominance of U.S. Treasuries in the micro-market structure.

### 1\. Absolute Barriers to Market Depth

The U.S. Treasury market boasts a massive size of over $27 trillion, a market depth that no other sovereign bond market can match. This unparalleled liquidity allows large global financial institutions to conduct massive capital flows without triggering severe price volatility.

### 2\. Collateral Function and Convenience Yield

More importantly, U.S. Treasuries serve as the core collateral in the global repurchase market and derivatives trading. This irreplaceable financial infrastructure status endows U.S. Treasuries with a high convenience yield. If we exclude this liquidity premium and collateral value, the credit risk premium corresponding to the deterioration of U.S. fiscal conditions should be steeper. The hegemony of U.S. Treasuries is built not only on national credit but is also deeply rooted in the trading habits and clearing networks of the global financial system.

## VI. Recession Pricing and Structural Weakness: The Achilles' Heel of the Canadian Economy

We must be wary of overly romantic interpretations of the low yields on Canadian government bonds. The decline in Canadian bond yields is largely a recession pricing of its domestic economic structural weaknesses.

### 1\. Long-term Risks of Stagnant Productivity

The Canadian economy has long faced the dilemma of weak labor productivity growth, overly reliant on real estate and resource extraction, lacking strong growth engines in high-tech and innovation sectors. This structural defect limits its long-term potential economic growth rate.

### 2\. Short-term Impact of Mortgage Renewal Cliff

On a micro level, Canada's unique mortgage renewal mechanism makes its household sector extremely sensitive to interest rate changes. As a large number of mortgages issued during low-interest periods enter the renewal cycle, known as the mortgage renewal cliff, the household sector faces significant debt repayment pressure, forcing the central bank to lower interest rates to alleviate systemic financial risks. Therefore, the low yields on Canadian bonds are largely a bet on the central bank's bailout put, rather than a pure appreciation of credit.

## VII. Conclusion: Moving Towards a Pragmatic Multipolar Safe Asset Portfolio

The inversion of the Canada-U.S. yield spread does not signify the end of U.S. Treasury hegemony but marks the entry of global safe asset pricing logic into a more complex new phase. The risk-free status is no longer an inherent privilege but a trust contract that requires continuous maintenance. In the face of numerous uncertainties in the era of fiscal dominance, large global asset management institutions need to construct a more pragmatic multipolar safe asset portfolio

### 1\. Core Liquidity Hub

U.S. Treasuries continue to serve as the absolute liquidity hub of the global financial system and will do so for a long time. Its deep market capacity and collateral function determine its irreplaceable role in responding to short-term liquidity shocks.

### 2\. Hedging Tool for Extreme Risks

Gold, as a representative of non-credit currency, will play an increasingly important underlying insurance role in hedging against the depreciation of fiat currency credit and extreme geopolitical risks.

### 3\. Supplementary Vehicle for Certainty Premium

High-quality sub-sovereign debt, represented by Canada and Australia, can serve as an effective supplement to provide certainty premium due to its relatively robust fiscal discipline and resource endowment. However, it must be clearly recognized that the capacity of these markets is extremely limited and cannot accommodate the overall transfer of massive global hedging funds. Their role in the investment portfolio is tactical asset allocation to enhance returns and diversify risks, rather than a strategic core alternative.

Understanding the cracks in this yield curve is not only key to understanding the current macro cycle but also to grasping the underlying logic of global capital seeking to rebalance liquidity, credit risk, and geopolitical security over the next decade. In this era of change, maintaining a reverence for the microstructure of the market and being wary of the temptation of grand narratives is the rational stance that professional investors should adopt.

**Chen Xinshen**

_Author Bio: Senior financial professional_

_Currently an advisor to the National Asset Management Standardization Technical Committee_

Related article: Trial and Error Cost: The Essential Contradiction and Enlightenment between Financial Pursuit of Maximum Returns and Strict Risk Control in Healthcare | Chen Xinshen

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