It's down. Look at the one million dollars that Japan borrowed, it could have bought a building, but now it has recovered one million and can only buy half a building. Do you say this is a gain or a loss? Don't think I am talking nonsense.
Not long ago, Lao Mei played this trick on Vietnam intact. Beginning last year, the United States began to issue a large number of national debt and borrowed nearly astronomical amounts of money from the world.
Then immediately afterwards, the boss invested a lot of the borrowed money in the Gusheng real estate in Vietnam, which naturally caused Vietnam's housing prices and stock prices to skyrocket all the way. Then the U.S. only needs to wait for the stock price of Vietnam's housing prices to rise to its peak, and then sell off the stocks and real estate in its hands.
Naturally, the profit is full, but the Vietnamese capital market, which has lost the support of the US dollar, will naturally fall all the way, letting the Vietnamese people match it.
Can it? Simply put, even if he is in debt, he can only use a large amount of printed US dollars in the United States to buy assets all over the world, which can cause the world to inflate. The dollar is worthless, and the debt he owes.