Jim Cramer sends blunt message on US debt risk to stocks

Americans are increasingly concerned that the U.S.'s soaring deficit and mountain of debt are major warning signs of an economic reckoning that could send the stock market reeling.

Those concerns intensified this week after Moody's, one of the three most significant credit-rating companies, downgraded the U.S.'s credit because of fears that America's debt was becoming more problematic.

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Spending more than you earn isn't a great recipe, and mounting stagflation and recession risk due to newly implemented tariffs doesn't help matters.

Overall, the backdrop has investors wringing their hands about what could happen next, particularly in the wake of a major stock market rally off the S&P 500's early April lows.

The dynamic isn’t lost on longtime market participant Jim Cramer. Cramer, who famously blasted the Federal Reserve during the Great Recession as "knowing nothing," recently weighed in on the impact of debt on stocks, delivering a blunt take on the situation.

<em>Veteran investor Jim Cramer recently delivered a candid take on U.S. debt's impact on the stock market.</em>Noam Galai&sol;Getty Images
Veteran investor Jim Cramer recently delivered a candid take on U.S. debt's impact on the stock market.Noam Galai/Getty Images

A struggling US economy makes the US debt situation worrisome

America arguably has a spending problem, and it's unlikely to get better anytime soon, given recent economic signs.

The US economy made major headway following the Covid pandemic thanks to record-setting monetary and fiscal stimulus.

Related: Secretary Bessent sends message on Walmart price increases due to tariffs

Arguably, stimulus payments to Americans and zero-interest-rate policy kept America from tailspinning into the biggest depression since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

However, those policies also caused inflation to skyrocket. In 2022, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell was forced to embark on the most hawkish rate increases to battle inflation since former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker broke inflation's back in the 1980s.

The rate hikes worked: Inflation has fallen below 3% from a peak above 8%. However, they came at a price. Because higher rates cap economic activity, job losses have increased unemployment to 4.2% from its 3.4% low in 2023.

The Fed switched tactics again, cutting rates late last year to shore up employment. However, this year it's been forced to pause additional rate cuts to support the economy because of fears that President Donald Trump's tariff plan would reignite inflation.

The situation leaves the Fed in a bind, trapped by its dual mandate to ensure low unemployment and inflation, two often competing goals.

As a result, many worry that we may enter stagflation, slow growth plus inflation, or worse, wind up in a recession with the Fed sidelined.