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Greece lawmakers back plan to allow 13-hour workday
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Lives at risk of 'exhausted' French couple held by Iran: families
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French PM survives two confidence votes days after reappointment
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McIlroy lets 'big dog' sleep to shoot three-under on Delhi debut
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Impeached president confirms he fled Madagascar as new leader claims 'not a coup'
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Pope slams millions facing hunger worldwide as 'collective failure'
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Nestle to cut 16,000 jobs worldwide
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Prince Andrew accuser says he acted as if sex with her was 'birthright': memoir
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Fatal bear attacks in Japan hit record number
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One of world's oldest dinosaurs discovered in Argentina
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Kanchha Sherpa: Last link to Everest's first summit
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Markets mixed as traders weigh China-US row, rate cut hopes
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Kluivert out as coach after Indonesia fail to reach World Cup
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Last member of the first successful Everest expedition dies
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Markets mostly rise as traders weigh China-US row, rate cut hopes
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Impeached president confirms he fled Madagascar at the weekend
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One dead, dozens injured in Peru anti-crime protests
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Shake truck helps Californians prepare for massive quake
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Nepal ask FIFA to overturn Malaysia defeat because of player bans
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Fatal bear attacks hit new record in Japan
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Labuschagne slams another big century to send Ashes message
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Don't let the party stop: Berlin's fight against 'club death'
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Madagascar's protests fan anger against colonial France
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YouTube users trip over fake AI tributes to Charlie Kirk
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One year on, Italian migrant camps in Albania near-empty
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AI boom delivers record net profit for Taiwan's TSMC
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Nestle says to cut 16,000 jobs worldwide over next two years
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Rugby Championship shelved next year, back for 2027 in new calendar
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Indonesia, Kluivert part ways after World Cup dream ends
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Ceasefire halts deadly Afghanistan-Pakistan fighting
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Rare woman yakuza on path to redemption in Japan
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Ambitious new Monaco coach Pocognoli looking to make Van Gaal-style 'impact'
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Bloom-backed Hearts out to shatter Scottish football's 'glass ceiling'
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India's pollution refugees fleeing Delhi's toxic air
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Blue Jays bats come alive in 13-4 MLB playoff victory over Mariners
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Asia stocks rise as traders weigh China-US row, rate cut hopes
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Skating stars Malinin, Sakamoto begin quest for Olympic gold in France
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Uruguay legalizes euthanasia
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Alex Marquez looks to fill void left by injured brother in Australia
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McLaren title rivals looking warily for Verstappen's late charge
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Viral Mexican 'grandparents' recount flood horror
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Sandra Oh trades the small screen for the grand stage of the Met Opera
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Australian rainforests no longer a carbon sink: study
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Trump indicates approval of CIA action against Venezuela
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Sunshine Biopharma Launches Cholesterol Fighting Medicine Pravastatin
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MIRA Pharmaceuticals Announces Oral Mira-55 Outperformed Injected Morphine in Normalizing Pain and Reducing Inflammation, Supporting Its Planned IND for Chronic Inflammatory Pain
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Creative Compliments(TM) Wins 2025 Consumer Choice Award for Gift Baskets in Saskatoon
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Guanajuato Silver Provides El Cubo Drill Results
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Greatway Financial Inc. Recognised With 2025 Consumer Choice Award For Life Insurance
Alert in Trump’s America
In recent weeks, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has issued a series of sobering warnings about the fragile state of the U.S. economy—warnings that ring particularly alarmingly in light of the aggressive economic policies advanced under Donald Trump. Dimon cautioned that the nation's bond market is on the brink of a serious "crack," fueled by ballooning budget deficits and deepening investor skepticism. With the national debt already exceeding $36 trillion and credit ratings under pressure, he warned that without decisive reforms, a reckoning is all but inevitable.
Dimon’s concerns extend beyond bonds. In his quarterly report, he described the U.S. stock market as "kind of inflated," noting that asset valuations currently rank among the top 10–15 percent of historical levels. He attributed this overheating to sustained deficit spending, inflationary pressures, and geopolitical tensions. Trade measures, particularly tariffs adopted by the Trump administration, have further intensified those pressures—raising the risk of slower growth, inflation, and market instability.
Emerging trends indicate volatility in Treasury yields, a jittery bond market, and mounting fears that markets may be underpricing systemic risks. Dimon voiced alarm that such mispriced optimism could lead to sudden market shocks, even as he sought to reassure stakeholders that the financial system remains fundamentally sound.
Taken together, these warnings paint a picture of a U.S. economy that appears robust on the surface—buoyed by high valuations and bullish sentiment—but is in fact navigating mounting macroeconomic vulnerabilities. Under the Trump-era policies of elevated deficits, protectionism and regulatory uncertainty, Dimon is urging policymakers to act swiftly: not to stoke the bubble, but to defuse it before it bursts.

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