๐Ÿšจ BIG SHOCK FOR AMERICANS ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

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President Donald Trump says credit card interest rates will be capped at 10% from January 20, 2026 โ€” and this could be one of the biggest changes to consumer finance in decades. Right now, most Americans are stuck paying 20โ€“30% interest, where monthly payments mostly go to banks, not to reducing debt. A 10% cap could cut this burden almost in half, meaning more money stays with people instead of disappearing into interest charges. Thatโ€™s instant relief, and it changes the mood of the entire economy.

Hereโ€™s the suspense part. The U.S. credit card market is over $1.3 trillion, and Americans pay $100+ billion every year just in interest. If even a small part of that money stays in households, it becomes real spending power. Less stress, more confidence, more risk-taking. History shows when people feel financially relaxed, markets react first โ€” equities stabilize, and risk assets usually follow. This looks like a hidden liquidity boost, not from the Fed, but directly to consumers.

But thereโ€™s a dark twist. Banks make huge profits from high interest rates. At 10%, their margins get crushed. So banks may fight back quietly โ€” lower credit limits, fewer approvals, stricter rules. If credit tightens, spending slows, money circulation weakens, and the whole effect flips negative. So this policy has two futures: if credit stays open, itโ€™s a powerful consumer boost; if banks pull back, it turns into a credit squeeze. The outcome wonโ€™t depend on the headline โ€” it will depend on how this is managed behind the scenes. ๐Ÿ‘€๐Ÿ’ฅ