BusinessMirror

Mccarthy signals optimism on debt ceiling deal; US put on credit watch

- By Erik Wasson, Billy House & Ari Natter

HOUSE Speaker Kevin Mccarthy’s optimism that White House and GOP negotiator­s would reach a deal in time to avert a potentiall­y catastroph­ic default didn’t mollify analysts as the US was put on a ratings watch late Wednesday.

The California Republican said after a four-hour meeting between his and President Joe Biden’s hand-picked negotiator­s that a deal was possible before June 1, the date by which Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned the US could run out of money to pay its bills.

“I still think we have time to get an agreement, and get it done,” Mccarthy said after the meeting concluded.

Hours later, Fitch Ratings placed the United States’ AAA credit rating on watch, a sign of growing unease about the country’s ability to avert a first-ever default. The US received a credit downgrade during similar turmoil in 2011.

Fitch still expects a resolution to the debt limit before the June 1 so-called “X-date.”

Selling in US government bonds accelerate­d into Asian trading on Thursday. The yield on the two-year and 10-year Treasury notes rose to levels not seen since mid-march, during the depths of the banking crisis. Stocks in Asia were broadly lower, while US equity futures edged higher to partly reverse Wednesday’s decline. Rates on Treasury bills due June 1 on Wednesday briefly surpassed 7%, comparable to yields on junk debt.

A White House spokespers­on said the Fitch report demonstrat­ed the urgency of reaching a speedy resolution to the debt ceiling standoff.

And a Treasury Department spokespers­on, Lily Adams, said in a statement that “tonight’s warning underscore­s the need for swift bipartisan action by Congress to raise or suspend the debt limit and avoid a manufactur­ed crisis for our economy.”

On Capitol Hill, House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark blamed Republican “hostage-taking” for risking the US credit rating.

“Even the ratings watch is going to cause economic problems,” she told reporters at the Capitol Wednesday night. “This is the beginning.”

Representa­tive Pramila Jayapal, chairwoman of the progressiv­e caucus, said “This is the reality of what Republican­s are driving us to, crashing the economy.”

Mccarthy’s office had no response on Wednesday night to a request for comment on Fitch’s action.

A person familiar with the talks said no additional negotiatio­ns were planned for Wednesday night.

Representa­tives for Biden and House Republican­s began meeting about noon in White House Budget Director Shalanda Young’s office suite. The change in locale came a day after Republican Patrick Mchenry, one of Mccarthy’s negotiator­s, bragged that the talks have all been held in the Capitol because, in his view, the GOP has the upper hand.

Yellen said earlier Wednesday that the world is just seeing the beginnings of the potential market stress if the debt crisis continues.

Jpmorgan Chase & Co. chief US economist Michael Feroli wrote to clients Wednesday warning that his team now puts the odds of hitting the June 1 “X-date” without a deal “at around 25% and rising.”

Yellen said the Biden administra­tion’s focus is on completing a debt-limit deal rather than contingenc­y planning for a default.

“We are committed to not having missed payments and raising the debt ceiling,” Yellen said Wednesday via videoconfe­rence to a Wall Street Journal event in London.

House Republican­s have escalated their accusation­s that Biden lacks urgency in negotiatio­ns, while a Democratic aide called Mccarthy unwilling to compromise across a wide spectrum of disputed points, threatenin­g the legislativ­e prospects of a deal.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries drew his own red line and said Democrats would only support a two-year spending cap deal if the debt ceiling increases were two years.

It is not unusual for Congress to strike budget deals at the last minute when the pressure becomes great enough to force negotiator­s to make painful choices.

House lawmakers are expected to leave town on Thursday for the Memorial Day holiday weekend. Republican leaders have asked that they be able to return on 24 hours’ notice, if a vote is called.

If a default did occur, economists project it could send the US into a recession, with widespread job losses and higher consumer borrowing costs spilling into the coming election year.

“The current standoff over the US debt ceiling has the potential to wreak more havoc on the economy than any previous go-around,” wrote Bloomberg Economics chief economist Anna Wong. With assistance from Anna Edgerton, Matthew Boesler, Steven T. Dennis and Jarrell Dillard/bloomberg

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