Gulf News

S&P downgrade of US is a non-event in hindsight

DESPITE RATING AGENCY’S WARNINGS, INVESTOR DEMAND PERSISTS FOR TREASURY NOTES

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The rating agency Standard & Poor’s stunned the world a year ago by stripping the US government of its prized AAA bond rating. The downgrade of long-term US Treasurys threatened to sow chaos in financial markets, driving up US interest rates, pushing the dollar down, scaring investors away from stocks and into that traditiona­l refuge for the fearful: gold. In fact, the Dow Jones industrial­s dropped 635 points in panicked selling the first day of trading after the S&P announceme­nt.

A year later, S&P’s historic move looks like a non-event. Long-term interest rates are sharply lower, the Dow industrial­s reversed course and is now up more than 1,600 points. The dollar has rallied, and gold prices are down from where they were when S&P lowered the boom.

Rival rating agencies Moody’s and Fitch have said they might downgrade the US government’s blue-chip rating, too, though neither has followed S&P’s lead.

It is difficult to imagine a more decisive repudiatio­n of S&P’s warning that the US government might not be able to pay its bills.

No credible plans

But things aren’t so simple. After all, the rating agency downgraded federal debt largely because it feared that America’s dysfunctio­nal political system couldn’t deliver credible plans to reduce the federal government’s debt. S&P decried American “political brinksmans­hip” and concluded that “the difference­s between political parties have proven to be extraordin­arily difficult to bridge.”

A year later, the two political parties are still as deadlocked as ever. They can’t agree how to reduce the annual gap between what the government spends and what it collects in taxes. That deficit is expected to be $1.1 trillion (Dh4.04 trillion) in the fiscal year that ends on September 30. Each year’s deficit adds to the federal government’s $11.1 trillion in accumulate­d debt.

The White House and congressio­nal Republican­s last year came up with a plan designed to force themselves to compromise. If they can’t reach a budget deal by the end of the year, $600 billion worth of spending cuts and tax hikes — far more draconian than an- ything either side would agree to — will kick in on January 1. The shock of those measures would push the US economy over the so-called “fiscal cliff” and probably into a recession, the Congressio­nal Budget Office warns.

Despite S&P’s warnings and the political stalemate, investors still want US Treasurys. Given economic turmoil in Europe and uncertaint­y elsewhere, US government debt and US dollars look like the safest bet around.

That is why the interest rate, or yield, on 10-year Treasury notes has fallen from 2.58 on August 5, 2011 to 1.57 per cent on Friday.

 ??  ?? Reviewing federal debt The Standard & Poor’s building in New York. Its downgrade of long-term US Treasurys threatened to sow chaos in financial markets and also drove up US interest rates.Bloomberg
Reviewing federal debt The Standard & Poor’s building in New York. Its downgrade of long-term US Treasurys threatened to sow chaos in financial markets and also drove up US interest rates.Bloomberg

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