Risk of US downgrade still on the cards despite debt deal
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[June 03, 2023] By
Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK (Reuters) -While a U.S. default on its debt has been averted,
the possibility of another credit rating downgrade remains, as 11th-hour
debt ceiling negotiations have become an almost regular feature in
recent U.S. history.
The U.S. Senate on Thursday passed bipartisan legislation backed by
President Joe Biden that lifts the government's $31.4 trillion debt
ceiling, following months of bickering between Democrats and
Republicans.
"The risk of a downgrade is exacerbated every time Congress flirts with
the debt ceiling," said Calvin Norris, portfolio manager & US rates
strategist at Aegon Asset Management, who sees another downgrade as
still a risk.
Rating agencies could look at the way the negotiations around the
government's borrowing cap were handled, in addition to fiscal
considerations, analysts have said.
There is a precedent: in the 2011 debt ceiling crisis, rating agency
Standard & Poor's stripped the United States of its coveted AAA rating a
few days after Washington narrowly averted a default, citing heightened
political polarization and insufficient steps to adjust the nation's
fiscal outlook.
Economic damage from the 2011 and 2013 debt ceiling battles had a
chilling impact. Without that political uncertainty, by mid-2015 GDP
would have been $180 billion higher and there would have been 1.2
million more jobs, according to a 2021 Moody's Analytics study.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office said delays in raising the
debt limit in 2011 led to an increase in the Treasury’s borrowing costs
of about $1.3 billion that year.
CHANGING THE AVERAGE
"A second downgrade would matter, and perhaps more than even the first
downgrade," said Wendy Edelberg, director of The Hamilton Project at the
Brookings Institution.
"So much of the guidance that people take from ratings is the average
rating across the three major rating agencies ... The single downgrade
didn't really have any bite in terms of changing the average," Edelberg
said, referring to investment vehicles which are ratings sensitive.
The three major rating agencies - Fitch, Moody's, and S&P Global Ratings
- rate U.S. sovereign debt AAA, AAA, and AA+, respectively. Fitch and
other smaller agencies recently placed their U.S. credit ratings under
review.
William Foster, senior vice president at Moody’s Investors Service, said
the bipartisan debt deal met the agency's expectation of a resolution
ahead of the so-called X-date.
With the debt limit suspended until January 1, 2025, the main drivers of
the U.S. rating returned to be "economic, institutional and fiscal
fundamentals,” he said.
Fitch on Friday said its rating will remain on negative watch despite
the debt deal, as repeated political standoffs and last-minute debt
limit suspensions lower "confidence in governance on fiscal and debt
matters."
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House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) sits
for debt limit talks with U.S. President Joe Biden in the Oval
Office at the White House in Washington, U.S., May 22, 2023.
REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
S&P Global Ratings referred Reuters to its latest update on U.S.
sovereign debt, dated March, which maintained the rating at AA+ with
a stable outlook.
CASCADE EFFECT
Investors use credit ratings as one of the metrics to assess the
risk profiles of governments and companies. Generally, the lower a
borrower's rating, the higher its financing costs.
A Moody's Analytics report from May said a downgrade of Treasury
debt would set off a cascade of credit implications and downgrades
on the debt of many other institutions.
Andy Sparks, head of portfolio management research at MSCI, said
another downgrade by a major rating agency could have repercussions
on investment portfolios that hold top-rated securities, but the
impact on the Treasuries market would likely be marginal. "The
reality is it is hard to find substitutes for Treasuries," he said.
Olivier d'Assier, head of applied research in APAC at Qontigo, said
a downgrade could affect the use of Treasuries as collateral, but he
considered that a very small probability.
"When the dust settles, the U.S. sovereign bond market will still be
the place to go for extra liquidity, simply because there isn’t any
other bucket large enough to contain it," he said.
A downgrade could push some money from Treasury funds into
government funds or from government funds into prime money market
funds, which have a broader credit exposure, according to money
market fund expert Peter Crane, President of Crane Data.
"But I think anyone would take a single A Treasury over AAA
commercial paper," he added.
'REPEAT GAME'
After the 2011 Standard & Poor's downgrade, U.S. stocks tumbled and
the impact of the rating cut was felt across global stock markets,
already in the throes of a financial meltdown in the euro zone.
Paradoxically, U.S. Treasuries rose because of a flight to quality
from equities.
In the 2013 debt ceiling crisis the legislative standoff did not
cause a rating downgrade, although Fitch placed its rating under
review. That standoff caused an estimated $38 million and $70
million increase in borrowing costs according to a Government
Accountability Office report.
"In some investors' minds this has become a repeat game ... there
could be some stigma effects over the longer term, but maybe not as
dramatic as we observed in 2011," said MSCI's Sparks.
(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia; Editing by Megan Davies, Nick
Zieminski and David Holmes)
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