New York, Dec 30 : The stalled progress in the Washington budget battle may be rattling
markets but the gridlock among policymakers will not move the rating agencies to
downgrade the United States - yet.
The U.S. credit rating is far from
safe. All three major agencies have negative outlooks on the United States,
which suffered its first downgrade in history last year when Standard &
Poor's stripped it of its triple-A rating.
But the fiscal cliff is only
one event in a series of issues that will see ratings agencies looming over
Washington for months.
Investors sold off riskier assets such as stocks
and scooped up safe-havens such as the dollar and U.S. Treasuries after
Republican Representative John Boehner failed to find enough support from his
own party to push a measure raising taxes on millionaires through the House of
Representatives.
With Boehner's leadership as speaker of the House on the
line, markets worry he can't get any tax plan through Congress at all - much
less the stricter terms Obama wants in what's becoming the latest drawn-out
political budget debacle.
Dysfunction in Washington was specifically
cited as one of the reasons Standard & Poor's cut the U.S. debt rating to
AA-plus in August 2011. The "fiscal cliff" itself will reduce the deficit, but
Fitch has said that a continuing political standoff could cost the country its
top-notch rating.
"This potential for continued gridlock among
legislators could have profound effects for the U.S. economy," Standard &
Poor's said in a report after the November elections.
Without a budget
deal among lawmakers, the fiscal cliff, a package of $600 billion in automatic
tax hikes and spending cuts, will begin to kick in January 1 and could push the
economy into recession.
If investor hope is fading, though, the rating
agencies still have some confidence. Fitch still sees a compromise before
year-end, spokesman Brian Bertsch confirmed. "That base case has not changed"
from a previous view, he said.
But failure could lead to a rating
cut.
If the fiscal fracas drags into next year and looks set to hurt the
economy, "the U.S. sovereign rating could be subject to review, potentially
leading to a negative rating action," Fitch said in a report.
Moody's
will probably resolve its negative outlook on the U.S. rating in 2013, as well,
but how remains to be seen.
A spokesman for Moody's said that the rating
agency's view hasn't changed since it issued a report in September saying that
the United States could be off the hook for a potential downgrade if there is a
medium-term plan that stabilizes the debt and reduces it as a percentage of
GDP.
In the event of a plan without such policies, "we would expect to
lower the rating, probably to Aa1," according to the report, co-authored by
Moody's lead sovereign credit analyst on the United States, Steven
Hess.
Moody's might take some time to assess a plunge over the fiscal
cliff - but not beyond 2013.
In contrast, of the three major agencies,
Standard & Poor's is the least likely to act soon, since the agency cut the
U.S. rating to AA-plus last August after intransigence on the debt ceiling
debates dented confidence in policymakers.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Rating agencies won't cut U.S. on fiscal cliff - yet
Rating agencies won't cut U.S. on fiscal cliff - yet
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