Thumbs down: Chinese rating agency downgrades US

Despite a temporary budget compromise in Washington, China's Dagong agency
has downgraded the United States. Dagong maintains a negative outlook on the
sovereign credit, as revenue and GDP fail to keep up with the country’s
massive debts.

The Beijing-based
<http://rt.com/business/chinese-ratings-agency-alternative-us-004/> Dagong
agency, one of the few notable non-US based credit rating agencies, has
downgraded America to an ‘A -‘rating from ‘A’. 

The move came shortly after Congress and President Obama narrowly
<http://rt.com/usa/senate-deal-shutdown-default-283/> averted a technical
default. Fear the world’s largest economy may default on its widely
dispersed Treasury Bonds is making investors re-evaluate political and
financial stability in the US. 

“The government is still approaching the verge of a default crisis, a
situation that cannot be substantially alleviated in the foreseeable
future," the Dagong agency said in a press release. 

Ratings by Dagong are not internationally recognized, and will likely hold
only symbolic, and not market, implications. 

According the Chairman of Dagong, Guan Jianzhong, current agencies tend to
arbitrarily favor developed economies. 

On Tuesday, Fitch Agency put the United States’ Triple A rating under a
<http://rt.com/usa/fitch-us-rating-negative-241/> negative watch. The debt
ceiling debacle in 2011 prompted a drop in the superpower’s rating from AAA
to AA+. 

Standard and Poor’s hasn’t issued a warning or downgrade, but released a
statement Wednesday calculating the government shutdown didn’t save, but
rather  <http://rt.com/business/us-government-shutdown-losses-256/> cost the
US $24 billion. 

"The bottom line is the government shutdown has hurt the US economy," the
S&P statement said. 

Overrated 

Dagong thinks the US government debt, currently $16.7 trillion, and spread
domestically and internationally, is rated too high. 

Sixty percent of foreign currency holdings are in dollars, with a total
dollar equivalent of $6 trillion. 

If the US were to renege on its debt obligations, central banks around the
world that hold Treasury Bonds as reserves would be in trouble. 

China, which holds roughly $1.3 trillion in US Treasury bonds, and is quite
vulnerable to a US economic collapse, criticized lawmakers handling of the
debt ceiling debate. State-owned Chinese media lambasted it as a
‘manufactured crisis’. 

Russia, the 11th largest holder of US debt with $131.6 billion, has
significantly reduced its stake in Treasury Bonds. 

According to Bloomberg, Russia has trimmed its holdings by 25 percent from a
record high on October 31, 2010. 

“Such events result not only in short-term jumps in volatility, but also an
erosion of trust in the dollar as a reserve currency and the American
financial system as a whole,”
<http://rt.com/business/russia-central-bank-chairmanship-nabiullina-156/>
Nabiullina told Bloomberg in an emailed statement on October 15. 

Russia’s central bank, though not currently reducing US reserves, is looking
to diversify their currency reserves to Australian dollars and New Zealand
dollars. 

Trapped Treasure 

Political ping pong in Washington may affect future Central Bank reliance on
US Treasuries, but for now, most banks are stuck with what they have. 

“For governments and central banks that already hold a lot of treasuries,
it’s already too late to exit, from an investment point of view,” Martin W.
Hennecke, chief economist at Henley Group Ltd, told RT. 

If China or any country starts selling their treasuries, it would send the
debt servicing price up, which could quickly inject into markets and kill
the sale of all remaining bonds, essentially creating a bubble. 

“China is trying to buy more gold, they actually imported over 2 dozen tons
of gold over the last two years through HK, and they are trying to increase
the gold part of their reserves. It’s difficult for them to do this without
driving prices up. Russia and China are both buying,” the Henley Group
expert said. 

“China understands they made have to eventually write off part of their US
Treasury bond part of their reserve currencies,” Hennecke said. 

 

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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