UK TO LOSE ITS TRIPLE AAA BOND RATING-THE USA COULD BE NEXT DUE TO HUGE FUTURE DEBT LOAD APPROACHING 100% OF THE GDP!
Posted by Sterling Cooper Thursday, May 21, 2009 at 11:14 AMCountries like individuals are issued credit ratings based on their credit worthiness. The USA and the UK are both at the venerable and coveted AAA (triple A), rating attesting to the buyers of their notes and bonds, that they are very likely able to pay back the debt (at present).
However, the STANDARD & POORS ( S & P), rating agency has indicated that the UK, will likely in the future, not be able to hold on to that rating since they estimate that by 2013, its national debt will approach 100% of its GDP (GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT). THAT IS THE VALUE OF ALL THE GOODS AND SERVICES PRODUCED BY THE COUNTRY.
They indicated that a AAA rating would be "incompatible" with a debtor nation which has its debt equal to 100% of its GDP.
Oh, oh! That percentage would be somewhat similar to what the debt ratio would be for the USA by approximately that same time frame.
Does that foretell the possible rating downgrade for the USA? The short answer is YES, and definitely YES!
If that happens, interest rates will soar for US debt-Notes and Bonds, and the staggering debt load will cost more to maintain, causing an ever more expensive budget expense item to add to the growing deficit (ever present deficit).
Hopefully the government will understand that with this event, it will be disastrous to all elements of the economy. The dollar will lose value as a global currency of trade and other currencies may be used to routinely replace it for commercial transactions.
It would not be easy to purchase oil and pay for it in YUAN, or REALS or RUBLES.
This process appears to be going forward, full steam ahead.
Britain may lose its AAA credit rating for the first time as government finances deteriorate in the worst recession since World War II.
Standard & Poor’s lowered its outlook on Britain to “negative” from “stable” and said the nation faces a one in three chance of a ratings cut as debt approaches 100 percent of gross domestic product. The pound fell the most in four weeks against the dollar, the FTSE 100 Index slid as much as 2.8 percent and the cost of insuring U.K. debt against default rose.
Britain needs to sell a record 220 billion pounds ($344 billion) of bonds in the fiscal year through March 2010 as the economy contracts and Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling predicts that the budget deficit will reach 175 billion pounds, or 12.4 percent of GDP. The U.K.’s worsening finances parallel the public perception of Prime Minister Gordon Brown, whose Labour government has trailed the Conservative opposition for more than a year in polls.
“Somebody will have to tackle the finances in the U.K., which has not been done at present,” said David Scammell, a money manager at Schroder Investment Management Ltd. in London, where he helps oversee $158 billion in assets. “The budget that we have is just unacceptable. You need a political will to deal with this enormous problem.”
Gilts Drop
Gilts fell, pushing the yield on the 4.5 percent note due March 2019 up as much as 13 basis points to 3.71 percent, before rebounding to 3.63 percent at 1:58 p.m. in London after the U.K. successfully sold a record 5 billion pounds of five-year notes. The budget deficit increased to 8.5 billion pounds last month, the most for April since records began in 1993, the Office for National Statistics said in London today.
Britain would become the fifth western European Union nation to lose its rating because of the economic slump, following Ireland, Greece, Portugal and Spain. The U.K.’s debt load next year will be 66.9 percent of GDP, exceeding Canada’s 29.1 percent and Germany’s 58.1 percent, according to April 22 forecasts by the International Monetary Fund. The U.S. will be at 70.4 percent, and the 16-nation euro area at 68 percent, with France at 70.6 percent, according to the IMF.
“The key from a market perspective is whether this is a stand-alone U.K. problem or whether it is the start of a trend where the agencies start to review the ratings of various sovereigns across the developed world,” said Gary Jenkins, head of credit research at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London. “If this is really just a case of the U.K. deteriorating as a credit then it could have a significant impact going forward.”
Unemployment Jumps
Brown’s efforts to patch up the nation’s finances are being hobbled by an economy mired in its first recession since 1991. Unemployment surged to 2.2 million in March, the highest since 1996, and tax income has dropped 10 percent in the past year. The IMF expects gross domestic product to contract 4.1 percent this year, the most since World War II.
British Land Co., the largest office developer in London, reported a record annual loss of 3.9 billion pounds today as property values slumped across the nation’s capital.
There are no U.K. companies with AAA ratings by S&P or Moody’s Investors Service. British Land is rated BBB by Fitch Ratings, its second-lowest investment-grade ranking.
The difference in yield, or spread, between U.K. 10-year bonds and equivalent German securities widened 14 basis points to 29 basis points, the most since May 7. As recently as March 19, gilts yielded less than bunds.
Stocks, Pound Slide
The FTSE index declined the most since March 30. The pound dropped 0.6 percent to $1.5667 and weakened 0.3 percent against the euro to 87.74 pence. Credit-default swaps on U.K. debt rose 6.5 basis points to 79, according to CMA DataVision prices.
European governments are increasing borrowing to bolster ailing economies and bail out banks reeling amid the fallout from the global credit crisis. Ireland had its AAA credit rating removed by S&P on March 30. S&P lowered the ratings of Spain, Portugal and Greece in January.
“We have revised the outlook on the U.K. to negative due to our view that, even assuming additional fiscal tightening, the net general government debt burden could approach 100 percent of gross domestic product and remain near that level in the medium term,” S&P analysts led by David Beers in London, said in the report today.
The British economy, the second largest in Europe, shrank 1.9 percent in the first quarter, the biggest contraction since 1979, when Margaret Thatcher became Prime Minister, the Office for National Statistics said on April 24. Darling said in his budget the economy will slump about 3.5 percent this year, before expanding in 2010.
Government Support Slumps
Brown needs to increase borrowing to pay for rescuing banks that have reported $121 billion in credit-related losses and writedowns since the start of 2007. The government pledged 40 billion pounds to bail out lenders and hundreds of billions of pounds in loan guarantees.
Labour trailed the Conservatives by as much as 22 points this month, according to a BPIX Ltd. survey completed on May 16. Conservatives had the support of 42 percent of voters, compared with 20 percent for Labour, according to the poll, which didn’t provide a margin of error.
Support for Brown is tumbling in the run-up to European elections on June 4 as a scandal about lawmakers’ expenses engulfs British politicians. House of Commons Speaker Michael Martin resigned two days ago, the first time that has happened since 1695.
Bank of England
The government gave the Bank of England authority to purchase as much as 150 billion pounds of assets with newly printed money in an attempt to lower borrowing costs.
Britain’s “balance sheet is deteriorating rapidly,” Moody’s analysts led by Arnaud Mares in London wrote in a report on April 23. “The government is taking risks with public finances.”
Moody’s and Fitch affirmed the U.K. “stable” outlook today. Moody’s has no plans to review the outlook, Mares said in a statement.
Cross your fingers, and hope for the best.
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