Moody's recortara la deuda de US a Aa si cae en default y no suben el limite de la deuda.
Moody’s Sees U.S. Rating Cut to Aa On Default
By John Detrixhe and Wes Goodman - Jun 29, 2011 9:31 PM ET .. The U.S. flag flies above the Treasury building in Washington, D.C. The U.S. would risk not winning back its top Aaa credit rating soon if the nation’s debt limit causes even a short-term default, Moody’s senior credit officer said in an interview this month. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg
.Standard & Poor’s will cut the U.S. credit rating to its lowest level and Moody’s Investors Service said it would reduce its ranking if the government fails to increase the debt limit, leading to a default.
S&P would lower its sovereign top-level AAA ranking to D, the last rung on its scale, John Chambers, chairman of the company’s sovereign rating committee, said in an interview yesterday. Moody’s said it would probably assign a level in the Aa range.
“We believe the debt ceiling will be raised and the government won’t default,” Chambers said by telephone from New York. “Otherwise we wouldn’t have a AAA rating on the U.S. government. It’s evolving as we expected.”
President Barack Obama and U.S. lawmakers are seeking a compromise to cut spending and reduce the deficit to clear the way for an agreement to raise the nation’s borrowing limit, currently capped at $14.3 trillion. The Treasury has said it has until Aug. 2 before its ability to pay the U.S. debt expires.
S&P put the U.S. government on notice in April that the nation risks losing its AAA standing unless policy makers agree on and begin “meaningful implementation” of a plan by 2013 to reduce budget deficits and the national debt.
Ratings directly linked to the U.S. government would move in step with any sovereign action, while some Aaa rankings of state and local governments may be vulnerable, Moody’s said in its report yesterday.
‘Not Compatible’
The U.S. would risk not winning back its top Aaa credit soon if the nation’s debt limit causes even a short-term default, Moody’s said this month.
A default stemming from “the debt limit and the political configuration would indicate that, well, this might happen again,” said Steve Hess, the company’s senior credit officer. “That risk is perhaps not compatible with Aaa,” Hess said at Bloomberg headquarters in New York.
Moody’s warned on June 2 that it will put the U.S. credit rating under review for a downgrade unless there’s progress on increasing the debt limit by mid-July.
To contact the reporters on this story: John Detrixhe in New York at
jdetrixhe1@bloomberg.net; Wes Goodman in Singapore at
wgoodman@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at
dliedtka@bloomberg.net; Rocky Swift at
rswift5@bloomberg.net .