 
  
The White House maintained silence in the immediate aftermath of S&P downgrade. — Photo by AFPS&P cut  the long-term US credit rating by one notch to AA-plus on concerns about  the government’s budget deficits and rising debt burden. The move is  likely to raise borrowing costs eventually for the 
American government,  companies and consumers.
“The downgrade reflects our opinion that  the fiscal consolidation plan that Congress and the Administration  recently agreed to falls short of what, in our view, would be necessary  to stabilise the government’s medium-term debt dynamics,” S&P said  in a statement.
The decision follows a fierce political battle in  Congress over cutting spending and raising taxes to reduce the  government’s debt burden and allow its statutory borrowing limit to be  raised.
On August 2, 
President Barack Obama signed legislation  designed to reduce the fiscal deficit by $2.1 trillion over 10 years.  But that was well short of the $4 trillion in savings S&P had called  for as a good “down payment” on fixing America’s finances.
The White House maintained silence in the immediate aftermath of S&P downgrade.
The  political gridlock in Washington and the failure to seriously address  US long-term fiscal problems came against the backdrop of slowing US  economic growth and led to the worst week in the US stock market in two  years.
The S&P 500 stock index fell 10.8 per cent in the past  10 trading days on concerns that the US economy may head into another  recession and because the 
European debt crisis has been growing worse as  it spreads to Italy.
US Treasury bonds, once undisputedly seen as  the safest security in the world, are now rated lower than bonds issued  by countries such as Britain, Germany, France or Canada.
‘Daunting implications’As  the focus for investors shifted from the debate in Washington to the  outlook for the global economy, even with the prospect of a downgrade,  30-year long bonds had their best week since December 2008 during the  depth of the financial crisis.
Yields on 10-year notes, a  benchmark for borrowing rates throughout the economy fell as far as 2.34  per cent on Friday — their lowest since October 2010 — also very low by  historical standards.
“To some extent, I would expect when Tokyo  opens on Sunday, that we will see an initial knee-jerk sell-off (in  Treasuries) followed by a rally,” said Ian Lyngen, senior government  bond strategist at CRT Capital Group in Stamford, Connecticut.
The  outlook on the new US credit rating is “negative,” S&P said in a  statement, a sign that another downgrade is possible in the next 12 to  18 months.
“The long-term implications are daunting. Short-term,  Treasuries remain a premier safe-haven refuge,” said Jack Ablin, chief  investment officer at 
Harris Private Bank in Chicago.
Borrowing costs could riseThe  impact of S&P’s move was tempered by a decision from 
Moody’s  Investors Service earlier this week that confirmed, for now, the US Aaa  rating. 
Fitch Ratings said it is still reviewing the rating and will  issue its opinion by the end of the month.
“It’s not entirely  unexpected. I believe it has already been partly priced into the dollar.  We expect some further pressure on the US dollar, but a sharp sell-off  is in our view unlikely,” said Vassili Serebriakov, currency strategist  at Wells Fargo in New York.
“One of the reasons we don’t really  think foreign investors will start selling 
US Treasuries aggressively is  because there are still few alternatives to the US Treasury market in  terms of depth and liquidity,” Serebriakov added.
S&P’s move  is also likely to concern foreign creditors especially China, which  holds more than $1 trillion of US debt. Beijing has repeatedly urged  Washington to protect its US dollar investments by addressing its budget  problem.
Obama administration officials grew increasingly  frustrated with the rating agency through the debt limit debate and have  accused S&P of changing the goal posts in its downgrade warnings,  sources familiar with talks between the administration and the ratings  firm have said.
The downgrade could add up to 0.7 of a percentage  point to US Treasuries’ yields over time, increasing funding costs for  public debt by some $100 billion, according to SIFMA, a US securities  industry trade group.
S&P had placed the US credit rating on  review for a possible downgrade on July 14 on concerns that Congress was  not adequately addressing the government fiscal deficit of about $1.4  trillion this year, or about 9.0 per cent of gross domestic product, one  of the highest since World War II.
The unprecedented downgrade of  the nation’s AAA credit rating by a major ratings agency comes only 15  months before the next presidential election where the downgrade and the  debt will be top issues for debate.
Bitter political battles remain over the ideologically fraught issues of spending cuts and tax reform.
The  compromise reached by Republicans and Democrats this week calls for the  creation of a bipartisan congressional committee to find $1.5 trillion  of deficit cuts by late November, beyond the $917 billion already  identified.
Why S&P downgrades US credit rating?
The credit rating agency Standard & Poor's on Friday cut the United States' credit rating to AA+ from AAA, citing three fundamental reasons for the downgrade, the first ever in US history.
Debt burden worry
According to S&P's judgment, the debt situation of the United States doesn't satisfy the requirement of an AAA rating.
S&P compared US debt with the other four countries with AAA ratings: Canada, France, Germany and Britain.
It estimated the five countries will have net general government debt to GDP ratios this year ranging from 34 percent of Canada to 80 percent of Britain, with the US debt burden at 74 percent.
S&P predicted the net public debt to GDP ratios will range between 30 percent of Canada and 83 percent of France, with the US debt burden at 79 percent.
Although the US ratio of net public debt to the GDP was not the highest among the five countries, the rating agency projected that the net public debt burden of the other four countries will begin to decline, either before or by 2015.
Fiscal plan "not enough"
On August 2, US President Barack Obama signed legislation designed to reduce the fiscal deficit by $2.1 trillion over 10 years.
However, according to S&P's calculations, a good "down payment" on fixing the country's finances would be at least $4 trillion.
"The downgrade reflects our opinion that the fiscal consolidation plan that Congress and the administration recently agreed to falls short of what, in our view, would be necessary to stabilize the government's medium-term debt dynamics," S&P said.
The rating agency believed the prolonged controversy over raising the statutory debt ceiling and the related fiscal policy debate indicated that further near-term progress containing the growth in public spending, especially on entitlement, or on reaching an agreement on raising revenues is less likely than previously assumed and will remain a contentious and fitful process.
Lose faith on policy makers
S&P questioned US policy makers' eagerness to solve the debt problems by bipartisan efforts. Also, the rating agency blamed Democrats and Republicans for ignoring its earlier warnings.
On April 18, S&P assigned a negative outlook to US then-AAA rating, warning the debt ceiling should be raised to avoid a default. However, the action didn't draw much attention from policy makers who had decisive power to take quick measures.
The US debt would reach its ceiling of 14.3 trillion on August 2. If the debt ceiling was not raised, the United States would face an unprecedented default.
Through long, testy negotiations between the two parties in Congress, the plan was finally passed just before the August 2 deadline. However, patience and trust in US policy makers diminished as time went by.
"The effectiveness, stability, and predictability of American policymaking and political institutions have weakened at a time of ongoing fiscal and economic challenges to a degree more than we envisioned," S&P said.
Also, as the difficulties behind the debt problems still loom ahead, S&P worried that US policy makers could not react properly and effectively to the "government debt dynamics" any time soon, given their recent performance on dealing with the debt ceiling.Related Reading
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One of the world's  leading credit rating agencies, Standard & Poor's, has downgraded  the United States' top-notch AAA rating for the first time ever.  
News of the downgrade ended a tumultuous week for US finances
    
S&P cut the long-term US rating by one notch to AA+ with a negative outlook, citing concerns about budget deficits.
The agency said the deficit reduction plan passed by the 
US Congress on Tuesday did not go far enough.
Correspondents say the  downgrade could erode investors' confidence in the world's largest economy.
It is already struggling with huge debts, unemployment of 9.1% and fears of a possible double-dip recession.
The downgrade is a major embarrassment for the administration  of President Barack Obama and could raise the cost of US government  borrowing.
This in turn could trickle down to higher interest rates for local governments and individuals.
Analysis - Robert Peston Business editor, BBC NewsThe US losing its AAA rating matters. It is a very loud  statement that there has been an appreciable increase in the risk -  which might still be tiny, but it exists - that the US might one day  struggle to pay back all it owes. Another important certainty in the  world of finance has gone.
Of course many will argue - and already have - that the  record of ratings agencies such as Standard & Poor's of getting  these things right in recent years has been lamentably poor.
Think of  all the subprime CDO products rated AAA by S&P that turned out to be  garbage.
But S&P, Moody's and Fitch (and particularly the first  two) still have a privileged official position in the world of finance:  they determine what collateral can be taken by central banks from  commercial banks, when those central banks lend to commercial banks.
However, some analysts said with  debt woes across much of the developed world, US debt remained an  attractive option for investors.
The other two major credit rating agencies, Moody's and  Fitch, said on Friday night they had no immediate plans to follow  S&P in taking the US off their lists of risk-free borrowers.
'Flawed judgement'Officials in Washington told US media that the agency's sums were deeply flawed.
Unnamed sources were quoted as saying that a treasury  official had spotted a $2 trillion [£1.2 trillion] mistake in the  agency's analysis.
"A judgment flawed by a $2tn error speaks for itself," a US  treasury department spokesman said of the S&P analysis. He did not  offer any immediate explanation.
John Chambers, chairman of S&P's sovereign ratings  committee, told CNN that the US could have averted a downgrade if it had  resolved its congressional stalemate earlier.
"The first thing it could have done is raise the debt ceiling  in a timely matter so the debate would have been avoided to begin  with," he said.
International reaction to the S&P move has been mixed.
China, the world's largest holder of US debt, had "every  right now to demand the United States address its structural debt  problems and ensure the safety of China's dollar assets," said a  commentary in the official Xinhua news agency.
"International supervision over the issue of US dollars  should be introduced and a new, stable and secured global reserve  currency may also be an option to avert a catastrophe caused by any  single country," the commentary said.
However, officials in Japan, South Korea and Australia have urged a calm response to the downgrade.
The S&P announcement comes after a week of turmoil on  global stock markets, partly triggered by fears over the US economy's  recovery and the eurozone crisis.

  
 - With a bill to raise the US debt ceiling finally passed, the  US has managed to avoid the catastrophic effects of a debt default. Now  the focus has moved to the underlying economy and whether GDP is about  to stall.
  
S&P had threatened the downgrade if the US could not agree to cut its federal debt by at least $4tn over the next decade. 
Instead, the bill passed by Congress on Tuesday plans $2.1tn in savings over 10 years.
S&P said the Republicans and Democrats had only been able  to agree "relatively modest savings", which fell "well short" of what  had been envisaged.
The agency also noted that the legislation delegates the  lion's share of savings to a bipartisan committee, which must report  back to Congress in November on where the axe should fall.
The bill - which also raises the federal debt ceiling by up  to $2.4tn, from $14.3tn, over a decade - was passed on Tuesday just  hours before the expiry of a deadline to raise the US borrowing limit.
S&P ratings (selected)
-  AAA: UK, France, Germany, Canada, Australia
 -  AA+: USA, Belgium, New Zealand
 -  AA-: Japan, China
 
Source: S&PS&P said 
in its report  issued late on Friday: "The downgrade reflects our opinion that the  fiscal consolidation plan that Congress and the administration recently  agreed to falls short of what, in our view, would be necessary to  stabilise the government's medium-term debt dynamics.
"More broadly, the downgrade reflects our view that the  effectiveness, stability, and predictability of American policymaking  and political institutions have weakened at a time of ongoing fiscal and  economic challenges."
The agency said it might lower the US long-term rating  another notch to AA within the next two years if its deficit reduction  measures were deemed inadequate.
S&P noted that the bill passed by Congress this week did  not include new revenues - Republicans had staunchly opposed President  Barack Obama's calls for tax rises to help pay off America's deficit.
The credit agency also noted that the legislation contained  only minor policy changes to Medicare, an entitlement programme dear to  Democrats.
"The political brinksmanship of recent months highlights what  we see as America's governance and policymaking becoming less stable,  less effective, and less predictable than what we previously believed,"  it added.
Newscribe : get free news in real timeMoneychangers see sluggish trade in US dollar
By QISHIN TARIQ qishin.tariq@thestar.com.my PETALING JAYA: Trade in the US dollar has been sluggish over the last  week for moneychangers as customers “wait and see” which direction the  currency will go.
“It has become a waiting game as people look for the best time to buy.
“Now,  even trade in euros has slowed down,” said moneychanger Sahul Hamed,  who operates the PJ Forex outlet at Bukit Bintang Plaza in Kuala Lumpur.
“With  the current economic situation, customers are expecting the value to  dip but are reluctant to buy when they feel it hasn't gone down by  much.”
Anxious wait: The demand for US dollars could spike with a potential  fall in the currency’s value following the downgrading of the US credit  rating on Friday ->>Moneychanger Jamil Akhbar Ali said there had  been a dip in both sales and purchase of the US dollar despite the  stable value of the currency over the last week.
“Most of our customers deal in Singapore and US dollars.
“While  trade in the Singapore currency remains about the same, there are fewer  people trading US dollars,” said the Petaling Jaya-based moneychanger.
Automotive  engineer Meng Ng, 35, a Malaysian based in the United States for the  last decade, said the exchange rate had not changed much since he last  came to Malaysia four months ago.
“While the prices offered by  moneychangers fluctuate slightly every day, on average the exchange rate  has been pretty reasonable,” he said.
With the worsening US debt outlook and after US-based credit rating agency 
Standard & Poor's downgraded the US credit rating on Friday, speculation was rife that the US dollar would weaken considerably.
RAM Holdings Bhd group chief economist 
Dr Yeah Kim Leng said while the US currency would probably dip in the short term, he expected it to recover fairly quickly.
“When  Japan's credit rating    was downgraded from AAA status to AA+, its  debt market was      hardly affected with bond yields remaining  relatively unchanged,” he said.
“The weakening US dollar would  make imports from the country cheaper not only for large industries, but  even for something as small as an online purchase.
“It's a  double-edged sword though, as the US will lower its demand and import  less when its economy is going through a soft patch.”
Trade in renminbi, says FMM
By YUEN MEIKENG  meikeng@thestar.com.my
 PETALING JAYA: Malaysia should consider trading in a different  currency from the US dollar, such as the Chinese renminbi, to avoid  being affected by the dollar's devaluation.
Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM) 
president Tan Sri  Mustafa Mansur said people had to accept the fact that China was poised to be the largest economy in the world.
“We  also export a lot to China and our business with the country has grown  substantially since the enforcement of the Asean-China Free Trade  Agreement,” he said yesterday.
Mustafa said many countries, which  traded using the US dollar, including Malaysia, would stand to lose out  as its exports would have a lesser value following the currency's  downgrading.
“Based on this situation, we might have to look into the possibility of trading in a different currency,” he said.
Mustafa  said this when asked to comment on the United States losing its coveted  top AAA credit rating and its impact in Malaysia.
It was reported that credit rating agency 
Standard & Poor's downgraded the nation's rating for the first time since the US won the top ranking in 1917.
Mustafa  added that it was also better for Malaysia to trade in ringgit as this  would distance the country from any risk of further downgrading of the  US dollar.
He said other currencies, which could also replace the US dollar were dinar, dirham or the Japanese yen.
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