As lawmakers continue to debate what it takes to raise the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling, America is edging closer to disaster.
So what happens if the U.S. fails to raise its borrowing ceiling in time to avoid a default, how major nations are preparing for that scenario, and how the Treasury will pay its debts. The question arises as to what would actually happen if it did not. lender.
It is difficult to say with certainty how this situation will unfold as it is unprecedented. But this isn’t the first time investors and policy makers have had to think “what if.” And they’re busy updating their plans for how things will play out this time around.
Negotiators appear to be on track for a deal, but time is short. It is not certain whether the debt limit will be lifted by June 5th. The Treasury Department now estimates that the government will run short of cash to pay all bills on time, a point known as the “X date.”
Rep. Patrick McHenry, a North Carolina Republican who has been involved in the talks, said, “We are forced to close the meeting because of the schedule.” “I don’t know if it will be the next day or within a few days, but we have to get it together.”
Big questions remain about what could happen in the market, how the government plans to default, and what happens when US money runs out. Now let’s see how things play out.
before x date
Financial markets are becoming more volatile as the US approaches X-Date. While enthusiasm for hopes of boosting profits from artificial intelligence has helped the stock market recover, concerns about the debt ceiling persist. The S&P 500 rose 1.3% on Friday, a modest 0.3% gain for the week.
Fitch Ratings announced this week that it will put the country’s highest AAA credit rating for review. Possibility of downgrading. Another rating agency, DBRS Morningstar, made a similar assessment on Thursday.
For now, the Treasury is still selling bonds and making payments to lenders.
This helps allay some concerns that the Treasury will not be able to repay all of its maturing debt, not just interest payments. This is because the government regularly conducts new bond auctions, where bonds are sold to raise new funds. The tender is designed to allow the Treasury Department to repay old debt while receiving newly borrowed cash.
This would allow the Treasury Department to avoid significantly increasing its $31.4 trillion debt outstanding, but it has taken an unusual step in the wake of the imminent debt ceiling on Jan. can’t do that. At least for now, cash is needed to avoid payment interruptions.
For example, this week the government sold 2-, 5- and 7-year bonds. But that debt won’t be “settled” until May 31, when the other three securities are due, meaning the cash has been turned over to the Treasury and the securities have been delivered to the buyer at auction.
More precisely, the newly borrowed cash is slightly larger than the amount due, and the difficult act of balancing all the money coming in and going out presents a challenge for the Treasury over the coming days and weeks. .
When all payments are tallied, the government will end up with just over $20 billion in additional cash, according to TD Securities.
Some of that could go toward a $12 billion interest payment that the Treasury Department has to pay on the same day. But as time goes on and it becomes harder to avoid debt limits, the Treasury may be forced to defer additional funding, as it did during the 2015 debt limit stalemate.
After X Days Before Default
The US Treasury pays its debts through a federal payment system called Fedwire. Large banks have accounts with Fedwire, and the Treasury Department applies debt payments to those accounts. These banks then pass payments through clearinghouses such as market plumbing and bond clearing corporations, and ultimately the cash is deposited from domestic retirees into foreign central bank holders’ accounts.
The Treasury could try to avoid default by extending the maturity of maturing debt. Due to the way Fedwire is set up, in the unlikely event that the Treasury Department chooses to postpone the debt maturity, it must do so no later than 10 p.m. It is issued by the industry group Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA). The group expects the maturity to be extended by one day at a time if this is done.
Investors are more nervous that interest payments on other debt could be delayed if the government runs out of available cash. The first big test will come on June 15, when notes and bonds with original maturities longer than one year will come due.
Ratings agency Moody’s said June 15 was the date it was most concerned about the government’s potential default. But it may help next month with corporate taxes pouring into the coffers.
SIFMA said the Treasury could not delay interest payments without default, but could notify Fedwire by 7:30 a.m. that interest payments would not be made by the morning. After that, the payment must be completed by 4:30 p.m. to avoid default.
When defaults are a concern, SIFMA will hold up to two conference calls the day before defaults occur and three more conference calls on the day payment is due, with representatives of Fedwire, banks and other industry stakeholders. are planning to hold Each call follows a similar script to update, evaluate, and plan what will be deployed.
“I think we have a good idea of what could happen in terms of settlements, infrastructure and plumbing,” said Rob Toomey, head of capital markets at SIFMA. “That’s the best we can do. to hold back.”
default and beyond
One of the big questions is how to determine if the US has actually defaulted.
There are two main ways the Treasury can default. One is failure to pay interest on the debt and the other is failure to repay the full amount of the loan when it becomes due.
This has sparked speculation that the Treasury Department may prioritize payments to bondholders over other bills. If bondholders were paid but others weren’t, rating agencies would likely rule that the U.S. avoided a default.
But Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen has suggested that failure to pay effectively amounts to default.
Shai Aqabath, director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said an early warning sign of an impending default could come in the form of failed government bond auctions. The Treasury Department also plans to closely track spending and incoming tax revenues to predict when payment defaults will occur.
Aqabas said at that point Yellen predicted that the U.S. would not be able to make all payments on time and could issue warnings on specific timing to announce a contingency plan that it plans to implement. Said expensive. .
Investors will also receive updates through industry groups that track critical deadlines for notifying Fedwire that the Treasury will not make payments on time.
Defaults can lead to a chain of potential problems.
Rating agencies have said nonpayment merits a downgrade on U.S. debt, and Moody’s has said it won’t restore its Aaa rating until the debt ceiling is no longer subject to political brinkmanship.
International leaders question whether the world should continue to tolerate repeated debt ceiling crises, given the key role the United States plays in the global economy. Central bankers, politicians and economists warn that a default could send the U.S. into a recession, with a secondary wave of consequences ranging from business bankruptcies to rising unemployment. are doing.
But these are just some of the risks known to lurk.
“This is all uncharted waters,” Akabas said. “There is no playbook to follow.”
Luke Broadwater Contributed to the report.