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Debt ceiling showdown: Should investors worry?
Matt Miller
Political Economist
Tom Hollenberg
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
Steve Watson
Equity Portfolio Manager

Stop us if you’ve heard this one before: US lawmakers are clashing over a legislative action to raise the federal debt ceiling. The issue has been percolating for months but could come to a head this summer as the US Treasury starts running out of money to pay its bills.


The decision to increase the nation’s debt limit is often a routine one — except in years when Congress is divided, like it is now. With Republicans controlling the House of Representatives and Democrats in command of the Senate, the scene is set for what could be one of the most contentious debt ceiling showdowns in recent history.


So far, Democrats have said they won’t negotiate on the issue, while many Republicans have said they won’t vote to lift the debt limit without some additional agreements to curb federal spending.


“This could be the worst standoff we’ve ever witnessed,” says Capital Group political economist Matt Miller. “It certainly has the potential to be at least as bad as 2011.”


That’s the year Standard & Poor’s cut the United States’ prized AAA credit rating to AA-plus (where it remains) amid concerns about the government’s budget deficit, a growing long-term debt burden and political conflicts over raising the debt limit. The move unnerved US financial markets for a time, but they quickly recovered.


A US debt ceiling standoff could get ugly, but markets have historically powered through them

The image shows a line graph depicting the U.S. statutory debt limit in USD trillions on the right axis vs. the S&P 500 Index total returns on the left axis from 1995 to the present. The graph notes previous debt ceiling standoffs, specifically the 1995 U.S. government shutdown that lasted 21 days, the September 11 attacks in 2001, the global financial crisis between 2006–2007, U.S. loss of AAA credit rating from S&P in 2011, the 2013 U.S. government shutdown that lasted 16 days and the U.S. government shutdown of 2018 that lasted 35 days. The graph shows the current debt limit is $31.4 trillion.

Sources: Capital Group, Refinitiv Datastream, Standard & Poor's, U.S. Department of the Treasury, U.S. Office of Management and Budget. Periods in which the statutory limit has been suspended are reflected by the dotted lines. These periods include February 4, 2013, through May 18, 2013; October 17, 2014, through March 31, 2017; September 30, 2017, through March 1, 2019; and August 2, 2019, through July 31, 2021. Data as of March 31, 2023. Past results are not predictive of results in future periods.

In fact, not long after the 2011 credit rating action, US stocks embarked on one of the longest bull markets in history — a virtually uninterrupted run from 2011 until the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.


“I think the lesson from 2011, and a subsequent debt ceiling impasse in 2013, is that these events can disrupt markets for a while — sometimes even weeks or months — but if we look at history, they don’t tend to have a lasting impact on investors,” Miller says. “That’s assuming we get a reasonable resolution.”


On 19 April, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy unveiled legislation that would raise the debt limit by $1.5 trillion. The bill also includes several other provisions to curtail federal spending. It remained unclear whether there were enough votes to pass the bill in its current form.


What happens if the US defaults on its debt?


Of course, the worry is that the US could — in the middle of a particularly nasty debt ceiling impasse — wind up in technical default on its many debt obligations, including payments to bond holders. It’s hard to predict what might happen next, but there are many who say it would roil the financial markets and jeopardise the US dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency.


The chances of a technical default — which would occur should a bond payment be missed or even delayed — are very low but not zero, according to Tom Hollenberg, a Capital Group fixed income portfolio manager.


“It's important to make a distinction between the situation we are facing in the US and something much worse, like an Argentina-style default, where investors lose their savings. Nobody seriously believes that will happen here,” Hollenberg says. “In the US, the probability of even a technical default, or a delayed payment, is between 5% and 10%, in my view. It’s certainly not my base case, but it’s something I can’t ignore either.”


When will the US Treasury run out of money?

The image shows a line graph comparing the maximum available cash balances to U.S. Treasury including extraordinary measures. The vertical axis represents USD in billions while the horizontal scale lists the dates March 2023, April 2023, May 2023, June 2023, July 2023, August 2023, and September 2023. A dark blue line represents the debt forecast of $1.6 trillion from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) while a lighter blue line represents the debt forecast of $2 trillion from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Potential X-dates are early June/late July 2023 on the OMB baseline and September 2023 on the CBO baseline.

Sources: Capital Group, Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Piper Sandler. Cash balance figures reflect estimates from Piper Sandler based on debt forecasts from the CBO and OMB, respectively. Estimates assume extraordinary measures are fully deployed and that the Treasury will not allow cash balances below $25 billion. "X-dates" refer to the date on which the U.S. government will be unable to pay all its obligations. Cash balance path is smoothed. As of April 12, 2023.

If the US missed a payment on a short-term note due in June, for example, it would spark an outcry in the markets, accompanied by extreme volatility for a day or two, Hollenberg explains, and then the debt ceiling impasse would likely come to an end.


“When you reach a crisis, that tends to put the political gears in motion,” he adds. “If that happened, I think Congress would very quickly come together and raise the debt limit, and investors would be made whole.”


The law of unintended consequences


That doesn’t mean there would be no consequences for a technical default. The rating agencies could slash the US credit rating again. Investors could drive up the cost of future US debt issuances. And, perhaps worst of all, some investors may no longer regard US Treasuries as the safest investment in the world.


“We don’t really know what the downstream implications would be,” Hollenberg says. “For example, there are banks whose ratings are somewhat linked to US sovereign ratings. There are insurance companies in the same situation, as well as agencies like Fannie and Freddie. It’s difficult to know what would happen to them if one or more of the rating agencies were to downgrade the US again.


“We could wind up with cascading downgrades, and that would be a real problem for some financial institutions,” he warns. “It’s not something we can just gloss over, and it’s why we need a timely resolution. I do think we will get one, I just hope it comes before we encounter any unintended consequences.”


US long-term debt has risen steadily over the past half century

The image shows how long-term debt in the U.S. has risen steadily over the past 50 years. The vertical scale lists the U.S. total public debt to gross domestic product (GDP) % while the horizontal scale lists the years 1970, 1975, 1980, 1985, 1990, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2010, 2015, and 2020. Recessionary periods are represented by gray vertical columns. They include December 30, 1973-December 30, 1974, March 30, 1980-June 30, 1980, September 30, 1981-September 30, 1982, September 30, 1990-December 30, 1990, March 30, 2001-September 30, 2001, December 30, 2007-March 30, 2009, and March 30, 2020-April 30, 2020. A dotted line notes the point at which the U.S. reaches 100% total public debt to GDP.

Sources: Capital Group, National Bureau of Economic Research, U.S. Treasury Department. As of December 31, 2022.

How much debt is too much?


From the point of view of an equity investor, the US debt ceiling debate makes for interesting political theater, but it’s not something that weighs too heavily on investment decisions, says portfolio manager Steve Watson.


“At the same time, I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad idea to have an occasional reminder that the United States is more than $30 trillion in debt,” Watson notes. “Maybe it’s time to engage in a serious discussion about long-term fiscal responsibility.”



Matt Miller is a political economist at Capital Group. He was formerly a senior advisor at McKinsey, a Washington Post columnist and author, host of public radio's "Left, Right & Center" program, and a Clinton White House aide. He has a law degree from Columbia and a bachelor's from Brown.

Tom Hollenberg is a fixed income portfolio manager with 18 years of industry experience. As a fixed income investment analyst, he covers interest rates and options. He holds an MBA in finance from MIT and a bachelor's from Boston College.

Steve Watson is an equity portfolio manager with 36 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/23). He has an MBA and an MA in French studies from New York University as well as a bachelor's degree from the University of Massachusetts.


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