U.S. Deficit and Inability to Repay Debts

Last week, Standard & Poor’s lowered Japan’s bond rating to AA-, the fourth-highest level. By that standard, the U.S. got away with a slap on the wrist from Moody’s Investors Service, which warned merely that “the probability of assigning a negative outlook in the coming two years is rising.” If you look at the U.S. budget trajectory with an eye on the lessons from Japan’s recent history, there’s a strong case that the U.S. rating should be cut immediately. It’s true that the U.S., with total government debt equal to 98.5 percent of gross domestic product, according to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development data, has many years of unrestrained deficits ahead before it reaches the crisis point of Japan, which has debt of 204 percent of GDP. A more plausible target, however, is 135.4 percent of GDP. That was Japan’s debt in 2000, just before S&P first downgraded it from AAA in February 2001. If the U.S. makes no fiscal progress, and continues to run annual deficits at the 2011 level of $1.48 trillion dollars, it will take just six years to reach a debt level of 135.3 percent of GDP. The Japan precedent suggests the U.S. would lose its sacrosanct AAA rating at that point, if not sooner. To be fair, the Congressional Budget Office, in its forecasting, predicts that the U.S. will do better than that, in part because revenue should increase as the economy recovers. CBO’s wholly unrealistic baseline forecast suggests the day of reckoning is …Continue Reading

DOW Jones and FX

Dow Jones & Co. will launch a real-time information service targeting the burgeoning foreign-exchange market in coming months, the company said. DJ FX Trader, combining news from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal with technology from the company’s Financial Markets business, will offer “exclusive news, analysis and real-time opportunities to help customers better direct their market and currency trading strategies,” Dow Jones said in a news release. “The product offers access to breaking FX news ahead of the broader market and other exclusive content,” the company said. “DJ FX Trader is a key addition to Dow Jones’s portfolio of FX trading products, which includes several FX-specific wire and commentary services.” News Corp. owns Dow Jones, which is the publisher of The Wall Street Journal. “The House of Medici made money from foreign exchange—in our age, it will be Dow Jones,” said Robert Thomson, editor in chief of Dow Jones and managing editor of The Wall Street Journal. “We will provide market-moving news and alerts, unique statistics and incisive commentary backed by the full weight of our news organization and supported by high-speed delivery technology. Currencies were once merely a measure, but they are now a global asset class.” Dow Jones is seeking to benefit from the explosion in global currency trading, which recently hit $4 trillion a day and is projected to more than double to $10 trillion by 2020, according to UBS AG. Institutions spend more than $1.7 billion annually for foreign-exchange news and information, according to …Continue Reading

JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs show signs of profit.

http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/KrWfB_2EN4o/idUSTRE70D2BM20110114

Ben Bernanke’s Update on Our Economy.

January 7, 2011 Federal Reserve No Comments

http://us.mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE7060UW20110107?ca=rdt

2011 Off To A Good Start

January 3, 2011 Uncategorized No Comments

http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/7a2sp1eKppY/idUSTRE6BM24V20110103

Spending Cuts?

January 3, 2011 National Debt No Comments

It seems as if we as Americans are being put through a large degree of uncertainy in relation to tax and social reform. Republican house has decided to try and extend Bush tax cuts beyond the immediate future. Republicans also believe that spending cuts should be the main source of funding for the federal deficit. Mistermoneyman viewers what do you think about these proposed changes?

 

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