U.S. credit downgrade: Mohamed El-Erian says it's 'surprising,' but 'you scratch your head as to the timing'

In This Article:

Ratings agency Fitch surprised a lot of people when it downgraded its rating on U.S. debt from AAA to AA+. Allianz Chief Economic Advisor Mohamed El-Erian tells Yahoo Finance Live that he was surprised by the move too, and that "what Fitch put in their statement has been true for a while, so why now?" "When you look at the reason you scratch your head as to the timing of this," El-Erian said. On the political issues the downgrade could raise, El-Erian says "domestically, this is likely to fuel more of the polarized conversations that are going on. Internationally, for the adversaries of the U.S., they will point to that as yet another development in terms of the U.S. no longer being as powerful and as influential," adding that he thinks those arguments are "weak, but they will be used."

Overall, El-Erian says there is "no reason for the U.S. to fall into recession," saying the economy is "vibrant enough, it is flexible enough, and it's handling this global soft patch well." His biggest worry is that the Fed will overtighten and "continue pursuing an inflation target, 2%, that makes less sense for today's structural and supply-side elements." El-Erian says he wouldn't have hiked rates in July and "certainly wouldn't hike in September." "There's a more fundamental issue, which is, as I regard, excessive data dependency by the Fed," El-Erian said, highlighting how data is backward looking while the Fed's tool, interest rates, can take time to have an impact.

Video Transcript

- Fitch has downgraded the US government's credit rating. This is only the second time that has ever happened. The first was back in 2011, that's when fellow credit rating agency S&P cut this rating to the same level, AA+. Fitch now says its move reflects an erosion of governance, which has manifested in repeated debt limit standoffs.

Joining us now Mohamed, El-Erian, Allianz's chief economic advisor. And Mohamed was formerly CEO and co-chief investment officer at PIMCO. He's also the President of Queens College Cambridge. It's great to talk to you, as always, Mohamed.

You said in a tweet that you were puzzled certainly by the timing of this. I wonder, though, if you are as puzzled by the fundamental case that Fitch is making here, that there is so much dissent that this is really holding back the US from a fiscal perspective.

MOHAMED EL-ERIAN: So the only response I would have to this is why now? What Fitch put in their statement has been true for a while, so why now? And that explains the reaction that I and many others have had, which is first, this is surprising. Second, when you look at the reason you scratch your head as to the timing of this. And then thirdly, which is most important for our audience, is the expectation that this will have minimal impact on the things that are sensitive to ratings. In particular, the credit default swaps, the currency, and the yields.