Zandi Says Too-Calm Investors Raise Risk of US Default Calamity

Mark Zandi, the Moody’s Analytics chief economist, warned that investors are “too sanguine” about a looming political fight over the US debt limit — and that itself raises the danger of a devastating default.

(Bloomberg) — Mark Zandi, the Moody’s Analytics chief economist, warned that investors are “too sanguine” about a looming political fight over the US debt limit — and that itself raises the danger of a devastating default.

Overconfidence that politicians will come to agreement in time to avert a default is likely to delay market gyrations ahead of a debt-limit deadline, and that may send “the wrong signals to lawmakers who are taking their cues from investors,” Zandi wrote in a note Monday.

The ultimate consequences could drive down stock prices as much as third and throw up to 6 million Americans out of work, he said.

Zandi, whose fiscal and economic analysis has been regularly cited by the Biden administration, said his best estimate for when the Treasury will run out of financing options is a window from August to “no later than early October.”

Read More: Treasury Starts Maneuvering Funds to Avoid Breaching Debt Limit

Without clear signs of peril from financial markets, members of Congress “may believe they have nothing to worry about and fail to resolve the debt limit in time,” Zandi wrote. 

Zandi said that would be “an egregious error” and even if Congress acted quickly to let the Treasury resume paying federal obligations, “it would be too late for the already-fragile economy, and a recession would ensue.”

If an impasse over the debt limit dragged on “even a few weeks” after a payments default, it would do damage comparable to the 2008 global financial crisis, Zandi said.

In such a scenario, he forecast US gross domestic product would decline by 4%, nearly 6 million jobs would be lost and stock prices would slide by a third — wiping out $12 trillion in household wealth at the worst of the selloff. The unemployment rate would rise to more than 7%, he added.

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