S&P Downgrades and Banks: Threats to Global Stability
By Nomi Prins
Standard & Poor’s likes moving on Friday nights after the
markets are closed. It was on a Friday night that it downgraded U.S.
debt to AA+ from AAA. And on Friday night, Jan. 13, it downgraded France
and Austria from AAA to AA+ and seven other European countries
too—Cyprus, Italy, Portugal and Spain by two notches, Malta, Slovakia
and Slovenia by one. Portugal, Cyprus, Ireland and Greece remain at junk
status. Germany’s AAA rating stayed the same.
The markets weren’t shocked by last week’s wave of pre-broadcast
S&P sovereign debt downgrades. For months, the question wasn’t “if”
but “when.” And true to form, just as with the U.S. downgrade, S&P’s
reasoning skated the surface of prevailing wisdom: Governments have too
much debt and not enough income. That’s only part of the story.
Friday, January 20, 2012
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