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Analysis: Rating agency scrutiny raises stakes for U.S. election process

FILE PHOTO: U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker at a bank in Westminster

By Ross Kerber and Kate Duguid

BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - As Americans go to the polls, some of the more influential observers of the election process will be the agencies that determine the country's credit rating.

The country's nearly top-notch, coveted rating is partly a reflection of the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency and the fact that the roughly $20 trillion U.S. Treasury market is the largest and most liquid in the world.

Yet two of the three major U.S. credit agencies, Fitch Ratings and Moody's Investors Service, which give the United States their top rating of AAA and Aaa respectively, are watching the election and have said that anything other than a smooth handover or retention of power could cause concern.

The third major agency, Standard & Poor's, rates the country's long-term debt at AA+, just below the highest grade, partly on fiscal concerns. S&P has also cited political disagreements as a constraint on its ratings.

"If we don't have a clear election result after election day we're going to watch the process very closely," said William Foster, Moody's senior credit officer.

Fitch analyst Charles Seville said in a recent report https://www.fitchratings.com/research/sovereigns/drawn-out-us-presidential-election-scenario-highlights-governance-risks-12-10-2020 that the agency will also monitor the election for usual scenarios amid the rise of mail-in voting and logistical challenges at polling places. He wrote the current high grade is contingent on processes "for the transfer of power that are broadly accepted and executed."

Asked about potential election uncertainty this year, a spokesman for S&P said its current thinking was reflected in its April 2 report, which cites partisanship as a rating constraint.

The focus on the process of the Nov. 3 national and state elections comes as U.S. President Donald Trump has offered a mixed message on whether he would cede power if he loses.

So far the agencies have maintained their U.S. ratings despite the economic devastation and fiscal stress caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

LITTLE SHORT-TERM IMPACT

Relegating the United States to a lower-tier credit rating or adding a negative outlook might not be an immediate blow to the value of U.S. Treasury debt, investors said.

Justin Hoogendoorn, head of fixed income strategy for Piper Sandler, said that a downgrade would likely have little impact at least in the short run on investors' perception of Treasuries as a safety play.

When S&P lowered its long-term U.S. rating by one notch in 2011 over a widening deficit and higher debt levels, Treasuries rallied as investors bought them as safe-haven assets.

Should Moody's, Fitch or both join S&P in a downgrade of the U.S. rating, it would effectively mark the end of the country's long run as a triple-A credit, and while Treasury prices themselves may hold up, it could roil riskier assets as occurred in August 2011.

The long-running tensions of that time, including a congressional fight over the debt ceiling, damaged the perceived safety of U.S. bonds. The credit-default swap on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which measures the cost to insure U.S. government debt, in August 2011 had roughly doubled from a year prior.

Other countries have seen sanguine reactions. Late on Friday, Moody's lowered the United Kingdom's sovereign debt rating to Aa3 from Aa2, yet the yield on the benchmark 10-year gilt ended Monday lower at 0.171%.

"We don't think delayed election results will cast any doubts on the viability of the largest sovereign bond market in the world," said Charlie Ripley, senior investment strategist for Allianz Investment Management.

One reason to expect tame bond behavior is an expectation that the U.S. Federal Reserve would step in to suppress volatility.

"In a nutshell, the Fed will again be called on by the markets," said Omar Slim, fixed income portfolio manager, PineBridge Investments in Singapore.

Investors with doubts about the viability of U.S. assets have some alternatives in sovereign debt in other countries, such as Switzerland and Japan, said Erik Weisman, a portfolio manager at MFS Investment Management in Boston. Weisman said MFS has held internal conversations examining which countries' debt would be an attractive safe haven.

"If you're not feeling supremely confident that the legal system will back your claims for assets, and for Treasuries specifically, then maybe you won't see the U.S. as the safest destination," Weisman said.

(Reporting by Ross Kerber in Boston and by Kate Duguid in New York. Additional reporting by Scott Murdoch in Hong Kong and by Stanley White in Tokyo; editing by Megan Davies and Steve Orlofsky)