Saturday, February 20, 2010

"Crisis of Confidence": Yes, Risks of U.S. Default Are Very Real, Charles Ortel Says

With America facing $1 trillion annual deficits and debt-to-GDP ratios on par with those of Europe's so-called PIGS, some are asking what was once unthinkable:Is the U.S. at risk of defaulting on its debt?

Earlier this week, Nobel-prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz told Tech Ticker the U.S. "has absolutely no real problem servicing the debt at the current level"; meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner recently said America will "never" lose its vaunted triple-A credit rating after Moody's suggested it was a possibility if we don't get our fiscal house in order.

Take a hard look at America's balance sheet and "you have to be concerned," says Charles Ortel, managing director of Newport Value Partners.

Total gross U.S. debt is now $50 trillion or 12 times the nation's total gross income, according to Ortel, whose debt calculation excludes unfunded mandates such as Social Security and Medicaid but does include corporate debt which he says are "potentially eligible for bailouts." (more)

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