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Eye on the Market I
July 29, 2011
J.P.Morgan
The Capitol Grill. We have arrived at the sad precipice of the Treasury's stated deadline of August 2i0 , when available sources
of funding are reportedly exhausted, other than from raising the debt ceiling. Both parties continue to propose deficit reduction
plans that are unlikely to be agreed to by the other (or even their own). The Treasury has —$1 trillion in assets that it could sell
(including $420 bn in gold, $370 bn in student loans and $85 bn in mortgage backed securities) to delay a default. The Treasury
could also prioritize payments to bondholders, social security recipients, etc. However, there are market-impact, liquidity and
feasibility issues that have to be overcome first (see page 3 for details on payment prioritization and the Treasury's view of asset
sale risks). More importantly, asset sales and prioritization are a temporary fix; some combination of markets, rating
agencies and unpaid entitlement recipients/vendors will likely force both parties back to the Capitol Grill shown below,
where some tough choices will have to be made. In the near term, a small, less ambitious deficit reduction / debt ceiling
increase is all Congress may have time for (let's at least hope for that). But even if a smaller deal is passed, there will be a lot
■
Burr
THE CAPITOL GRILL
E. CAPITOL ST. NE AND 1ST ST
WASHINGTON. DC 2OOO2
Tratnifion
RevenueRalsers,61llions of dollars over 10 years
Raise tax rates on ordinary income by 1%
480
Raise the top 2 ordinary tat rates by 1% (joint fifers
starting at $21.20
115
Raise tax rates on capital gains 6y 2%
49
Raise dividend tax rates on gfliWtaxpayers* to 20% 24
9ncrease cmyorate income tax rates by 1%
sot
Allow MIBusfi tax cuts to sunset as planned
Allow Bush tax cuts on ITTIWtaxpayers to sunset 709
Estate/gift tax rates/exemptions to '09 levels
'fax carried interest as ordinary income
21
Impose a financial crisis resporuibifity fee
3o
Phase out mortgage interest &di/alai;
215
Endieefunion for state andfocaltaxes
862
Curtaildeduction for charita6k giving
219
limit tax benefit of itemized deductions to 28%
293
Eliminate oil andegas pr#rences
44
EmILTFO accounting
98
Reduce write-off benefits of corporate jets
3
Extend depreciation time for certain equipment
241
End-9MT' indexation, mid& class tax cuts remain
(as per OMB)
1,550
End9IStr indexation, mid& class tax cuts sunset
(as per CBO)
661
Change tax bracket inflation indexation
87
5x> Value added tax(fow estimate)
1,390
s Mph net worth taxpayers defined as those with
adjustedgross income per year more than $25ok.
2,502
98
Prime Spending Cuts, baons of dollars over to years
95
Preen discretionary spending at 2011 levers
t3
Reduce growth in non-defense discretionary (discr.)
spending by 1% a year
327
Emu non-defense discr. spending at 2011 (eve& 642
Reduce non-defense discr. spending by 1% a year 932
Erene non-defense discr. spending until-2o15
406
Reduce growth in defense spending 6y 1% a year 286
Treeze definse spending at 2011 level
611
Rake defense spending by 1% a year
862
Change inflation indexation for Social Security
112
Change 'Medicare el@ibility age to 67
125
Alkw14edicare doctor reimbursement cuts
249
Change Medicaid grants to states
287
Change Medicaid formulas for reimbursements
18i
Eliminate extension of unemployment benefits
57
Spending cuts already assumed to takepace 6y CRO
Reduce troops in 'Iraq/18h by 45i by 2015
1,134
Tr° credit cards accrdwithout dsftcit reduction plan
sufficient to stabilize debt ratios at —70% of GDP by
2021 (see nextyage). The CPO Baseline stabilizes the
debt ratio, but requires 8 trillion less in deficits over 10
years con pared to the CRO !(tentative Case, which
assumes a continuation of most current policies.
Congress must %stash hands before returning to work
Sources: Office of Tianagement ant Budget, Congressional
Pudget Office, Committee for a Resyons 161efecferaf Stscifet,
Joint Committee on l'axation,11 Morgan Private Bank.
EFTA00617493
Eye on the Market
IP Morgan
more work to do. As proposed by both Boehner and Reid plans, after agreement on $1-$I.5 trillion in spending cuts, 12-
member bipartisan committees would be formed to make additional deficit reduction recommendations (joint committee reports
due by Thanksgiving, with deliberations under special expedited rules by Christmas). To get a sense for why both revenue
raisers and spending cuts are needed, we created two deficit reduction plans' representing ideological extremes. The first is a
Huey Long "Share the Wealth" (STW) program relying exclusively on the wealthy and the corporate sector to close the deficit,
without any spending cuts. Here's the STW program:
US long-term debt scenarios
•
Raise top two ordinary income tax brackets (>$212.3 k
Net debt to GDP, percent
in annual adjusted gross income) by 5%; limit benefit of
105
itemized deductions to 28% on top 2 brackets; raise
too
capital gains tax rates on top 2 brackets back to 2001
levels; return estate & gift tax rates to 2009 levels; tax
95
dividends for high income taxpayers at 20%; end oil
90
and gas tax preferences; tax carried interest at ordinary
85
rates; eliminate tax preferences for corporate jets
80
•
Total deficit reduction of $1.4 trillion, including interest
75
The other case is the Herbert Hoover Austerity plan (HHA),
70
which achieves deficit reduction solely through discretionary
65
•
spending and entitlement cuts, with no revenues raised:
• Italy
•1c'e V"-
(00
3
STW A
HHA
cep
President's Budget S
• France
CBO June 2011 Baseline
•
2010
2012
2013
2015
2016
2018
•
Freeze non-defense discretionary spending at 2011
Sou ce: CBO, IMF, OMB,.. Morgan Private Bank.
levels; reduce defense spending by 1% a year; change inflation indexation for social security (lowering payments); change
Medicare eligibility age to 67; allow Medicare doctor reimbursement cuts to proceed as previously agreed
•
Total deficit reduction of $2.4 trillion, including interest
We plot the STW and HHA plans on our CBO wedge, in between the CBO Baseline (all tax cuts return to 2001 levels and other
contractionary measures), and the Alternative case (continuation of most current tax policies). As shown, neither plan arrests
the rise in Federal debt; nor does the President's budget, nor the initial phases of the Reid or Boehner plans. You can
use the Capitol Grill menu to construct deficit reductions of your own.
Even if a smaller deal is all that is agreed to, perhaps S&P2 will wait to see what happens with the bipartisan deficit
reduction committees before deciding what to do about the rating. In case there is a downgrade, we do not foresee a
meaningful selloff in the Treasury markets; it could be a bigger problem for equity markets, at least in the short term:
•
Most collateral agreements appears to have leeway to avoid immediate liquidation of the collateral in case of a downgrade
•
Money market funds that are subject to 2a7 legislation even have the ability to hold defaulted collateral if selling would be
disruptive and not in the fund's shareholder interest, so a downgrade should not force any specific action
•
There is nothing in ERISA language governing pension funds that would trigger a sale in case of a downgrade; it would be
up to individual account guidelines as to whether there was flexibility on collateral rules.
•
We do not foresee any changes to bank or insurance company regulations regarding the zero risk-weighting applied to
Treasuries, nor its eli ibility as general collateral in repo transactions3.
•
A downgrade by
would probably trigger a matching downgrade of Agency paper (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac),
GNMA, municipal bonds backed by Treasury bonds, the Federal Home Loan Bank and the Federal Farm Credit Bank.
There could be eventual down rades of insurance companies, bank subsidiaries and bank holding companies due to
"sovereign ceiling" issues, but
softened their language on this topic on this week's conference call. Other potential
downgrade candidates: states with high levels of government dependency (e.g., South Carolina, Tennessee, Maryland,
Virginia, New Mexico), defined by their exposure to Federal employment, procurement contracts and Medicaid transfers.
•
Finally, we do not expect material change in demand for Treasuries and quasi-sovereign paper by central banks reinvesting
their current account or petrodollar surpluses. Well more than half of all AAA securities in the world are US Treasuries,
Agencies and Agency-backed securities, leaving few and highly fragmented immediate options for central banks, insurance
companies and other AAA buyers (soon to be AA buyers?). An end to central bank reserve accumulation (perhaps out of
concerns for inflation) appears a bigger risk for Treasuries than central bank reserve diversification.
2019
2021
I While we use OMB and CBO estimates of each budget item, there are cross•coefficients that take place when budget items are combined
that we are not accounting for. There is no way to determine if they would have a systematically positive or negative bias.
2 At the current time, Moody's does not appear inclined to downgrade the US, as long as the debt ceiling is raised.
3 Haircuts applied to Treasury collateral are typically 2%; a downgrade could increase this by I% or so, but there is no reason to think this
will happen automatically. It will depend on the volatility of the Treasury markets in the interim.
2
EFTA00617494
Eye on the Market I July 29, 2011
J.P.Morgan
Of course, we can't account for the "unknown unknowns" we might be missing; it wouldn't be a surprise if some market
participants reacted negatively or unpredictably if the debt ceiling is not raised. There are already some signs of funding
tightness in short term credit markets; unwinding decades of market precedent is generally a bad thing. The US first received a
AAA rating almost 100 years ago, when the US began to take over as the world's reserve currency from the United Kingdom.
it would be a lamentable thing to lose. In not being able to agree on how to prevent escalation of the Federal debt, the country's
elected representatives (and citizens they represent) may abrogate one of the most important parts of Washington's Farewell
Address, which was to avoid "ungenerously throwing upon posterity the burden which we ourselves ought to bear". As
time grows short, we are left hoping for divine inspiration to drive a sound compromise, perhaps driven by Senators Reid and
McConnell; maybe we'll have one next week. Bottom line: don't sell your gold.
Michael Cembalest
Chief Investment Officer
On asset sales to fund government operations
If the debt ceiling is not raised, asset sales may be a better option in the short term than prioritization or default. However, asset
sales would be a very tough pill for the Treasury to swallow. As recently as May 2011, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for
Financial Markets Mary Miller wrote a note entitled "Federal Asset Sales Cannot Avoid Need for Increase in Debt Limit".
Miller states that "afire sale of financial assets would be damaging to the economy, taxpayers, and financial markets. It would
harm the interests of taxpayers, and would undermine confidence in the United States. Nor would such sales postpone reaching
the debt limit for a meaningful amount of time. Congress would still need to raise the debt limit" Interestingly, Miller quotes
Treasury Secretary James Baker as saying that the "gold reserve is the foundation of ourfinancial system", a comment which
was made after the move away from the gold standard in the early 1970's. Perhaps the Treasury would enter into a gold-for-
cash swap with the Federal Reserve? Stranger things have happened.
On our understanding of payment prioritization
See chart for a theoretical modeling of what the Federal
government might pay (and perhaps not pay) if it had to
live only on the $170 billion in government receipts
expected for August. The items above the dotted line
are assumed to be paid. We have no idea if this can be
done; it could be administratively impossible.
On the Manchurian Candidate proposal of the week
in the Manchurian Candidate, the far right and far left
of the political spectrum converge together for a brief
moment. This happened recently when Congressman
Ron Paul and Economist Dean Baker of the Center for
Economic Policy Research agreed (as per the July 26
WSJ) on how to give the Treasury room to issue more
debt under the existing ceiling. Their idea: the Fed should rip up the $1.6 trillion of Treasuries it owns. Aside from its
questionable legal issues and the hole it would blow in the Fed's balance sheet, it would compromise the Fed's ability to drain
liquidity when the time comes (since it would do so by selling securities). It could also conjure up fears of debt monetization
(and Zimbabwe). Consider this: people are worried about ECB holdings of Greek debt, which are much smaller.
The material contained herein is intended as a general market commentary. Opinions expressed herein are those of Michael Cembalest and may differ from those of other.
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3
Summary of receipts and expenditures (August 3rd to 31st)
Billions, USD
0
100
200
300
400
Interest on Treasury Securities r
Total Federal
+Social Security Benefits,,
N' receipts
+Medicare
+Defense Vendor Payments
+Unemployment Insurance Benefits
+Military Active Duty Pay
+Veterans Affairs Programs
+Federal Salaries+ Benefits
+IRS Refunds
+Foodnitrition Services+ TANF
+Education Department
4-Housing and Urban.,
+Other Spendiig
Source: Bipartisan Policy Center and BridgewaterAssociates Estimates.
EFTA00617495
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