Moodys downgraded US credit rating
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U.S. stocks turned mostly higher despite Moody's trimming the US' credit rating. Treasury yields jump as investors demand more payout to hold US debt.
White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett criticized Moody’s Ratings over its decision to lower the US credit rating, calling the move backward-looking and saying the Trump administration is committed to lowering federal spending.
Wall Street stocks edged higher Monday (May 19) after shrugging off a spike in US Treasury bond yields following Moody's downgrade of the US credit rating. But yields subsequently eased as
The yield on both 10 and 30-year government bonds rose on Monday after another credit ratings agency downgraded the US on Friday.
Gold prices drifted higher on Monday, steered by a softer dollar and safe-haven demand after Moody's downgraded the U.S. government's credit rating. Spot gold rose 0.9% to $3,229.51 an ounce by 1315 ET (1715 GMT).
Long-dated Treasuries fell on Monday as investor attention turned to the US ballooning debt after Moody’s Ratings stripped the nation of its last top credit rating.
The US is no longer a triple-A sovereign credit, but top banks think investors are focused on other market narratives, with volatility to be short-lived.
A U.S. sovereign downgrade by Moody's has exacerbated investor worries about a looming debt time-bomb that could spur bond market vigilantes who want to see more fiscal restraint from Washington. The ratings agency cut America's pristine sovereign credit rating by one notch on Friday,