Thursday, June 9, 2011

US Debt

Fortune presents a fascinating article about Bob Rodriguez, the fund manager who has been uncannily correct about two investment crises of recent years. Rodgiquez now sees another crisis on the horizon. A wind-up on the Fortune article appears in the paragraph below.
"Rodriguez argues that the U.S. debt as a percentage of GDP ratio (currently 64%) is massively under-reported because it doesn't count off-balance-sheet entitlements such as Medicare, and debt owed by Fannie and Freddie. If you factor in those liabilities, he says, the actual ratio is greater than 500% and growing. The U.S. must reduce that before 2012, Rodriguez says, because it's unlikely to accomplish anything during the election year. If nothing changes, he adds, investors will start to get nervous about the amount of debt on the U.S. balance sheet. As lenders balk at buying Treasuries, rates will spike, causing borrowing costs to skyrocket across the financial system. "The financial system is held together with a very thin filament called confidence," says Rodriguez. "When you clip that, all hell breaks loose."

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