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Exchequer

NRO’s eye on debt and deficits . . . by Kevin D. Williamson.


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Biggest Bond Fund Dumps U.S. Debt

So, the guy behind the world’s largest bond fund is dumping U.S. government debt.

Got your attention yet?

Bill Gross of Pacific Investment Management Co. (PIMCO) is no great fan of  U.S. government debt to start with: His fund also zeroed out its holdings of Uncle Sam’s IOUs back in 2009, but had added some back into the portfolio. No more. He’s not buying what Washington is selling, and he’s urging others to dump U.S. bonds, too. Bloomberg reports:

Gross in his February commentary urged investors to reduce holdings of Treasuries and U.K. gilts and buy higher-returning securities such as debt from emerging-market nations. “Old-fashioned gilts and Treasury bonds may need to be ‘exorcised’ from model portfolios and replaced with more attractive alternatives both from a risk and a reward standpoint,” Gross wrote.

So, what’s wrong with U.S. government debt? With deficits running at insane levels but interest rates still low, the risk-reward ratio is out of whack, even compared to “emerging-market” countries — read: those Third World regimes whose farcical finances we used to regard with a mixture of scorn and pity, until we began emulating them. All the money-printing down at the Fed is taking a toll:

Gains in so-called headline inflation matter more for the U.S. economy than Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke suggests and rising oil prices may cut U.S. gross domestic product by a quarter to half a percentage point, Gross said March 4 in a radio interview on “Bloomberg Surveillance” with Tom Keene.

“Bernanke tends to think this doesn’t matter — at least in terms of headline versus the core — we do,” Gross said.

What this means, of course, is pressure on the U.S. government to offer higher interest rates on its bonds. Gross says that the rates need to go up about 1.5 percent to reflect market realities. And market realities, ignored for the past few years, are going to start reasserting themselves as “quantitative easing” ends and the Fed stops buying U.S. debt that the markets don’t want.

As things stand, interest on the debt (at about 6 percent of all federal spending) is equal to about one-third of all discretionary spending combined (about 19 percent of the budget). Current forecasts have debt-service costs alone amounting to nearly $1 trillion by 2020, consuming 20 percent of all federal tax revenues. That’s a vicious circle: Bigger deficits add to the total debt, which drives up the cost of debt service, which creates bigger deficits, shampoo, rinse, repeat, and wake up in Argentina circa 1999–2002.

Which gets us back, as usual, toward the one inevitable, undeniable fact of American life at this moment: The major entitlement programs — Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid — other “mandatory” spending, national defense, and interest on the debt make up more than 80 percent of federal spending. Everything else put together accounts for less than $1 in $5 of government outlays. Assuming we don’t default on our national debt, interest on the debt is the one spending item that is truly off the table. Even if we cut national-defense spending to zero, that would only get us just over halfway toward eliminating the trillion-dollar deficit headed our way in 2012. (We aren’t cutting national-defense spending to zero.) Meaning that major reform of the entitlement programs is not optional. It is do or die.

Bernanke & Co. have baked inflation into this cake, and catastrophic state and local finances mean that Washington really can’t pass off its spending schemes onto the governors, mayors, and state legislatures.

You may think the Ryan Roadmap looks harsh and disruptive. But we simply must start dealing with these things right now, while we have some resources, some options, and some time. It will be much more harsh and disruptive to try to deal with these things after the fiscal crisis is upon us, when inflation is skyrocketing, unemployment is through the roof, and the markets start demanding a very high premium to finance the debt of Washington, the states, and the cities, if indeed investors are willing to do so at all.

We are in an extraordinarily dangerous period, one that calls for real leadership in Washington, where the geniuses in charge are currently locked in a death struggle over whether to cut nothing or next to nothing.

NPR? Foreign aid? Food stamps? That isn’t going to do it. The fact that we’re even having a discussion about whether we have to federally subsidize experimental opera companies in Topeka suggests that the message has not quite hit home. Maybe when the Social Security checks stop coming, Americans will notice. Which is to say, when it’s too late.

To be clear, PIMCO in and of itself is not disastrous — it is just a mile marker on the road to Fiscal Armageddon. But it is one worth noting.

—  Kevin D. Williamson is a deputy managing editor of National Review and author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Socialism, just published by Regnery. You can buy an autographed copy through National Review Online here.

Tags: Debt, Deficits, Despair, Fiscal Armageddon

New on Exchequer. . .


COMMENTS   53

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Brian k
   03/09/11 20:08

This is actually comforting for those of us shorting US treasuries via various ETFs. It means that profit day is coming.

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   03/09/11 20:15

As a person who is 20% long in PIMCO in my 401(k), I'm tempted to allocate more to the fund....

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   03/09/11 20:44

If PIMCO dumped it, who bought it? There is a short for you.

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   03/09/11 20:45

Oh Snap! This is just like that point in beginning of the roller coaster ride when you crest over the high point and then....

BAM! The bottom drops out and you're basically in free fall...

Sadly, the attendant forgot to check the harnesses (must have been on his union break I suppose...)

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   03/09/11 20:46

Back about 2000, I bought the PIMCO TIPS fund. The prospectus did tell me that it would occasionally buy something else - guess what the something else was - Enron bonds. I will not go near PIMCO again.

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   03/09/11 21:09

The truly scary thing is that given the amount of inflation that has already been baked into the cake how much real pain will we have to endure before we take the steps necessary to correct things. Even when Reagan won in 80, it was a couple more years before the storm had truly passed. Even if Obama is Carter 2 on its BEST days, the years ahead are going to make those early 80s look like the Golden years.

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eljay
   03/09/11 21:15

themargincall.com praises such moves and exhorts Mr. Gross to never lend to the pigs again.

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   03/09/11 22:17

He must have finally realized total owed debt by the US exceeds the entire world GDP by a fairly large amount.

$118 trillion in total obligations, $14.2 trillion US GDP, but $6.7 of that is um, government spending lol.

China is #2 with $5.87

Hey look at that fact, the US government (all levels combined) spends more money than the entire GDP of China!

Reality Check - We are beyond broke, but we get away with it because of all of the financial idiots that keep lending to us. Enron had nothing on us! We make Bernie Madoff and Enron look like Saints economically. We being he US Government, which is representative of the citizens.

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   03/09/11 22:53

As predicted the bond vigilantes are coming knocking on our door. Great...

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   03/09/11 22:59

What will make Congress get serious? Seems like the deficit alone is 40% of the proposed budget. What worries me is that a lot is held by foreign investors. What also worries me is that, even if we dodge this bullet and start balancing budgets and reducing overall debt, we'll never be out of the woods. When things get better with the budget and the debt, the economy will recover and Congress will try to go back to their old ways.

And what even more worries me is that if Congress does do massive cuts to Social Security, Medicare, etc., there will be riots and people will start dying. Ryan's Roadmap seems the least catastrophic potentially useful thing that has been proposed. I wonder, is it enough?

Maybe we could hold a "spontaneous" rally in Tahrir Square -- I mean, Washington Mall -- and chant deathless slogans like, "Do not fudge it! Cut the budget!" and "Don't forget! Pay off debt!". Maybe even, "Cheer up my physiognomy! Strengthen the economy!" No, that's too vague.

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   03/09/11 23:16

When the Social Security checks stop coming, Congress will have to adjourn to another planet the same day to serve out their terms.

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   03/10/11 00:08

"...the Fed stops buying U.S. debt that the markets don’t want."

Pardon my ignorance, but what does the Fed buy the U.S. debt with?

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KSMoody
   03/10/11 06:30

"When the Social Security checks stop coming..."

They'll keep coming, but they won't be able to purchase very much.

I wonder if wheelbarrow futures are worth considering? Baby boomers will need more of them to cart around their monthly entitlements.

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MarkW
   03/10/11 07:35

Koblog: When the US govt buys US bonds, they use the printing presses to create the money necessary out of thin air.

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Joe O.
   03/10/11 07:42

Don't read into this more than there is - Treasuries have long been considered a staple of a good portfolio because they bend the risk of the overall portfolio downwards for a given expected return.

Nowadays, treasuries are near rock bottom in terms of interest rates....and they are rock bottom because PEOPLE KEEP BUYING THEM at those prices. Law of supply and demand - if people weren't buying them today, then the yield would go up until they were being bought again.

PIMCO is just saying "Hey, listen, for the amount of risk baked into today's treasuries, we can go elsewhere and get another 100 basis points on the yield while keeping portfolio risk identical."

And they are right.

Comparing our situation with Argentina or others demeans your own argument.

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PamK
   03/10/11 08:46

In response to a comment on this article, it is always interesting to see people snark at "baby boomers" for expecting to receive their social security entitlements. The people of the boomer generation have paid into the system as they were required to do for the last 45 years, longer than many people who are snarking at them have been alive. They paid for the retirements of the people before them, AS THEY WERE REQUIRED TO DO, and now younger people seem to not only be more than willing to shut down the Ponzi scheme, but seem to blame the baby boomers for being the ones left holding the bag. Baby boomers did not create the Ponzi scheme. They were responsible people playing by the rules they inherited. Those rules are going to change and lots of them will be in dire straits because they trusted their elected representatives to act responsibly. They did not create the problem, did their jobs, paid into the system, and are being made scapegoats just because of their place in the American economic meltdown.

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Michael K
   03/10/11 09:14

"...the Fed stops buying U.S. debt that the markets don’t want."

"Pardon my ignorance, but what does the Fed buy the U.S. debt with?"

The Fed literally creates new money to buy Fed debt.

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   03/10/11 09:47

Re: PamK's comment. The youngest Baby Boomers have been of legal voting age for nearly thirty years. The oldest boomers have been of legal voting age for nearly fifty years. They have had plenty of time to vote against the Social Security ponzi scheme, but they didn't and still refuse to face reality. Moreover, Boomers decided to have fewer children (fewer kids means more "me time" and more disposable income) exacerbating the entitlement mess. Why should younger generations pay the cost of a mess that Boomers were complicit in creating?

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   03/10/11 10:03

Mr. Wombat,

I am a boomer. I knew in 1984 that Social Security was a Ponzi scheme and I have lived my life under the assumption that it wouldn't be there when I retired. I am good with cutting social security payments. I will be "ticked off" if it becomes "means tested" and those of us who saved and invested get screwed while those people who "partied like its 1999" their whole lives get full payments. If that does happen, just make sure everyone (politicians) are honest and call social security by its true name: "Welfare."

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Bonfire of the Idiocies
   03/10/11 10:14

Gross didn't actually SELL all the funds' govt debt as much as he zeroed it out. In other words, he kept many of the securities but bought hedges to cover the eventuality that the govt debt prices will decline. So, if that happens, the hedges will go up in price and cover his losses. If the bond prices rise, the hedges go down; the price moves cancel each other out.

This isn't totally a distinction without a differnce. He is still saying that he feels govt debt is a bad investment. He doesn't think it's going to be worthless, he just doesn't think it's going to produce the real return (a return ABOVE the inflation rate) that he requires for his fund.

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