Yellen Says She Disagrees With Moody’s Negative Outlook on US

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said she disagrees with Moody’s Investors Service’s shift to a negative outlook on the country’s Aaa credit rating, expressing confidence in the economy and in Treasuries as a safe asset.

“The American economy is fundamentally strong and Treasury securities remain the world’s preeminent safe and liquid asset,” Yellen said Monday at a press conference in San Francisco following a day of meetings between finance ministers from across the Pacific Rim. The Moody’s action is “a decision that I disagree with,” she said.

Yellen’s comments came three days after the US was threatened with the loss of its last top credit rating. Moody’s signaled it was inclined to downgrade the nation because of wider budget deficits and political polarization.

While the US has enjoyed a surprisingly resilient economy, a ballooning deficit points to longer-term fiscal risks that in recent months have spurred fresh warnings from economists, politicians and credit-rating agencies. For the fiscal year through September, the US deficit effectively doubled.

Moody’s is the only of the three main assessors with a top rating for the US since Fitch Ratings downgraded the US government in August following the latest debt-ceiling battle. S&P Global Ratings stripped the US of its top score in 2011 amid that year’s debt-limit crisis.

Janet Yellen, US Treasury secretary, during a news conference following the the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Finance Ministers Meeting in San Francisco, California, US, on Monday, Nov. 13, 2023. Yellen will visit China again next year at her counterpart's invitation, as officials in the worlds two biggest economies seek to boost contact further and improve tense relations. Photographer David Paul MorrisBloomberg