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U.S. debt ceiling debate delayed (but not over)

Oct 19, 2021

Redacción Mapfre

Redacción Mapfre

As predicted, Congress passed a $480 billion debt ceiling increase (The White House has said President Biden will sign it into law). When it was first reported that a deal had been reached last week, global markets signaled their approval with markets worldwide registering their largest single day increase since May.

Unfortunately, nothing has changed. Congress simply “kicked the can down the road,” and another standoff will most likely occur in early December when the $480 billion is projected to run out as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has already said Republicans will not back a second extension.

These games of political chicken are dangerous, and sooner or later Congress could manufacture an economic disaster by making the US default on its debt. The stakes are just too high for partisan politics. Researchers at the Federal Reserve wrote during the 2013 debt ceiling crisis (according to The Economist), that if a default were to occur “yields on American debt would spike, the dollar would plunge in value, equities would fall by a third and a mild recession would ensue.”

Congress should stop the madness and start working on a permanent solution to this senseless problem. There are too many real problems in the world to have time to deal with manufactured ones.

Jonathan Boyar, CEO of Boyar Value Group

How to plan your investment cycle throughout life

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Life has its phases. And as those phases change, so do our objectives and personal horizons. The priorities we have right after graduating and starting a career are rarely the same as those we hold in the years leading up to retirement.

“The combination of inflation and a fall in confidence in the US is worrying; it can curb investment”

“The combination of inflation and a fall in confidence in the US is worrying; it can curb investment”

The General Manager of La Financière Responsable, Alberto Matellán, sees signs of alarm in the US economy, which go beyond the tariff war and have been demonstrated in recent events such as the rise in the price of US bonds or the downgrading of its rating by Moody's. Specifically, he points to higher inflation and a decrease in consumer and business confidence, a combination that curbs investment.

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