By John
Glover Mar 10, 2014 5:42 PM GMT+0200
Bloomberg
The amount
of debt globally has soared more than 40 percent to $100 trillion since the
first signs of the financial crisis as governments borrowed to pull their economies
out of recession and companies took advantage of record low interest rates.
The $30
trillion increase from $70 trillion between mid-2007 and mid-2013 compares with
a $3.86 trillion decline in the value of equities to $53.8 trillion, according
to the Bank for International Settlements and data compiled by Bloomberg. The
jump in debt as measured by the Basel ,
Switzerland-based BIS in its quarterly review is almost twice the U.S. economy.
Borrowing
has soared as central banks suppress benchmark interest rates to spur growth
after the U.S.
subprime mortgage market collapsed and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s
bankruptcy sent the world into its worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression. Yields on all types of bonds, from governments to corporates and
mortgages, average about 2 percent, down from more than 4.8 percent in 2007,
according to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Broad Market Index.
“Given the
significant expansion in government spending in recent years, governments
(including central, state and local governments) have been the largest debt
issuers,” said Branimir Gruic, an analyst, and Andreas Schrimpf, an economist
at the BIS. The organization is owned by central banks and hosts the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision, which sets global capital standards.
In the
six-year period to mid-2007 global debt outstanding doubled from $35 trillion,
according to data compiled by BIS.
Austerity
Measures
Marketable U.S. government
debt outstanding has soared to a record $12 trillion, from $4.5 trillion in
2007, according to U.S. Treasury data compiled by Bloomberg. Corporate bond
sales globally surged during the period, with issuance totaling more than $21
trillion, Bloomberg data show.
Concerned
that high debt loads would cause international investors to avoid their
markets, many nations resorted to austerity measures of reduced spending and
increased taxes, sacrificing their economies as they tried to restore the
fiscal order they abandoned to fight the worldwide recession.
“To get out
of debt, you need prudence and you need pro-growth structural reforms,” said
Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London . “Those are long-term processes. You
can’t get out of debt too quickly or your economy collapses, as we saw in Greece .”
Bond
Returns
Adjusting
budgets to ignore interest payments, the International Monetary Fund said late
last year that the so-called primary deficit in the Group of Seven countries
reached an average 5.1 percent in 2010 when also smoothed to ignore large
economic swings. The measure will fall to 1.2 percent this year, the IMF
predicted.
The
unprecedented retrenchments between 2010 and 2013 amounted to 3.5 percent of U.S. gross domestic product and 3.3 percent of
euro-area GDP, according to Julian Callow, chief international economist at
Barclays Plc in London .
Rising debt
did little to diminish demand for fixed-income assets. Bonds worldwide have
returned 31 percent since 2007, including reinvested interest, according to
Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data. Treasury and agency debt handed
investors gains of 27 percent, while corporate bonds returned more than 40
percent, the indexes show.
Rating
Downgrades
“Total debt
levels, the sum of household, government and corporate debt, haven’t declined
at all in recent years,” said Ben Bennett, a credit strategist in London at Legal &
General Investment Management, which oversees the equivalent of about $120
billion of corporate bonds. “Each time there’s a wobble, the central banks turn
on the taps. Either that works by creating growth with asset prices eventually
coming into line with fundamentals, or it doesn’t and we’re in for a massive
fall.”
Bond
investors haven’t penalized sovereign issuers such as the U.S. , U.K. ,
Japan and France for
losing their top credit ratings. While Standard & Poor’s stripped the U.S. of its AAA
ranking in August 2011, Treasuries moved in the opposite direction from what
the downgrade suggested and yields touched a record low of 1.38 percent in
2012.
In the U.K. , where ratings
were cut one level to Aa1 from Aaa in February 2013 by Moody’s Investors
Service, 10-year Gilt yields fell 26 basis points to 1.85 percent in the month
after the downgrade.
Increasing
Indebtedness
Yields on U.S. government
bonds have dropped 2.3 percentage points since 2007 to an average 1.6 percent,
according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch bond index data. Corporate yields
have declined 2.6 percentage points to 2.9 percent.
Faster
growth is deflecting concern about high debt loads. In the U.S. , the
government will borrow less money this year than at any time since 2008,
validating the nation’s decision to go deeper into debt to combat the financial
crisis as a stronger economy shrinks the deficit, based on a January survey of
the Wall Street’s biggest bond dealers.
The
government will sell $717 billion of notes and bonds on a net basis, 14 percent
less than last year, according to a survey of primary dealers which are
obligated to bid at Treasury auctions. Issuance has fallen every year since the
U.S.
borrowed a record $1.607 trillion in 2010, data compiled by the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association show.
Unprecedented
Stimulus
Helped by
the Federal Reserve’s unprecedented stimulus, the Obama administration’s
deficit spending has enabled the American economy to recover faster from the
first global recession since World War II than European countries that chose
austerity.
Faster
economic growth and falling unemployment in the U.S. has slowed the build-up of
debt as a proportion of GDP to 70 percent, less than two-thirds of the 24
developed nations tracked by Bloomberg. The jobless rate was 6.7 percent in
February, government data showed last week, down from 7.7 percent a year
earlier.
Higher
corporate and individual tax receipts have prompted dealers in the Bloomberg
survey to predict the U.S.
budget deficit will decline by about $50 billion to $629 billion, the least
since 2008.
Smaller
deficits may be short-lived because government costs for retirement and health
care are poised to surge in the coming decade. Spending on Social Security will
rise 67 percent to $1.414 trillion in 2023 from $848 billion this year, while
spending on programs including Medicare and Medicaid will almost double to
$1.808 trillion in 2023, estimates from the Congressional Budget Office
released in May show.
Debt
Recovery
Bonds in
Europe’s most indebted nations are recovering from the region’s sovereign debt
crisis, with 10-year yields from Greece
to Ireland
sinking last week to the lowest since at least 2010.
The average
yield to maturity on bonds from Greece ,
Ireland , Italy , Portugal
and Spain
fell to an average 2.44 percent on March 5, the lowest in the history of the
euro area, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. That’s down from
more than 9.5 percent in 2011, when the region was rocked by concern nations
may struggle to service their debt.
To contact
the reporter on this story: John Glover in London at johnglover@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editors responsible for this story: Shelley Smith at
ssmith118@bloomberg.net
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