Verified Veteran Owned Business
  • Home
  • Pricing
  • Placement Services
  • Principal/Agent
  • White Label
  • News
  • Sign Up
  • Login

Advisors take US debt downgrade in stride: ‘More to do with politics than economic stability’


« Return to News

Financial advisors werent expecting a credit rating agency to downgrade U.S. debt two months after the country avoided a default, but theyre taking the move in stride.

Late Tuesday afternoon, Fitch Ratings demoted U.S. bonds from AAA to AA+, citing expected fiscal deterioration in coming years, the countrys growing debt burden, and the erosion of governance.

The last point relates to Congress and the White House agreeing at the last moment to raise the debt ceiling earlier this summer. Advisors weren’t worried then that the country would spurn its debt. Nor were they shaken up by Fitchs decision, which came weeks after a potentially catastrophic default was averted.

The timing is surprising, but its not totally unexpected, Francisco Ayala, an advisor at The Coleridge Group, said of the downgrade. He noted that Fitch has had a negative rating watch on the United States for a while.

This has more to do with politics than the economic stability of the U.S., Ayala added.

Lisa Kirchenbauer, founding partner and senior advisor at Omega Wealth Management, also was caught off guard by the Fitch announcement.

My initial reaction last night was, Wow, this is a little late, Kirchenbauer said. I dont think its worth panicking about.

Jeff Farrar, founding partner at Procyon Partners, also was sanguine, noting that Fitch is the second credit agency to downgrade U.S. debt.

S&P did it 10 years ago, and were still stumbling on. Nothings gotten better, Farrar said. Its not great, but it doesnt mean the world is going to end tomorrow.

The problems that Fitch cited regarding the brittle politics in Washington were hardly a revelation, advisors said.

Its not telling us anything we dont already know about our government, said Steve Ankerstar, CEO of Ankerstar Wealth. If the U.S. was any other country or company they would have already downgraded.

The relatively muted market reaction with the Dow falling about three-quarters of a percentage point as of early afternoon Wednesday was a good sign.

The overall strength of the economy is why [the sell-off] is not worse, Ankerstar said. But [Fitch does] make valid points about the long-term fiscal deterioration of the U.S. government.

The downgrade is not causing advisors to reevaluate client portfolios.

There has been corporate news that has impacted the Dow more than this downgrade, Ayala said. Investors are just looking past the noise.

Kirchenbauer is focused on the Federal Reserves next move on interest rates, corporate earnings and the ever-looming potential recession. The fact that markets are up this much always makes me incredibly nervous, she said.

Assessing the chance of a second-half economic slowdown is a higher priority than the downgrade.

If the economy stays strong, were going to remain long, Ankerstar said.

But there was one reaction to the downgrade that has investment implications for Ayalas clients. Yields on 10-year Treasury bonds increased to about 4%.

Were taking this as an opportunity to go farther out on the yield curve to capture safe and high yield, Ayala said.

Gen X in for rude retirement awakening unless advisors step in

« Return to Dashboard

Have any Questions?

We're here to help. Send us an email or call us at +1 (585) 329-9661. Please feel free to contact our experts.

A donation will be made by Adviser First Partners to a Veterans organization on behalf of all financial professionals and firms that register each month

Contact Us

Adviser First Partners

Subscribe to our mailing list.

Veteran Owned Business

Quick Links
  • Home
  • Schedule Meeting
  • Listen & Subscribe to Our Podcast
  • Contact
  • New Item
Your Account
  • News
  • Schedule Meeting
  • Register
  • Login
  • Dashboard
  • Sign Out
  • New Item
  • New Item
Get In Touch

P.O. Box 12
Ionia, NY 14475

Phone: +1 (585) 329-9661
Email: info@adviserfirstpartners.com

© 2025 Adviser First Partners. All Rights Reserved.

Web Design by eLink Design, Inc., a Kentucky Web Design company