(Bloomberg) — S&P Global Ratings said revenues from Donald Trump’s tariffs will help soften the blow to the US’s fiscal health from the president’s tax cuts, enabling it to maintain its current credit grade.
While Trump’s trade war has roiled markets, unnerved foreign governments and provoked criticism from leading economists, S&P affirmed its AA+ rating for the US — a score it’s given since 2011, when it first downgraded the world’s largest economy from AAA.
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This is in part because it reckons money flowing from the levies will offset the impact on the US’s budget position from the recent tax and spending bill. It kept the outlook for the long-term rating stable.
“Amid the rise in effective tariff rates, we expect meaningful tariff revenue to generally offset weaker fiscal outcomes that might otherwise be associated with the recent fiscal legislation, which contains both cuts and increases in tax and spending,” analysts including Lisa Schineller wrote in a report.
Treasuries ticked higher across the curve on Tuesday, with yields on 10- and 30-year tenors slipping two basis points to 4.31% and 4.91% respectively. A gauge of the dollar traded little changed.
The decision offers a glimmer of good news for Trump by endorsing one of his arguments that imposing tariffs is already helping to improve the nation’s fiscal position. Tariff revenue reached a fresh monthly record in July, with customs duties climbing to $28 billion.
The views of ratings companies have had an important impact on the world’s biggest bond market this year. Deficit concerns prompted Moody’s Ratings to strip the US of its last top credit rating in May, bringing its score in line with S&P and Fitch Ratings. The move sent yields on 30-year Treasuries above 5% and raised the risk of forced selling from some pension funds.
S&P said the stable outlook indicates its expectation that while the fiscal deficit won’t meaningfully improve, it also won’t persistently deteriorate over the next several years. The company expects net general government debt to surpass 100% of GDP over the next three years, but it thinks the general government deficit will average 6% from 2025 to 2028, down from 7.5% last year.