Moody's Investors Service downgraded the United States sovereign credit rating from Aaa to Aa1 on Friday, removing the last major agency assignment of triple-A status to US debt. The downgrade ends a 113-year run at the top tier and places American sovereign obligations one notch below Germany, Singapore, and Switzerland in Moody's hierarchy. The rating now sits level with Kuwait and Taiwan.
The move follows $36.2 trillion in outstanding federal debt as of May 2025, with net interest expense running at $1.2 trillion annually—higher than the defense budget. Moody's cited the absence of credible medium-term fiscal consolidation, persistent primary deficits exceeding 5.4% of GDP, and mounting political obstacles to revenue increases or entitlement reform. The agency maintained a stable outlook, meaning further downgrades are not imminent but require demonstrated fiscal discipline to avoid. S&P removed its AAA rating in 2011; Fitch followed in August 2023. Moody's was the holdout.
The immediate market response was muted. Ten-year Treasury yields widened 7 basis points to 4.51% in after-hours trading, then stabilized. The dollar index slipped 0.3% against a basket of currencies but held above technical support at 104.2. This calm reflects two realities: the downgrade was widely anticipated after Moody's shifted to negative outlook in November 2023, and US Treasuries remain the world's deepest, most liquid safe-haven asset regardless of rating. No pension fund, central bank, or insurance company can materially reduce Treasury allocations without creating worse liquidity and duration problems. The structural demand persists.
What changes is the long-term cost of capital and the behavioral flags for foreign creditors. Japan and China together hold $2.1 trillion in Treasuries. Neither can dump holdings without destroying their own reserve positions, but both can slow marginal purchases or shift new accumulation toward German Bunds, UK Gilts, or inflation-linked alternatives. A 20-basis-point sustained increase in borrowing costs—modest by historical standards—adds roughly $72 billion annually to debt service on new issuance. That figure compounds. Meanwhile, rating-triggered clauses in certain structured finance vehicles and insurance portfolios may force mechanical rebalancing, creating episodic volatility in the $27 trillion Treasury market even if the macro picture holds.
Allocators should monitor three developments over the next 90 to 180 days: whether Japan's Ministry of Finance signals any change in its Treasury purchasing cadence during quarterly FX reserve disclosures; whether Congressional Budget Office projections in June revise deficit forecasts upward beyond the current $1.9 trillion baseline for fiscal 2025; and whether any G7 finance minister meetings produce coordinated commentary on US fiscal credibility. The June FOMC meeting will also clarify whether the Fed views the downgrade as immaterial to monetary policy or a reason to maintain higher real rates longer.
Moody's has now placed the US in the company of nations that have experienced significant fiscal stress or political dysfunction within the past decade. The rating reflects what the market already priced: American sovereign debt is still safe, but no longer flawless.