JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said Thursday that Americans will feel economic “pain” before an agreement is reached on raising the debt ceiling and markets will start to experience frightening turbulence as a possible default gets closer.
“You'll feel the pain before it happens,” Dimon told the outlet, referring to the moment when the Treasury Department’s arsenal of “extraordinary measures” for continuing to settle the U.S. government’s debt obligations runs out.
As the moment of potential default approaches, Dimon suggested nervous investors will send markets on a wild ride.
“You’ll see it in the markets and that will scare people,” Dimon said, adding that most people in Washington understand how serious the debt ceiling standoff is and “they want to get it to a resolution.”
Investors ‘Should Be Concerned’: McCarthy
Dimon’s warning about the prospect of sharp market gyrations ahead of a possible deft default echo remarks made a day prior by House Speaker Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.).The Republican lawmaker said Wednesday that investors “should be concerned” about the standoff in Washington over raising the debt ceiling as the country inches closer to a possible default and President Joe Biden refuses to negotiate spending cuts as a condition of GOP agreement to lift the cap.
Republicans have been working on a deficit-reduction proposal, and McCarthy suggested that once Congress returns from recess later this month, there might be “some news” in this regard.
Asked whether he plans to speak to investors about the GOP proposal in the meantime in order to reassure markets, McCarthy said that Wall Street is right to be worried.
McCarthy and Biden Trade Jabs
In his letter to the president, McCarthy warned that Biden’s refusal to negotiate spending cuts to get GOP backing on raising the debt ceiling “could prevent America from meeting its obligations and hold dire ramifications for the entire nation.”“With each passing day, I am incredibly concerned that you are putting an already fragile economy in jeopardy by insisting upon your extreme position of refusing to negotiate any meaningful changes to out-of-control government spending alongside an increase of the debt limit,” McCarthy wrote.
Biden replied to McCarthy that he’s prepared to consider Republican proposals for spending cuts as part of a budget plan, but that such discussions must be separate from “prompt action on the Congress’ basic obligation to pay the nation’s bills and avoid economic catastrophe.”
Failure to reach an agreement over the debt ceiling could lead to a default on U.S. debt obligations, an outcome many economists have warned would be disastrous.
Fitch Ratings warned in February that if investors believed the government were to default, this would lead to increased redemptions and volatility in Treasury-only money market funds (as opposed to prime and government money market funds).
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently warned that gaps in the regulatory framework for money market funds makes them prone to runs on deposits when market stress is extreme.