Senate panel to probe U.S. downgrade by S&P

August 09, 2011 10:58 am | Updated November 17, 2021 12:36 am IST - Washington

File photo shows the Senate side of the Capitol in Washington. The Senate’s Banking Committee has begun collecting information about the S&P downgrade, reports have said.

File photo shows the Senate side of the Capitol in Washington. The Senate’s Banking Committee has begun collecting information about the S&P downgrade, reports have said.

The unprecedented downgrade of the U.S. creditworthiness by ratings agency Standard and Poor’s may face a probe by a Senate committee, reports have said.

The U.S. administration has already taken up cudgels against S&P for unleashing mayhem on the world’s largest economy by its downgrade action.

Stung by the development, the U.S. Senate’s Banking Committee has begun collecting information about the downgrade action informally, but is yet announce an official probe, ABC News reported.

The report quoted an unnamed aide of the committee as saying that it was looking into the issue and gathering more information.

S&P on Friday announced a downgrade of its long-term sovereign rating for the U.S. from the top-notch ‘AAA’ level to ‘AA+’ in the first-ever lowering of America’s rating.

The downgrade has added to the woes of the U.S. economy, which is already battling fears of slipping into another recession amid mounting debt worries.

The development has triggered mayhem in already weak stock markets in the U.S. and abroad and stocks have dropped to their lowest levels in about two years.

President Barack Obama yesterday strongly defended the U.S. credit profile and said America will always be an AAA nation, as its economic problems were “imminently solvable“.

Speaking for the first time since the downgrade, Mr. Obama said he would present his own proposals for overcoming the debt woes in the “coming weeks” and asked the Republicans to accept tax hikes on the most affluent Americans.

“No matter what some agency may say, we have always been and always will be a triple A country,” Mr. Obama said, arguing that global investors still saw the U.S. economy as one of the safest investment destinations in the world.

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