From Bloomberg.com:
 
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner committed  to cutting the budget deficit as concerns about deteriorating U.S. creditworthiness  deepened, and ascribed a sell-off in Treasuries to prospects for an  economic recovery.
“It’s very important that this Congress  and this president put in place policies that will bring those deficits  down to a sustainable level over the medium term,” Geithner said in  an interview with Bloomberg Television yesterday. He added that the  target is reducing the gap to about 3 percent of gross domestic product,  from a projected 12.9 percent this year.
The dollar extended declines today after  Treasuries and American stocks slumped on concern the U.S. government’s  debt rating may at some point be lowered. Bill Gross, the co-chief investment  officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., said the U.S. “eventually”  will lose its AAA grade.
Geithner, 47, also said that the rise  in yields on Treasury securities this year “is a sign that things  are improving” and that “there is a little less acute concern about  the depth of the recession.”
The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield  jumped 17 basis points to 3.36 percent yesterday and was unchanged as  of 12:18 p.m. in London. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index  fell 1.7 percent to 888.33 yesterday. The dollar tumbled 0.5 percent  today to $1.3957 per euro after a 0.8 percent drop yesterday.
 
Gross’s Warning
Gross said in an interview yesterday  on Bloomberg Television that while a U.S. sovereign rating cut is “certainly  nothing that’s going to happen overnight,” markets are “beginning  to anticipate the possibility.” Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul  Krugman, speaking in Hong Kong today, nevertheless argues it’s “hard  to believe” the U.S. would ever default.
Britain’s AAA rating was endangered  when Standard & Poor’s yesterday lowered its outlook on the nation’s  grade to “negative” from “stable,” citing a debt level approaching  100 percent of U.K. GDP.
It’s “critically important” to  bring down the American deficit, Geithner said.
In its latest budget request, the administration  said it expects the deficit to drop to 8.5 percent of GDP next year,  then to 6 percent in 2011. Ultimately, it forecasts deficits that fluctuate  between 2.7 percent and 3.4 percent between 2012 and 2019.
 
Ten-year Treasury yields have climbed  about 1 percentage point so far this year, in part after U.S. economic  figures indicated that the worst of the deepest recession in half a  century has passed. The yield on 30-year bonds has jumped to 4.31 percent,  from 2.68 percent at the beginning of the year.
The Treasury chief said it’s still  “possible” that the unemployment rate may reach 10 percent or higher,  cautioning that the economic recovery is still in the “early stages.”
 
“The important thing to recognize is  that growth will stabilize and start to increase first before unemployment  peaks and starts to come down,” he said. While “these early signs  of stability are very important” this is “still a very challenging  period for businesses and families across the United States,” he said.
 
Initial claims for unemployment insurance  fell by 12,000 in the week ended May 16 to 631,000, according to Labor  Department statistics released yesterday. Still, the number of workers  collecting unemployment checks rose to a record of more than 6.6 million  in the week ended May 9.
