(Bloomberg News) Standard & Poor's would cut the U.S. credit rating to its lowest level and Moody's Investors Service said it will probably reduce its ranking if the government fails to increase the debt limit, leading to a default.

S&P would lower its sovereign top-level AAA ranking to D, the last rung on its scale if the U.S. can't pay its debt, John Chambers, chairman of the company's sovereign rating committee, said today. Moody's said it would probably assign a position in the Aa range, or within three steps of its highest level.

"If any government doesn't pay its debt on time, the rating of that government goes to D," Chambers said today in an interview with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television's "Inside Track". "Having said that, we think the government will raise the debt ceiling. They've raised it 78 times more or less since 1960, often at the last moment, and we think that will be the case this time."

President Barack Obama, a Democrat, is trying to reach a compromise with Republican lawmakers who are seeking spending cuts before they agree to raise the nation's borrowing limit, currently capped at $14.3 trillion. The Treasury has said it has until Aug. 2 before its ability to pay the U.S. debt expires.

One-year credit-default swaps are rising this year as investors seek insurance in case of a U.S. default.

Default Insurance

The contracts climbed to 49.42 basis points as of yesterday in New York from this year's low of 20.81 basis points in April, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by CME Group Inc. and compiles prices quoted by dealers in the privately negotiated market.

By contrast, one-year credit default swaps are 36.57 basis points for Japan and 143.31 basis points for Spain, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Credit-default swaps pay the owner if a borrower fails to meet its debt obligations.

Ten-year Treasuries completed their biggest three-day loss this year yesterday, sending benchmark yields up a quarter percentage point.

The rate dropped two basis points to 3.09 percent today as of 8:46 a.m. in London, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader prices, still less than its 10-year average of 4.07 percent.

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