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Ratings agencies and Ukraine

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Standard & Poors has joined Fitch in lowering Ukraine’s rating. The news here is not the new rating. The real story is that the continuing political stalemate in Kyiv. At some point the government will have to change course to respond to the crisis. Options are running out.

This from www.reuters.com:

S&P may cut Ukraine’s ratings on refinancing worries

Standard & Poor`s Ratings Services warned on Monday it could cut the foreign and local sovereign ratings of Ukraine in the next 90 days as it doubts the country`s ability to implement the IMF`s loan agreement, Reuters reported.

S&P said it could cut Ukraine`s B foreign currency rating and B-plus local currency rating by one or more notches. For a full text of the agency`s statement please double-click on [ID:nHKG238893].

“Ukraine`s political commitment to implementing the IMF loan`s conditions, including structural fiscal tightening and banking-system consolidation, is wavering against a backdrop of sharply contracting growth, weakened terms of trade, and approaching presidential elections,” the agency said in a statement.

S&P said it was awaiting the government`s clarification on the IMF programme before deciding on the rating and warned the economy faced refinancing risk because both the government and private sector suffered from a lack of funding sources.

“The near total closure of the external borrowing channel has contributed to a loss of confidence of domestic economic agents in the stability of the exchange rate and the banking system,” S&P said.

It said that as of end-January, Ukraine`s external reserves covered just over 100 percent of this year`s banking sector repayments leaving nothing for corporate obligations, estimated at $9.5 billion. The figure excludes trade financing.

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Eastern Europe Credit Ratings…why are we not surprised?

Friday, February 6th, 2009

From www.reuters.com:

Fitch sees more E.Europe downgrades

Ratings agency Fitch expects more downgrades in emerging Europe after cutting Russia`s rating this week, it said on Thursday, warning political risk was a mounting threat to creditworthiness in the region, Reuters reported.

Head of emerging European sovereigns Edward Parker said that with nine countries in the region on negative outlook and the financial crisis deepening, creditworthiness in a string of countries was deteriorating.

“I would expect that we would see more negative ratings actions,” he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Parker said deepening economic pain and rising unemployment across the region heightened the risk of political instability and governments failing to take austerity measures out of fear of rising unrest.

“Clearly, there is going to be a rise in political risk,” he said. “Obviously, political shocks by their nature are often unpredictable but as well as that we would be particularly concerned over the risk of governments failing to pursue prudent and responsible policies.”

He would not say which country would likely be next to follow Russia, which on Wednesday suffered its first rating cut from Fitch in a decade on slumping reserves, corporate and banking problems and economic contraction.

But he said Fitch was watching the upcoming review of Ukraine`s International Monetary Fund deal particularly carefully.

Fitch has said previously that any failure of that deal would lead to a further negative move on Ukraine, which has suffered a currency slump and deep recession as its steel industry and banking sector suffered from the global financial crisis.

In contrast, he said that Turkey might be able to survive without an IMF deal with its current rating intact. Turkey has held back from concluding an IMF deal ahead of local elections.

“We would see an IMF deal as a positive development for Turkey,” he said. “But if one was not agreed they might be able to find other financing and it would not alone be enough for negative ratings action.”

Parker said Fitch was continuing to watch Russia closely in the aftermath of its downgrade, with ongoing low oil prices, any further loss of reserves, worsening of corporate balance sheets or difficulty refinancing debt or rising political risk potentially prompting further action.

Both Russia and Kazakhstan have allowed their currencies to depreciate after spending considerable reserves defending them. Parker said those devaluations had been necessary to take into account the drastic fall in oil prices.

With the Baltic states also entering deep recessions, some analysts believe their currencies — either pegged or trading in narrow bands — might also be forced to devalue.

Parker said this would potentially be negative for their ratings.

“It would make it more difficult for companies and others to repay foreign currency debt and it would undermine balance sheets,” he said.

Currency falls in Central and Eastern Europe were already having a similar effect, he said, with the high proportion of foreign currency loans in Hungary making it more vulnerable than other regional economies such as Poland and the Czech Republic.Technorati

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