global economy

Emerging markets to bear brunt of sovereign rating cuts in 2021 – S&P Global

Reuters
Emerging markets to bear brunt of sovereign rating cuts in 2021 – S&P Global

S&P GLOBAL. The S&P Global logo is displayed on its offices in the financial district in New York City, December 13, 2018.

Photo by Brendan McDermid/Reuters

At present, 16 emerging market countries still have negative outlooks on their S&P ratings, signaling they could face a downgrade

Mass government bond buying programs by the European Central Bank, United States Federal Reserve, and other top central banks will protect the credit ratings of most developed economies this year but poorer nations will not be so fortunate, S&P Global said.

The coronavirus crisis is expected to push the debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratios in the G7 group of rich nations up by 23 percentage points by the end of 2021 compared to 2019, without yet triggering a cut in their credit ratings, a measure of a country’s fiscal health.

But among less developed nations, ratings have been cut over the past year for 8 African countries, 5 Middle East states, and 11 South American, central American, and Caribbean countries, and more downgrades are on the way, S&P Global said.

At present, 16 emerging market (EM) countries still have negative outlooks on their S&P ratings, signaling they could face a downgrade, while fast-rising debt levels in Brazil and South Africa are not expected to stabilize even by 2023.

Speaking before the release of a 2021 sovereign outlook, one of S&P’s top sovereign analysts, Frank Gill, told Reuters he expected 2021 would “see a lot more rating actions in EM.”

“That doesn’t mean that developed economies are getting a pass. It just means that they have bought themselves more time,” he said.

In the euro zone, the ECB’s bond buying program has been hoovering up the equivalent of all the extra debt issued by the bloc’s 27 members to combat the coronavirus crisis.

Assessing the situation in richer nations, Gill said: “Are we going to rush to any conclusions about the permanent damage to structural growth? Highly unlikely.”

“So I don’t think you’re going to see a lot of rating actions in the OECD in 2021,” he said.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development groups 37 countries, stretching from the United States to European nations to Japan and Australia. – Rappler.com

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