The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Fitch affirms Malaysia’s rating at ‘A-’, outlook stable

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KUALA LUMPUR: Fitch Ratings has affirmed Malaysia’s long-term foreign-currency issuer default rating (IDR) at ‘A-’ with a stable outlook.

The ‘A-’ rating reflects higher growth rates than the peer median and a net external creditor position which is supported by steady current account surpluses and large external assets.

However, the rating is constraine­d by high government debt, low per capita income levels and weak standards of governance relative to rating peers, Fitch said in a statement.

The Pakatan Harapan governing coalition moved swiftly to implement many of its key election promises upon taking office in May 2018, most notably repeal of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and a review of infrastruc­ture projects.

It provided greater detail about its macroecono­mic policies in the 2019 Budget announced in early November.

“The budget’s medium-term fiscal targets are less ambitious than those of the previous government, due in large part to anticipate­d net revenue loss of around one per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) from the removal of GST and its replacemen­t with the Sales and Service Tax (SST),” it said.

Wider deficits and debt levels are negative for the credit profile, but are offset somewhat by steps announced in the budget to improve fiscal transparen­cy and public debt management.

The 2018 Budget deficit target was revised up to 3.7 per cent of GDP from 2.8 per cent previously, to take into account one-off tax refunds and certain expenditur­e items that were previously offbudget which add up to around 1.4 per cent of GDP.

The authoritie­s subsequent­ly met the revised 2018 deficit target, supported by higher-thanexpect­ed SST collection­s which offset lower corporate income tax collection. Meanwhile, the 2019 Budget targets a deficit of 3.4 per cent of GDP in 2019 and 3.0 per cent of GDP in 2020.

The authoritie­s expect to meet their 2019 deficit target through a higher dividend from Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas, A-/ Stable) and additional revenue measures including higher property taxes and an increase in stamp duty, as well as introducti­on of a departure tax.

Fitch said it sees downside risks to the 2019 deficit target.

In particular, the 2019 Budget is based on an optimistic oil price assumption of US$70 (US$1=RM4.07) per barrel (b), above Fitch’s forecast of US$65/ b. The budget is also based on implementa­tion of additional revenue-raising measures that may face political constraint­s, and on optimistic growth assumption­s.

However, Fitch assumes expenditur­e cutbacks will offset any revenue shortfall, and forecasts a general government deficit of 3.4 per cent of GDP in 2019 (current ‘A’ median -1.7 per cent), in line with the authoritie­s’ target.

Substantia­l non-oil revenue measures would be required for the government to meet its medium-term deficit targets unless oil prices recover, posing a risk to the fiscal outlook in Fitch’s opinion.

Fitch forecasts general government debt-GDP to stabilise at around 62 per cent in 2019 and 2020, above the current peer median of 49 per cent.

“Our debt numbers include officially reported committed government guarantees. Beyond the fiscal risks outlined above, there are risks to debt containmen­t from contingent liabilitie­s related to public-private partnershi­ps which may migrate to the sovereign balance sheet as the government continues to improve the transparen­cy of public finances.”

Fitch expects growth to slow to around 4.5 per cent in 2019 and 2020 from 4.7 per cent in 2018, on weaker export performanc­e and slowing investment activity, but to remain above peers.

Five-year average GDP growth at end-2018 was 5.2 per cent, against a current peer median of 3.3 per cent.

The outlook for exports is uncertain because of trade tensions between the US and China and Fitch’s expectatio­ns for low oil prices.

However, the credit rating agency believes private consumptio­n is likely to remain supportive of growth due to favourable labour market conditions and the government’s plans to disburse income tax and GST refunds of around RM37 billion (2.5 per cent of GDP) during the year.

“The growth outlook is subject to downside risk, as elsewhere in the region, from the slowdown in China and a further escalation of trade tensions with the US.”

The current account surplus declined to 2.3 per cent of GDP in 2018 from 3.0 per cent in 2017 on weaker exports of electronic­s and commoditie­s.

“We expect the current account surplus to narrow further in 2019 as demand for some key exports such as electronic­s, oil and liquefied natural gas is likely to stay weak. Sustained current account surpluses have helped Malaysia retain its net external creditor position (estimated at 14.2 per cent of GDP at end-2018, compared with a net debtor position of 16.8 per cent for current rating peers), which is a strength for its credit profile.”

Fitch said Malaysia is vulnerable to shifts in external investor sentiment because of high shortterm external debt, high foreign holdings of government debt, and an internatio­nal liquidity ratio which is just over 100 per cent.

Foreign-currency reserves fell in 2018 to US$101.4 billion (4.8 months of current external payments; current peer median 4.3 months) as the central bank, Bank Negara Malaysia intervened during the year to dampen depreciati­on pressures. Reserves have picked up subsequent­ly as pressures on emerging markets have subsided.

Structural metrics, such as GDP per capita, standards of human developmen­t and governance remain below ‘A’ category medians.

One of the key campaign promises of the current administra­tion was to set up a royal commission of inquiry into recent corruption scandals and to further improve the transparen­cy of public finances. These measures could bode well for transparen­cy and governance, although the improvemen­ts may take time to materialis­e.

“We forecast the banking sector’s performanc­e to remain broadly stable despite some softening in growth and pockets of asset-quality risk in some sectors. Profitabil­ity among Fitch-rated banks should hold up well, and bank balance sheets to remain generally sound – which should help the sector weather unexpected shocks.”

The sector’s Common Equity Tier 1 ratio and Liquidity Coverage Ratio of 13.1 per cent and 143 per cent, respective­ly, at end2018 indicated healthy capital and liquidity positions in aggregate. — Bernama

The budget’s medium-term fiscal targets are less ambitious than those of the previous government, due in large part to anticipate­d net revenue loss of around one per cent of GDP from the removal of GST and its replacemen­t with the SST. Fitch Ratings

 ??  ?? Fitch forecasts general government debt-GDP to stabilise at around 62 per cent in 2019 and 2020, above the current peer median of 49 per cent. — Reuters photo
Fitch forecasts general government debt-GDP to stabilise at around 62 per cent in 2019 and 2020, above the current peer median of 49 per cent. — Reuters photo

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