The Manila Times

Venezuela default contagion can be easily contained – economists

- AFP

PARIS: A looming Venezuelan debt default is unlikely to trigger any domino effect in neighborin­g economies as markets have long since priced in such an eventualit­y, economists say.

All alarm bells started ringing in the troubled South American country when the three major rating agencies— Standard and Poor’s, Fitch and Moody’s—further downgraded Venezuela’s credit ratings.

They see it as “highly probable” that the OPEC member will halt debt repayments, a week after President Nicolas Maduro called for a the country’s debt and Venezuela’s payment on a $1.1 billion bond.

very least an extension of repayment deadlines, and frequently a partial write-off.

A group of creditors could de a “credit event”, thus triggering payment of credit default swaps that some investors buy to protect themselves, and would likely push the ratings agencies to further downgrade the nation.

If Caracas were to halt payments on all of its debt, it would be the biggest-ever state default, easily surpassing even that of Argentina, which suspended repayment of $100 billion of loans from private creditors.

The combined debt of Venezuela and its state-owned oil company $150 billion. Neverthles­s, the markets do not appear to be untow- ardly worried about the prospect, since a possible default has been looming for a number of years.

“This has been a such wellflagge­d slow- motion deteriorat­ion, many people in the markets have been expecting Venezuela to default at some point,” said Tony Stringer, managing director for sovereign debt at Fitch.

“It’s important to remember that the country’s troubles are mostly home-made and due to “bad economic management by President Nicolas Maduro”, added Venezu- elan economist Orlando Ochoa.

“There is no risk of contagion,” he said.

Neighborin­g countries like Colombia have already absorbed the impact of a fall of their exports to Venezuela which has been cutting down on imports drasticall­y for years to help with honoring its debts.

“There is, in fact, already a cordon sanitaire around Caracas which the Venezuelan government itself has put in place by limiting access to foreign currency, and therefore world trade, for businesses and individual­s,” economic research at Saxo Banque.

A sentiment echoed by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund which last month said the impact of the crisis on other countries was likely to be “minimal”.

Up to now, Caracas has managed to meet its debt repayments on time even as the price of oil, a mainstay of the economy, plummeted, and the economic crisis punctured growth and plunged the country

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