The Citizen (KZN)

China junks Moody’s rating

DOWNGRADE PANNED: ‘NOT BASED ON OBJECTIVE REALITIES’

- Daniela Wei

Moody’s has downgraded Mainland China and Hong Kong’s debt rating based on ‘shallow evidence’, says Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan.

Moody’s Investors Service’s decision to downgrade Hong Kong’s debt rating last week was based on “shallow” evidence, Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan blogged over the weekend.

“The evidence on which the ratings company mechanical­ly downgraded Hong Kong’s debt rating based on the very close economic relationsh­ip between Hong Kong and the mainland is shallow,” Chan wrote on the department’s official website.

Closely knit

Enhancing cooperatio­n with the mainland could not be considered negative as China is the main growth engine for the global economy, he added.

Moody’s cut its rating on China’s debt for the first time since 1989 last Wednesday – a challenge to the view that the country’s leaders can rein in leverage while maintainin­g the pace of economic growth.

Hours later, the company cut the rating on Hong Kong’s local- and foreign-currency issuances to Aa2 from Aa1, and changed the outlook to stable from negative. It was the territory’s first cut in ranking by Moody’s since the Asian financial crisis in 1998.

“Credit trends in China will continue to have a significan­t impact on Hong Kong’s credit profile due to close and tightening economic, financial and political linkages with the mainland,” Moody’s said. Closer financial ties “risk introducin­g more direct contagion channels between China’s and Hong Kong’s financial markets”.

Hong Kong’s government said on its website shortly afterward that it disagreed with the decision by Moody’s, citing Chan. The ratings company overlooked Hong Kong’s “sound economic fundamenta­ls, robust financial regulatory regime, resilient banking sector and strong fiscal position”, the government said.

Chan, who was appointed Hong Kong’s financial secretary in January, expanded on that argument with his blog post on Sunday.

He said Moody’s concern for China’s economy lacked objective evidence because growth and exports this year had improved, while steel and coal oversupply had eased. In response to Moody’s “contagion channels” worry, Chan said Hong Kong’s financial system was very stable and it had policies in place to improve risk management for mainland-related loans.

The rating firm’s outlook cut in March 2016 has proven to be “exaggerate­d”, based on economic growth since then, Chan also wrote. Moody’s cut Hong Kong’s outlook to negative from stable last year because it said the city’s credit profile tracked China’s.

Markets unfazed

Days earlier, it lowered China’s credit-rating outlook, highlighti­ng the country’s surging debt burden and questionin­g the government’s ability to enact reforms.

China’s currency and stocks rallied despite last week’s debt-rating downgrade. The onshore yuan strengthen­ed 0.5% – the biggest weekly gain since July. Shanghai’s benchmark gauge climbed 0.6% last week – the most since April 7.

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? RED FLAGGED. Moody’s downgrades of the debt outlooks for mainland China and Hong Kong has attracted catcalls of derision from both financial centres.
Picture: Bloomberg RED FLAGGED. Moody’s downgrades of the debt outlooks for mainland China and Hong Kong has attracted catcalls of derision from both financial centres.

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