Bangkok Post

Kuwait gets first downgrade from Moody’s over ‘liquidity risks’

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Kuwait was downgraded on Tuesday for the first time by Moody’s Investors Service, a decision the ratings agency said reflected the increase in the government’s “liquidity risks.”

The sovereign credit rating was cut two levels to A1, the fifth-highest investment-grade level and on par with China and Saudi Arabia, according to a statement.

Moody’s now ranks Kuwait two steps lower than Fitch Ratings and one below S&P Global Ratings, which lowered its own assessment of the country in March for the first time ever.

The rating agency projects net sovereign issuance of up to 27.6 billion dinars ($90 billion) will be needed to meet the Kuwaiti government’s funding requiremen­ts between the current fiscal year and the fiscal year ending March 2024.

Moody’s revised the outlook to stable, completing the review for downgrade started in March.

Lacking a new public debt law, the government has been unable to borrow since a debut Eurobond in 2017, forcing it to rely on the General Reserve Fund instead. Liquid assets there are close to being depleted, forcing the Finance Ministry to push through other measures to meet spending needs.

Kuwait’s parliament this month approved the state budget for the current fiscal year, projecting a deficit of 14 billion dinars after making adjustment­s to account for lower oil prices and a cut in spending.

Tapping the much larger Future Generation­s Fund, designed as a buffer for the time when Kuwait’s oil runs out, would require a legislativ­e change.

“In the continued absence of legal authorisat­ion to issue debt or draw on the sovereign wealth fund assets held in the Future Generation­s Fund, available liquid resources are nearing depletion, introducin­g liquidity risk despite Kuwait’s extraordin­ary fiscal strength,” Moody’s said.

The government has been looking for approval from parliament to borrow as much as 20 billion dinars. In response, the finance and economic committee has proposed reducing the limit in half, an idea the Finance Ministry said it would study but then turned down.

“The persisting deadlock addressing the funding situation now directly threatens the ability of the government to function, representi­ng a significan­t escalation in the brinksmans­hip between the two branches of government,” Moody’s said.

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