Kuwait Times

Downgrade doom looms for virus-hit firms and markets

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LONDON/NEW YORK: A wave of credit rating downgrades in the corporate sector risks deepening a funding crisis for company bosses and spreading it to other markets.

The coronaviru­s’ suckerpunc­h to the global economy has prompted Moody’s rating agency to review its corporate ratings, the agency told Reuters this week, with a slew of downgrades or downgrade warnings on the cards. A credit rating cut is a blow for a company in any circumstan­ce, making it more expensive to raise fresh debt or refinance existing bonds. But it is potentiall­y devastatin­g when markets are in a panic and company cashflows are shrinking.

A downgrade to ‘junk’ status, the lowest credit rating indicating a higher risk of default, forces investors to scatter

because many asset managers cannot hold junk-rated debt. Without any willing buyers, the risk is a panicked sell-off which could also spread to other markets.

Moritz Kraemer, a former top sovereign analyst at S&P, likened the risk to when Greece lost its investment grade as the eurozone debt storm was whipping up. “There was no one to catch the knife when it fell,” he said. “As the ratings get pushed down there are not enough junk grade investors to absorb it all.” S&P upped the ante on Friday cutting two of Europe’s biggest flag carriers British Airways’ owner IAG and Germany’s Lufthansa to the last notch of investment grade and warning they could be downgraded again. With certain sectors such as airlines, travel and energy badly hit, S&P has said it now sees default rates in the United States surging past 10 percent having only last month expected 3.5 percent, and Fitch is firing warnings too.

Adding to the sector’s vulnerabil­ities, the squeeze on ratings comes when the corporate sector is more vulnerable than it was 10 years ago. Low interest rates have encouraged companies to gorge on record amounts of cheap debt-globally corporate debt has risen more than 50 percent since 2008 to over $72 trillion, Bank for Internatio­nal settlement­s (BIS) data shows. — Reuters

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: A man makes a delivery near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City. Trading on the floor will temporaril­y become fully electronic starting today to protect employees from spreading the coronaviru­s. —AFP
NEW YORK: A man makes a delivery near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City. Trading on the floor will temporaril­y become fully electronic starting today to protect employees from spreading the coronaviru­s. —AFP

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