The Borneo Post

Fitch downgrades Sri Lanka’s credit rating in fresh blow

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COLOMBO: Fitch Ratings cut Sri Lanka’s credit rating by one notch to B+ with a negative outlook, weeks after it asked for a bailout from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

The ratings agency said the island’s mounting debt, depleted foreign exchange reserves and evidence of capital f light had led to the downgrade.

The move is a signal to investors that Sri Lanka’s sovereign debt is now considered riskier, and will make it more expensive for the country to borrow on internatio­nal markets.

Fitch also downgraded its outlook for the economy from stable to negative, the second such rank reduction in nearly eight years.

The last downgrade, also by one notch, in April 2008 came just before a major balance of payments crisis.

Sri Lanka secured a US$ 2.6 bi l l ion loan from the IMF in 2009 to boost its financial reserves, which dropped below US$ 1 billion at the height of the civil war between Tamil Tiger rebels and the army.

Fitch’s latest assessment on Sri Lanka is based on the assumption that the country wi l l not slip back into a separatist war that claimed at least 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009.

“In Fitch’s view, (the latest downgrade) partly ref lects a weakening in policy coherence that increases the likelihood of Sri Lanka requiring external l iquidity support from the IMF and other multilater­al institutio­ns,” its statement said.

Sri Lanka is currently in bailout talks with the IMF, although the sum it is seeking has not been disclosed.

The IMF, which sent a mission to review Sri Lanka’s economy earlier in February, said it had warned the authoritie­s they should make a ‘stronger effort’ immediatel­y to reduce the deficit.

The government went on a spending spree after taking power in January 2015 to deliver on election promises of higher wages and lower prices.

But the move increased the country’s deficit and sparked concern over balance of payments.

Ten days ago, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka raised key interest rates by 50 basis points in a bid to slow credit expansion and discourage imports.

The island nation last week received pledges of over US$ 2 billion in loans and equity from the Asian Developmen­t Bank over three years. — AFP

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