Bangkok Post

S&P downgrades China’s credit rating

Strong credit growth has increased risks

- ELIAS GLENN

BEIJING: S&P Global Ratings yesterday downgraded China’s long-term sovereign credit rating, citing increasing risks from its rapid build-up of debt.

S&P’s one-notch downgrade to A+ from AA- comes as Beijing grapples with the challenges of containing financial risks stemming from years of credit-fuelled stimulus needed to meet ambitious government economic growth targets.

“The downgrade reflects our assessment that a prolonged period of strong credit growth has increased China’s economic and financial risks,” S&P said in a statement, adding that the ratings outlook was stable.

S&P had said in June that there was a “real” chance of a downgrade and that a decision would be made based on whether China is able to move away from a creditdriv­en growth strategy.

The demotion follows a similar move by Moody’s Investors Service in May.

While S&P’s move put its China ratings on par with those of Moody’s and Fitch Ratings, the timing raised eyebrows just weeks ahead of a twice-a-decade Communist Party Congress (CPC), which will see a key leadership reshuffle and the setting of policy priorities for the next five years.

“The downgrade is a timely reminder for the authoritie­s that China needs to bite the bullet on some of the more painful reforms that have been left to last, namely corporate deleveragi­ng and restructur­ing of state-owned companies,” said Rob Subbaraman, an economist at Nomura Holdings Inc in Singapore.

“The focus needs to shift from quantity to quality of growth. I hope that later this year China lowers its GDP growth target to 6-6.5%, or not have one at all. That would be a positive sign.”

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund warned earlier this year that China’s credit growth was on a “dangerous trajectory” and called for “decisive action”, while the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s said last September that excessive credit growth was signalling a banking crisis in the next three years.

While worries about China’s sustained strong credit growth are increasing in some quarters, first-half economic growth of 6.9% beat expectatio­ns and some analysts said the downgrade would have little impact on financial markets.

“The decision was a catch-up with the other two credit agencies, instead of an initiative. Its impact on financial markets would very limited,” said Ken Cheung, senior Asian FX strategist at Mizuho Bank in Hong Kong.

“For those invested in yuan-denominate­d bonds, they care more about yuan expectatio­ns. The downgrade decision is likely to have limited impact on capital inflows as well.”

China’s stock markets were already closed when the downgrade was published, and there was little reaction in the yuan.

While risks are rising, S&P said that recent efforts by the government to reduce corporate leverage could stabilise conditions in the medium-term.

“However, we foresee that credit growth in the next two to three years will remain at levels that will increase financial risks gradually,” S&P said.

S&P also lowered China’s short-term rating to A-1 from A-1+.

Analysts say China’s campaign to reduce financial risks this year has had mixed success so far, and opinions differ widely on whether Beijing is moving quickly enough or decisively enough to avert the risk of a debt crisis down the road.

Regulators are making significan­t inroads in reducing interbank borrowing — perhaps the most pressing risk — and have curbed some riskier types of shadow banking.

But analysts say more comprehens­ive structural reforms are needed.

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