Moodys warns UK, France, Austria, Italy, Spain and Portugal
over
AAA rating; cuts others
Rating agency Moody's warned on Monday it may cut the triple-A ratings of
France, the United Kingdom and Austria, and it downgraded six other European
nations including Italy, Spain and Portugal, citing growing risks from Europe's
debt crisis.
Moving less aggressively than
rival agency Standard & Poor’s last month but putting the
United Kingdom’s rating in
jeopardy for the first time, Moody’s said it was worried about Europe's ability to undertake the kind of reforms needed
to address the crisis and the amount of funds available to fight it.
It also said the region's weak
economy could undermine austerity drives by governments to fix their finances.
The U.S. rating agency said it changed the outlooks
for the ratings of France,
the UK and Austria
to negative due to "a number of specific credit pressures that would exacerbate
the susceptibility of these sovereigns' balance sheets."
Germany's top-tier rating was
described as "appropriate" by Moody's And it affirmed the triple-A rating on the
euro zone's bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Fund.
Moody's, which said late last
year it was reconsidering its European ratings, cut by one notch the ratings of
Italy, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia and Malta and downgraded Spain by two
notches.
Moody's said the scope of the
downgrades was limited due to "the European authorities' commitment to
preserving the monetary union and implementing whatever reforms are needed to
restore market confidence."
The announcement came a day after
Greece's parliament approved a deep
new round of budget cuts in the hope of securing new bailout funds and avoiding
a chaotic default in March.
The rating outlooks of the nine
countries affected by Moody's action was set to negative, "given the continuing
uncertainty over financing conditions over the next few quarters and its
corresponding impact on creditworthiness," Moody's
said.
BRITAIN, FRANCE
UNDER PRESSURE
Britain's finance minister responded
by saying the country must keep its promise to slash its large budget deficit.
"This is proof that, in the
current global situation, Britain cannot waver from dealing
with its debts," finance minister George Osborne said. "This is a reality check
for anyone who thinks Britain can duck confronting its
debts."
The government in Britain
has come under increasing pressure to soften its austerity measures to give a
stalling economy room to breathe.
The French government said it
will press ahead with its policies to improve competitiveness and growth while
reducing the government deficit.
"The government is determined to
press ahead with its actions to boost growth and competitiveness, notably the
reform of the financing of welfare, of employment and the reduction of public
deficits," Finance Minister Francois Baroin said in a statement.
Moody's move on Monday follows
one by Standard & Poor's last month, when France and Austria lost their
triple-A status, while Italy, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Malta, Slovakia and
Slovenia were downgraded. S&P also cut the EFSF by one notch.
Also in January, rating agency
Fitch downgraded the sovereign credit ratings of Belgium, Cyprus, Italy, Slovenia and Spain,
indicating there was a 1-in-2 chance of further cuts in the next two years.
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