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S&P Cuts South Africa Deeper Into Junk as Virus Hits Growth
JOHANNESBURG (Capital Markets in Africa) — S&P Global Ratings cut South Africa deeper into junk territory amid concern the Covid-19 pandemic will send the economy into a sharp downturn.
The rating firm downgraded the country’s long-term foreign-currency rating to BB-, three notches below investment-grade, from BB. South Africa’s cost of servicing the public debt will climb to about 6.5% of gross domestic product by 2023, S&P said Wednesday.
The South African Treasury said it’s “disappointed” by the downgrade. It welcomed the revision of the outlook on the rating to stable from negative as an indication that some of the state’s fiscal and monetary policy measures have strong points.
The rand strengthened 0.2% to 18.13 per dollar as of 8:05 a.m. in Johannesburg, heading for the fifth day of gains as global risk appetite continues to recover following last month’s market turmoil. The currency is still down 23% this year, the most among major emerging currencies after Brazil’s real.
“Tough decisions have to be made and collaboration between government, business, labor, and civil society remains vital in order to contain the spread of Covid-19 and ensure sustainable economic recovery,” the Treasury said in a statement.
Africa’s most industrialized economy is stuck in the longest downward cycle since at least World War II, with business confidence at the lowest in more than two decades and almost a third of the labor force unemployed. The output is also weighed down by power-supply constraints. Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., which generates about 95% of South Africa’s electricity, regularly implements rolling blackouts to prevent a collapse of the national grid.
“The Covid-19 health crisis will create additional and even more substantial headwinds to GDP growth,” S&P analysts led by London-based Ravi Bhatiawrote in a report.
Last month, the country lost its Moody’s Investors Service investment-grade credit rating more than 25 years after it was first awarded. That will lead to rand bonds being excluded from the FTSE World Government Bond Index. The gauge comprises 14 currencies, including the dollar, yen, and euro, and is tracked by around $3 trillion of funds.
S&P said South Africa’s economy will probably shrink by 4.5% this year. While the government’s decision to go into a strict lockdown relatively early could limit the health impact from the virus, it’s adding to the financial hit. Even before stay-at-home orders, the central bank forecast South Africa’s economy would contract for the first calendar year since the global financial crisis a decade ago. “The broader economic fallout will be very difficult to handle,” Bhatia said.
Source: Bloomberg Business News