14 June 2010

Moody's Cuts Greece to 'Junk'


It certainly is nice to own the world's major ratings agencies.

Oh no, not the US government -- the Anglo-American hedge funds and a few multinational banks.

Bloomberg
Greece Cut to Junk by Moody’s on ‘Substantial’ Economic Risks

By Ben Martin and Maria Petrakis

June 15 (Bloomberg) -- Greece’s credit rating was cut to non-investment grade, or junk, by Moody’s Investors Service, threatening to further undermine demand for the debt-strapped nation’s assets as it struggles to rein in its budget deficit.

In making the four-step downgrade to Ba1 from A3, Moody’s cited “substantial” risks to economic growth from the austerity measures tied to a 110 billion-euro ($134.5 billion) aid package from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. The lower rating “incorporates a greater, albeit, low risk of default,” Moody’s said in a statement yesterday in London. The outlook is stable, it said.

Greece has cut spending, raised taxes and trimmed wages to tackle the deficit, which swelled to 13.6 percent of gross domestic product last year, more than four times the EU limit. To secure the EU-IMF aid, the government pledged to trim the shortfall to 8.1 percent of GDP this year and bring it back under the 3 percent EU ceiling in 2014. The crisis has prompted investors to sell the bonds of Greece and other high-deficit nations and pushed the euro down 15 percent this year.

“We’ve got a lot of uncertainty around the growth outlook for Greece,” Sarah Carlson, vice president-senior analyst in Moody’s sovereign-risk group, said in a telephone interview yesterday. “It’s rare for a country to implement so much structural reform in a very short time...”