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S&P cuts Italy's credit rating as Greek debt crisis fears spread
S&P cuts Italy's credit rating as Greek debt crisis fears spread
Italy’s credit rating was cut by Standard & Poor’s, the country’s first downgrade in five years, as Greece’s worsening fiscal crisis fans concern that contagion will engulf countries such as Spain and Italy.
S&P lowered its rating last night to A from A+, saying weak economic growth, a “fragile” government and rising borrowing costs would make it difficult to reduce Europe’s second-biggest debt. The yield on Italy’s 10-year bond rose 8 basis points to 5.662 percent, 385 basis points more than similar German debt. The cost of insuring Italy against default rose to a record.
The European Central Bank was forced to buy Italian and Spanish bonds last month after their yields surged to euro-era records on concern they’ll be the next victims of the two-year- old debt crisis that led to bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal. Moody’s Investors Service is set to decide in the next month whether to downgrade Italy and Spain, while Greece struggles to convince international creditors it deserves its next bailout payment to stave off a default.
“Investors have become more bearish about Italy mainly because euro-zone leaders failed to create a firewall around the bloc’s solvent governments,” said Nicholas Spiro, head of Spiro Sovereign Strategy, a London-based consulting firm. “They let a crisis in the narrow periphery of the euro zone morph into one affecting the solvent core” and “we’re now dealing with the consequences.”
Greek Talks
European Union and International Monetary Fund officials held a second conference call in as many days tonight with Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, who is try to convince them that Greece deserves the sixth payment of its original 110 billion-euro bailout.
Italy follows Spain, Ireland, Portugal, Cyprus and Greece as euro-region countries having their credit rating cut this year. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi passed a 54 billion-euro ($74 billion) austerity package this month that convinced the ECB to buy its bonds. The plan to balance the budget in 2013 wasn’t enough to sway S&P, whose rating on Italy remains five steps above non-investment grade and three below that given by Moody’s.
Speculation, Reality
“The valuations of Standard & Poor’s seem dictated more by newspaper speculation than by reality, and appear influenced by political considerations,” Berlusconi’s office said in an e- mailed statement, adding that the government will meet its budget targets as it prepares measures to boost economic growth.
Responding to the government’s statement, S&P said its rating was based on an independent analysis of Italy’s fiscal and economic outlook and debt prospects. “S&P’s sovereign ratings are apolitical” and indicate “how different political initiatives may impact financial accountability,” the rating company said in an e-mailed statement. |
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