S&P Global is the first among the “big three” rating agencies to upgrade Greece to investment grade since the country’s debt crisis in 2010.
It raised late on Friday the country’s local and foreign currency long-term issuer ratings to “BBB-/A-3,” with a stable outlook, citing stronger budgetary position.
The other two agencies, Fitch and Moody’s, rate the country one notch below investment grade. DBRS Morningstar upgraded Greece’s rating to investment grade BBB (low) last month.
S&P said it expects budget surplus target to help in paring the country’s government debt, and added that it is cautious about political pressures hindering Greece’s ability to sustain large primary budget surpluses.
Greece lost its investment-grade credit rating, which implies a low risk of default, in 2010 when its decade-long debt crisis erupted, forcing it to sign up for international bailouts worth about 260 billion euros ($275.34 billion) to stay afloat. It emerged from the debt crisis in 2018 and was the only country in the eurozone with a “junk” rating.
S&P expects “additional structural economic and budgetary reforms, coupled with large European Union funds, will support robust economic growth in 2023-2026.”
Greece expects economic output to rise 3% in 2024 following a 2.3% expansion this year more than twice the eurozone average. It also projects a 2.1% of GDP primary budget surplus next year on higher investment and strong tourism revenue.
The conservative government hopes now that the upgrade will trigger more capital inflows and reduced borrowing cost for the country’s businesses.
“In the short and medium term, we expect inflows from index-tracking funds, upgrade of banks assets and more favorable borrowing cost for companies,” a senior finance ministry official told Reuters.
Greece’s 10-year government bond yield was at 4.38% on Friday, about 58 basis points below Italy’s equivalent.
“I think all the ratings specific news is priced in. It is trading as investment grade, anyway,” Rabobank senior rates strategist Lyn Graham-Taylor told Reuters. — Reuters