South Africa Dodges New Junk Rating As Moodys Ups Outlook

The country has been struggling with weak growth, ballooning national debt, depressed investor confidence and record unemployment

Johannesburg: South Africa, whose debt is rated as “junk” or non-investment grade by credit rating agencies Fitch and S&P, has escaped a third junk rating from Moody’s which suggested the country’s economic outlook was set to improve under its new President Cyril Ramaphosa.

Moody’s said in a statement that it was holding the rating on South Africa’s long-term debt at Baa 3, the lowest investment grade above junk status.

But the statement, released overnight on Friday, said that the ratings agency had decided to upgrade the outlook for the country’s debt from “negative” to “stable”, meaning that a further downgrade was not on the cards.

“The confirmation of South Africa’s ratings reflects Moody’s view that the previous weakening of South Africa’s institutions will gradually reverse under a more transparent and predictable policy framework,” the statement said.

“The recovery of the country’s institutions will, if sustained, gradually support a corresponding recovery in its economy, along with a stabilisation of fiscal strength.”

Ramaphosa took over as leader of the ruling African National Congress in December and became president last month.

During the nine-year tenure of his predecessor Jacob Zuma, South Africa grappled with weak growth, ballooning national debt, depressed investor confidence and record unemployment.

As result, Fitch and S&P to downgraded the country’s long-term debt ratings to non-investment grade or junk status.

But Ramaphosa has promised to get the economy back on its feet again and stamp out corruption.

In his first state of the nation speech last month, he announced an increase in value-added tax to help bring down debt.

The South African Treasury welcomed the announcement by Moody’s.

“To improve South Africa’s investment and economic prospects, the government continues to work diligently on practical steps to provide the necessary policy certainty such as the finalisation of mining legislation.”

Jacob van Rensburg, economics professor at South Africa’s North-West University said the move by Moody’s was “good news for the economy.

“The challenge to South Africa now is to wisely use the time granted by Moody’s to continue to work towards a more transparent and predictable policy framework”.

RECENT NEWS

UAE Secures Over $30bn In Crypto Investments In Just One Year: Report

With a proactive regulatory framework, the UAE presents investors with a balance between innovation and security Read more

DIFC Partners With Lloyds To Boost Future Talent In Insurance Sector

The agreement, which envisages a longstanding partnership, will help support development of a talent pipeline into the ... Read more

Paymob Secures UAE Central Bank License For Retail Payment Services

The regulatory nod also enables the company to provide merchants with its full suite of omni-channel solutions Read more

Open Banking Fuels GCC Fintech Boom As UAE, Saudi Lead Regional Growth Surge

The open banking payments volume in the GCC is projected to quadruple to over $930 billion by 2028 from $230 billion in... Read more

Saudi Arabia Leads Region With 178 Venture Capital Deals Last Year

Saudi venture capital funding is supporting business startups in the Kingdom Read more

UAE Gold Reserves Reach $6.7bn

CBUAE gold reserves surged by 34.8 per cent in the first 10 months of 2024 Read more