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IRELAND LOOKS SET to receive its second upgrade from ratings agency Moody’s since the start of the year tomorrow.
The ratings agency is likely to upgrade Irish debt to Baa2 from Baa3, which is still one notch below where other agencies such as Standard & Poors and Fitch rate our treasury bills.
Danske Bank analyst Owen Callan said that he is predicting an upgrade, with the only slight risk being that Moody’s may be hesitant to give the country a second bump in less than six months.
He said that Ireland’s underlying fundamentals – mainly the improving economic and industrial production data – would be enough to convince Moody’s to improve our debt rating.
The continuing popularity of Irish government debt among investors is also a driver for Moody’s anticipated upgrade.
The agency had been playing catch up with its competitors after going “too bearish” on the Eurozone in 2012, Callan said.
“They’re catching up with realities in general on the ground. Clearly they had a change of heart on how they view the eurozone overall.”
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Moody’s had been criticised for being slow to upgrade its rating of Irish government debt, which may have impacted negatively on Asian investors’ appetite for bonds in earlier auctions.
The upgrade is seen as likely in many quarters, despite the head of the NTMA predicting last month that Irish debt ratings would remain where they are until after the budget.
Progress on SME debt
Callan said that he expects the ECB to take action to improve the flow of debt to SMEs in the eurozone next month.
A cut in the overall interest rate, as well as the use of long term refinancing options to bring down the cost of borrowing for banks, have been suggested as possible policy tools for Frankfurt to use.
The main impetus behind the action would be to free up credit for SMEs and try to stimulate a higher level of inflation in the eurozone.
There is also a reasonable chance of the ECB pulling the trigger on a large scale quantitative easing programme, which Callan said could be up to €1 trillion.
Elsewhere, the National Treasury Management sold €500 million in short term treasury bills earlier this morning at a yield of 0.22 per cent.
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Moodys, Fitches and S&P… why do we care or listen to them. They triple A rates junk bonds on the sub prime mortgage fiasco… If they for those so wrong why listen to their opinion????
Because lots of investment funds are only allowed to invest in bonds with a certain rating from those agencies. If you get a better rating, you get more demand, hence higher price, hence lower cost of borrowing new money.
Personally I wouldn’t trust Moodys to tell me what day it is, but that’s not how funds work.
Emily Saul that is no reason to give them more credibility. We have to take it into account, but if I was making decisions I’d want a few other corroborating data points before I’d base any decision off these peoples opinion.
They were more responsible for the crash than nearly any other single factor by mislabeling exploding mortgages as AAA rated investments in a massive fraud.
They should have been wound up and new agencys with new personnel put in their place…but why would we do that, we didn’t bother doing any other serious financial reforms…
The people that countries borrow money off listen to them and use them to set the rates. So we do not have to listen but we certainly are affected by it.
Warren Buffett called it the lemming effect. While lemmings as a whole have a terrible reputation, no individual lemming has ever been singled out for criticism.
Exactly Brian!!
We know how corrupt the ‘free market’ and powers that be are..thus given how much emphasis is placed on bond status done by these rating agencies, the question is how are they regulated and by who!???
It would be ridiculous in the extreme to believe they were truly impartial and independent!
Our barely above junk paper is trading with below 3% yields! I wouldn’t be so certain the markets still attach the same value to the opinions of these agencies that they once did.
I would not say they are going nowhere at all Saul, theres another crash coming, anyone familiar with the insane risks currently being taken on the international markets can see that. Were in for a period of sluggish semi-ok but anemic GDP growth (a jobless recovery) followed by another crash and the scale of the risks being taken will mean that no bailouts will be possible this time.
I only hope we get people in charge in the US and UK who can see the writing on the wall in time and go back to pre80s financial regulation.
Also Saul the ‘must be doing something right’ comment is PAINFULLY naive…I used to have people say stuff like that to me in 07 when I was trying to yell ICEBERG ICEBERG back when you could count those of us seeing the thing on one hand, what you got was smug replies about how ”were doing ok so far” and ”soft landings”.
They were making money for people with the sub prime mortgage securitization scam and that ended up getting away from them and crashing the global economy.
Ryan I’m not saying I agree with the system. I’m just saying that it’s not going to change anytime soon. You are properly correct when you say another crash is in the way. I’m not an expert or even close to being one. Are you telling me that nobody (investors) actually listens to ratings agencies? BTW I tried to sell my house in 2006 because I could clearly see the writing was on the wall. Unfortunately I had no idea how bad it was actually going to be or I would have dropped the price a lot more!!!
Putting your faith in those in charge in the US and UK to “see the writing on the wall” and act is a bit naive too Ryan. The ones in charge are the ones orchestrating the crashes – doesn’t take a professor to work out the ultimate consequences of pumping upwards of $40bn in new liquidity every month into capital markets.
No no quite the opposite Saul…sadly…to my eternal horror they listen to them as if they never had any history of fraud whatsoever. Talking to people in the financial sector today and I’m talking about traders investors not bank tellers the smugness is shocking, and I feel kinda bad saying that cos some of them are friends, we’ve generally agreed to avoid this topic in our conversation, but they act as if the 08 crash had nothing to do with them, and no mistakes were made, that it was all govt policy mistakes or people ”dumb enough” to buy houses above their grade.
I don’t beleive crashes are orchestrated I’ve seen too much of the inside of the top of the political and financial systems to beleive that, the more scary (imo) reality is they are unplanned and people are bumbling through oblivious to the consequences of their actions (politicans)..or just not caring (in the case of the financial sector)
Even in the best most ideal financial reform we’d still need ratings agencys…I’m not saying lets stop being capitalists and bring on the central planning, just that these particular actors should have been swept away and new people and organizations put in their place, we could still do that and should.
Short of that, I’m saying we should take what they say with a grain of salt and look to corroboration for everything they say.
I think we need to be clear about what the rating agencies’ fraud was, because usually it is trotted out by crusties who don’t know what they are talking about.
The obvious type of fraud they could commit would be to overstate the prospects of investments in which they already had a stake. People buy in and they cash out. There’s absolutely no evidence of this type of fraud whatsoever. So whenever it gets trotted out, it is easily dismissed.
At the other end of the scale is incompetence. Getting it wrong, even getting it spectacularly wrong as the rating agencies did, is hugely damaging. But it is not fraud.
That is the distinction which the agencies have been able to draw so far. But it is a false dichotomy. In between those two extremes is an area which in my opinion isn’t grey at all.
The way the subprime loans worked was that junk was bundled up with apparently good stuff, so that overall the investment was seen as fairly safe and graded accordingly. These were then themselves mixed up, repeatedly, on the insane theory that if risk was spread around far enough, it effectively disappeared.
By the end of this chain, the instruments which were being sold to Norwegian pension funds and Canadian cities were based on an incredibly complicated basket of assets. By some estimates, in order to conduct a due diligence exercise on any one of those instruments, you would have had to read one billion pages of documents. This is of course impossible.
And it is the very fact that it is impossible which makes the rating agencies fraudulent. They were giving a rating to securities when they had absolutely no idea whether or not they were good investments – and must have known that they couldn’t possibly have any basis to rate them.
The theory is that the agencies have escaped prosecution because they have threatened to destroy the credit rating of any country which tries. This at least has the whiff of credibility. It cuts down the number of countries who would be in a position to give it a go, and certainly rules out the US.
Good news under this Government puts them into a dark rage, verbal diarrhea and lashing out insults at everyone. Their economic think tank had been hoping for a second bailout.
Given the Agencies’ rating of US sovereign debt, their indebtedness and the state of their economy, this upgrade for Ireland is relatively realistic if not too little.
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