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Dublin: 9 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

Moody’s warns on France’s credit rating

The agency says it may put France’s Aaa rating on negative outlook in the coming months over a weakening in the government’s financial position.

Moody's offices in New York.
Moody's offices in New York.
Image: AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams/PA Images

CREDIT RATINGS AGENCY Moody’s has warned it may put France’s Aaa rating on negative outlook in the coming months.

In its annual credit report on France, the agency cites a weakening in the French government’s financial position as the main reason for the warning.

Moody’s said that France’s sustainable GDP has the capacity to absorb shocks, but that some risk factors “continue to constrain medium-term economic performance” and that a Aaa government’s financing of very high debt in an uncertain economic environment relies on investor confidence in their ability and willingness to tackle “unforeseen challenges”.

The agency pointed out that this was a regular report on France’s position, and not a ratings action.

The Italian and Spanish governments and British, Swiss and Portuguese banks have been downgraded by diverse ratings agencies recently.

Meanwhile, France and Germany are understood to still be at loggerheads over some debt crisis issues ahead of Sunday’s EU summit. EU leaders are due to meet on Sunday to discuss new measures at tackling Greece’s debt problems and the wider eurozone concerns.

The G20 finance ministers released a joint statement after their weekend meeting urging eurozone leaders to come up with a “comprehensive plan” to deal with the region’s debt crisis.

Moody’s said in a statement this morning that the ECB has substantial capacity to support eurozone banks as well as the region’s sovereign debt markets, but is unlikely to take any action that could be interpreted as directly financing a government’s deficit.

The agency expects the European System of Central Banks to “continue to fully meet the liquidity needs of solvent euro area banks”, but that the banks’ “interventions in sovereign debt markets” are likely to remain limited and uncertain.

Read: IMF’s Chopra says link between state and banks led to Ireland’s ‘crippling downward spiral’ >

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Comments (2 Comments)

  • Seriously Moody. Stop publishing this crap creating more unease in the stock markets

    Reply
    • moodys is looking after its clients. There are people trading on the downgrade of economies and the damage to the euro. This isnt just about a matter of taking someones michelin star because the quality of the food has dipped, there is money to be made off other peoples misery and as long as this form of trading is allowed everyones going to suffer. France’s rating is next, you can guarantee it. any nation who has a warning coming from the ratings agencies has been downgraded. US got a warning and then downgraded and once you see that can happen to one of the worlds most influential economies then anyone is fair game.

      we need the big EU countries to be downgraded for this cycle to stop. Watch what happens if France gets downgraded. Germany and France will move to impose strict regulation on the EU markets and close sections of them off to international traders. Its circle the wagons time folks! The EU is at war, nobody outside the currency is your friend (not even great britain who’s traders are more than likely working off this euro downfall to their advantage, and especially not the US who will look to deflect heat off their own currency)

      after all we’re all in this together arent we? Hello European parliment? anybody home?

      Reply

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