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Credit downgrade lurks as SA's default risk increases

Johannesburg - South African Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene side-stepped an immediate credit downgrade with his mini budget proposals.

Still, investors are betting cuts that would bring the nation’s rating to the brink of junk are just a matter of time.

Fitch Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service, which rate the nation’s debt two steps above sub-investment, are set to bring their assessments in line with Standard & Poor’s at the lowest investment-grade level, credit default swaps suggest.

Another step down would start triggering capital outflows, Nene told lawmakers on October 21, when he lifted projected debt levels and widened budget-deficit targets in the face of slowing growth.

The cost of insuring South Africa’s dollar debt against default for five years has climbed 58 basis points in the past 12 months to 248, compared with the 142 median of five emerging- market economies with similar ratings at Moody’s and Fitch, and 215 for those rated one level lower.

“The debt metrics that the ratings agencies look at are probably going to put us on the back foot,” Thando Vokwana, a currency trader at FirstRand’s Johannesburg-based Rand Merchant Bank unit, said by phone on October 22. “You could see a possible downgrade coming and in that case South Africa is so reliant on external funding that it would spell disaster.”

South Africa relies on portfolio inflows to finance a current-account shortfall forecast to average 4.3% of gross domestic product in 2015 as demand for the nation’s commodity exports slows. Weakening tax revenue is putting pressure on the budget deficit, giving Nene less room to spur an economy close to recession and cut a 25% jobless rate.

Nene cut this year’s growth forecast to 1.5% from 2% and predicted expansion of 1.7% in 2016, down from an earlier estimate of 2.4% . The budget deficit will widen from earlier forecasts, reaching 3.3%  in the fiscal year through March 2017 and 3.2% in the following year. Government debt will reach almost 50% of GDP this year, a threshold the government won’t cross, Nene said.

Fiscal buffers

Keeping debt in check “could now prove challenging,” Kristin Lindow, a New York-based senior vice president at Moody’s, said via e-mail on Friday. The rising government wage bill has eroded fiscal buffers, raising the risk of overshooting debt targets, she said. Moody’s has a stable outlook on South Africa’s Baa2 rating, suggesting it probably won’t lower the assessment in the next 12 months.

The combination of larger deficits and weaker growth will keep public debt rising as government spending continues to increase, said Fitch, which has a negative outlook on South Africa’s BBB rating, indicating that it may cut the nation’s debt when it publishes its next review in December.

S&P, which rates South Africa’s debt BBB- with a stable outlook, said the economy isn’t able to create enough jobs to reduce unemployment, feeding anti-government protests such as last week’s student demonstrations against tuition-fee increases.

“It is very clear that there is now very little room for maneuver,” Mohammed Nalla, the Johannesburg-based head of strategic research at Nedbank, said in a note on October 23. “Any increments to future spending plans will have to be carefully considered. Unfortunately, it is still unclear whether this message has filtered through to all areas of government.”


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