Fitch: Emerging Europe Faces Testing Outlook
29.08.08 12:33
/Fitch Ratings, London, August 28, 08/ - Fitch Ratings says in a new report
published today that the economic and credit outlook for the Emerging
Europe (EE) region is worsening as it faces the combination of a global
economic slowdown, strong inflationary pressures and fragile financing
conditions, while many EE countries also have sizeable current account
deficits (CADs).
"The economic and credit outlook for Emerging Europe is deteriorating as
an unpalatable combination of a downturn in the euro area, maturing domestic
booms and the global commodity price shock presages a worse growth/
inflation/ current account trade-off across the region; while global
financing conditions are fragile," says Edward Parker, Head of Emerging
Europe Sovereigns at Fitch. "Although not Fitch's central scenario,
the risk of a hard landing accompanied by an exchange rate crisis somewhere
in the region is significant and rising," says Mr Parker.
Previous upward rating momentum in the region has stalled. Over the past
18 months there have only been three foreign currency rating upgrades: the
Czech Republic ("A+"), Slovakia ("A+") and Armenia ("BB"); and two
downgrades: Latvia ("BBB+") and Georgia ("B+"). "The balance of Positive to
Negative Outlooks has swung from plus five in August 2007 to minus five in
August 2008, highlighting the downward pressure on ratings. Seven countries
are now on Negative Outlooks, which is a record number since Fitch started
its sovereign coverage on the region in the mid-1990s," says Mr Parker.
Fitch forecasts EE's GDP growth to fall from 6.9% in 2007 to 5.8% in 2008
(the lowest since 2002) and 5.3% in 2009, bolstered by growth in Russia
("BBB+") of 7.5% this year and 6.5% next. But most countries within the
region will grow much slower, and Estonia ("A") and Latvia are at risk of
recession. Meanwhile, the spike in commodity prices has unleashed a surge
in inflation when many countries were starting to run up against capacity
constraints and overheat after years of rapid monetary and GDP growth.
Inflation has been highest in countries with fixed or managed exchange rates
including the Baltic States, Bulgaria ("BBB"), Kazakhstan ("BBB"), Russia
and Ukraine ("BB-"); and best contained in the inflation-targeting central
European economies. High and volatile inflation increases the risk of
exchange rate and banking crises, and reduces debt tolerance.
Substantial CADs are a significant credit concern across much of EE - and
one that has been heightened by the credit crunch. This was the primary
reason Fitch revised the rating Outlooks to Negative from Stable on Bulgaria,
Estonia, Latvia and Romania ("BBB") in January, following Lithuania ("A") in
December. In the report, Fitch has constructed an index of relative
vulnerability to external financing pressures, based on its projections of
CA balance plus FDI, external debt repayments due this year and net external
debt stocks. Latvia, Croatia ("BBB-"), Lithuania, Turkey ("BB-"), Estonia,
Bulgaria and Romania come out as most vulnerable on this measure.
EE sovereign external bond issuance at USD14bn year-to-date has already
surpassed last year's total of USD13bn. However, although private sector
external bond issuance picked up in H108 on H207, it is still well below pre-
credit crunch volumes. The rapid pace of bank credit growth in the region is
slowing, but remains elevated in parts of the CIS and Balkans. Foreign
parent banks should continue to support access to funding and confidence in
local banks, but there is a tail risk that a worsening of the international
credit crunch could trigger a fall in the availability of their financing
to EE banks.
The war between Russia and Georgia, and Russia's tense relations with
many of its neighbours and the West has added another layer of risk to the
region at an inopportune time. Aside from Georgia, which is on a Negative
Outlook, Fitch does not currently expect these developments to trigger any
rating changes for Russia or other countries. However, this is not impossible
should events lead to a marked reduction in FDI and other capital inflows,
seriously disrupt trade and economic activity, heighten domestic political
instability or heat up other post-Soviet frozen conflicts.
The full report, entitled "Emerging Europe Sovereign Review: 2008", is
available on the agency's subscription website at www.fitchratings.com
Contact:
Edward Parker, London, Tel.: +44 20 7417 6340;
David Heslam, Tel.: +44 20 7417 4384;
Andrew Colquhoun, London, Tel.: +44 20 7417 4316.
Media contact:
Alla Izmailova, Moscow, Tel.: + 7 495 956 9901/03,
alla.izmailova@fitchratings.com
[2008-08-29]