S&P Affirmed Kazakhstan Electricity Grid Operating Co. At 'BB+'; Off Watch On Continued Government Support; Outlook Stable
04.09.09 09:41
/Standard & Poor's, Moscow, September 3, 09/ - Kazakhstan Electricity Grid
Operating Co. Affirmed At 'BB+'; Off Watch On Continued Government Support;
Outlook Stable
- Kazakhstan Electricity Grid Operating Co. (KEGOC) should continue to enjoy
a wide level of support from the Kazakh government. We have received
comfort that the Kazakh government, despite propping up domestic banks,
will continue to be able to provide debt guarantees to KEGOC, as well as
implementing supportive tariffs, and making direct injections to cover
liquidity shortfalls.
- We are affirming our ratings on KEGOC and removing them from
CreditWatch with negative implications.
- The stable outlook reflects the outlook on Kazakhstan. Due to the fact that
the company is a provider of essential infrastructure services for the
country, we believe that the Kazakh government is committed to provide ongoing
and extraordinary support in the future.
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said today that it had affirmed its 'BB+'
long-term corporate credit rating on Kazakhstan Electricity Grid Operating Co.
(JSC) (KEGOC), the state-owned transmission grid operator in the Republic of
Kazakhstan (foreign currency BBB-/Stable/A-3; local currency BBB/Stable/A-3;
Kazakhstan national scale 'kzAAA'). The outlook is stable.
The rating was removed from CreditWatch, where it had been placed with
negative implications on June 16, 2009.
"The removal from CreditWatch and affirmation reflect our expectations that
KEGOC will likely continue receiving ongoing government support and our
opinion that the likelihood of timely and sufficient extraordinary government
support is "very high"," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Sergei Gorin.
We base this on our assessments of KEGOC's:
- "Very important" role in Kazakhstan's economy as a provider of core
infrastructure services;
- "Very strong" link with the Kazakh government, illustrated by state
guarantees on some of KEGOC's existing and, possibly, new debt, as well as
equity injections to cover liquidity shortfalls.
However, we consider KEGOC's stand-alone credit profile to be weak and
assess it at 'B+' because of its large investment program and associated
construction risk, high foreign currency and floating risk exposure, aggressive
financial policy, high leverage, and the relatively weak characteristics of
Kazakhstan's power sector. Kazakhstan's relatively low wealth, limited customer
diversification, and historically delayed payments impair KEGOC's market
position.
Ongoing and potential timely and sufficient extraordinary state support to
KEGOC partly mitigates these risks. KEGOC also benefits from its monopoly
position in a stable and low-operating-risk electricity transmission business.
The stable outlook reflects that on the sovereign. KEGOC's future credit quality
largely depends on the continuity of strong government support.
"If the government reconsiders its level of support to KEGOC, we might lower the
rating on KEGOC due to its rather weak stand-alone credit profile," said Mr.
Gorin.
Moreover, if we believe KEGOC's liquidity position to have deteriorated or if
there were indications of lower state support, we could lower our estimation of
the company's stand-alone credit profile and/or lower the corporate credit
rating.
Stronger-than-expected operational and financial results, improvements in the
financial profile, and more explicit government support might create ratings
upside potential.
RELATED RESEARCH
2008 Corporate Criteria: Analytical Methodology, April 15, 2008
Primary Credit Analyst:
Sergei Gorin, Moscow, 7 495 783 4132;
sergei_gorin@standardandpoors.com
Secondary Credit Analyst:
Peter Kernan, London, (44) 20-7176-3618;
peter_kernan@standardandpoors.com
Additional Contact:
Infrastructure Finance Ratings Europe;
InfrastructureEurope@standardandpoors.com
[2009-09-04]