S&P ПОДТВЕРДИЛО СУВЕРЕННЫЕ КРЕДИТНЫЕ РЕЙТИНГИ РЕСПУБЛИКИ КАЗАХСТАН, ПРОГНОЗ "НЕГАТИВНЫЙ"
14.03.16 12:33
/Standard & Poor's, 11.03.16, перевод и заголовок KASE/ Агентство Standard
& Poor’s подтвердило суверенные кредитные рейтинги Республики Казахстан,
а именно долгосрочный кредитный рейтинг на уровне "BBB-" и краткосрочный
рейтинг по иностранной и местной валюте на уровне "A-3". Прогноз остается
негативным.
В то же время, мы подтвердили рейтинг Казахстана по национальной шкале
"kzAA".
Ниже приводится оригинальный текст сообщения Standard & Poor's на
английском языке.
RATING ACTION
On March 11, 2016, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services affirmed its 'BBB-' long-
term and 'A-3' short-term foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings on
the Republic of Kazakhstan. The outlook remains negative.
At the same time, we affirmed our 'kzAA' Kazakhstan national scale rating on the
country.
RATIONALE
The ratings on Kazakhstan continue to be supported by the government's strong
fiscal position, built on accumulated past budgetary surpluses. In particular,
we project the general government will remain in a net asset position over the
next few years, helped by the authorities' capacity and willingness to contain
spending. The ratings remain constrained by our view of Kazakhstan's limited
institutional and governance effectiveness, owing to the highly centralized
political environment, the country's moderate level of economic development,
high dependence on the hydrocarbon sector, and limited monetary policy
flexibility.
Kazakhstan's economy depends heavily on the oil sector-it accounts for an
estimated 20% of GDP, 50% of fiscal revenues, and 60% of exports. Due to
suppressed global oil prices, we expect GDP growth will stagnate or contract
modestly in 2016. This will likely stem from weaker exports and our forecast of
roughly flat oil production during the same period (unless the large offshore
Kashagan oil field comes fully on stream earlier than 2018), as well as reduced
domestic consumption due to the recent tenge devaluation, high inflation, and
weak consumer lending. We then expect a moderate economic recovery in 2017-
2019, as consumption and investments gradually pick up. Longer-term growth
prospects will rely on the pace of the oil price recovery, the Kashagan oil
field project, and progress in the government's ambitious program of
institutional reforms announced recently.
We consider that the Kazakhstan tenge is now largely floating, based on its
substantial depreciation since August 2015 and almost no intervention from the
National Bank of Kazakhstan (NBK) in the past three months, even when the oil
price fell below US$30 per barrel (/bbl) in January 2016. We expect the current
account deficit will average 2% of GDP in 2015-2017, compared with a surplus in
2010-2014. However, we expect import reduction, supported by the lower tenge
exchange rate, and a gradually recovering oil price will help the current
account recover and return to surplus over time.
Current account deficits will lead Kazakhstan's net external liabilities to grow
to above 100% of current account receipts (CARs) in the next two years. At the
same time, we estimate that liquid external assets will exceed external debt by
45%-50% of CARs. We estimate that more than one-half of Kazakhstan's stock
of external liabilities related to foreign direct investment (FDI) is debt, and
this share has grown over the past few years.
Despite the current account performance weakening, we expect reserves will
stay broadly stable in 2016-2017. This is because they will be supported by
financial account inflows, namely the expected repatriation of National Fund of
the Republic of Kazakhstan (NFRK) assets, as part of government stimulus
spending, and the growth of external borrowings (primarily from multilateral
institutions [MLIs] that have expressed willingness to extend their facilities
to the government). We anticipate that MLI borrowings will offset the expected
fall in FDI inflows to 2% of GDP in 2015-2016, compared with5% of GDP in the
past five years.
We believe that the NBK's ability to influence domestic monetary conditions
remains constrained by weak transmission mechanisms. Apart from shallow
capital markets, Kazakhstan's banking system is extremely vulnerable and has
become increasingly dollarized. The share of foreign currency-denominated
deposits to total deposits increased to 67% in December 2015, from about 55%
at year-end 2014 and less than 40% in 2013. More importantly, the recent oil
price drop and further tenge depreciation will present the NBK with deepening
challenges, including maintaining financial stability, supporting credit and
economic growth, and keeping inflation within previously stated targets. In this
context, we see increasing risks to the predictability and effectiveness of the
NBK's policies. We expect inflation will remain in double digits this year,
following the hike to 13.6% in 2015. We note, however, the NBK's progress in
introducing a set of new monetary policy tools within the inflation-targeting
policy regime.
Due to lower oil prices and the ongoing fiscal stimulus program, we expect the
government will run fiscal deficits on a consolidated basis with the NFRK in
2016- 2017, and we expect general government debt as a percentage of GDP will
change as a result of both expected deficits and the impact of exchange-rate
movements. Apart from the regular annual transfer from the NFRK to the central
government budget, the government has recently used the oil fund to support the
local economy. This fiscal stimulus includes a US$5.5 billion program launched
in 2014 and a US$9 billion program for infrastructure investments up to 2018,
launched in 2015. In February, the government announced additional measures
to stimulate the economy.
We think Kazakhstan's capacity and willingness to contain spending in the next
few years, after the ongoing stimulus has finished, remains strong, and that the
general government will return to surplus from 2018. The government is
considering different fiscal scenarios, including with an oil price under
US$25/bbl. Kazakhstan's material capital expenditures should support the
government's spending flexibility, in our view.
The weaker tenge exchange rate could support revenues in 2016, whereas
revenue-mobilization measures, particularly related to more-focused collection
of value-added tax, as well as recovering oil prices, will push up revenue
growth in the longer term. So far, we do not factor in any sizable short-term
revenues from asset sales. Despite the ambitious privatization program the
government announced in 2015, we understand that the program's focus is on
attracting strategic investors (which might turn out to be a long-term process)
rather than on immediate revenue mobilization.
With the expected recovery in fiscal performance, we think gross general
government debt will continue to stay below a modest 25% of GDP over our
2016-2019 forecast period and that the government will remain in a net asset
position thanks to its liquid assets accumulated in the oil fund (above 50% of
GDP). This figure excludes the debt of Kazakhstan's government-related entities,
the statistics for which are not available (we estimate their debt exceeded 15%
of GDP as of year-end 2015).
In 2016-2017, consolidated general government fiscal deficits will likely be
primarily financed by domestic bonds and, if need be, borrowing from MLIs (such
as the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank). We understand that the
government could use some of the local issuance to inject capital into the
banking system, if the tenge depreciation puts pressure on the banking system's
capital. We expect nonperforming loans (NPLs; loans more than 90 days
overdue) to increase to about 12%-14% by year-end 2016 from a reported 9.5%
as of Dec. 1, 2015 (see "Credit FAQ: How The Recent Devaluation Of The Tenge
Affects Kazakh Banks' Creditworthiness," published Jan. 28, 2016, on
RatingsDirect).
In April 2015, President Nursultan Nazarbayev won the early presidential
election, which has supported political stability. Kazakhstan has been one of
the most politically stable environments in the region in recent years. Under
his renewed mandate, the president has announced five institutional and
economic reforms that could offset the sharp economic slowdown. That said, we
regard future policy choices as relatively difficult to predict in the longer
term because of uncertainty surrounding the presidential succession.
PresidentNazarbayev, aged 75, has governed Kazakhstan since its independence
in 1991.
OUTLOOK
The negative outlook reflects our view of risks to Kazakhstan's external and
monetary profiles over the next 24 months, in the current weak and volatile
global commodity environment.
We could lower our long-term ratings, for instance, if we believed the
challenges of containing inflation, responding to exchange rate pressures,
andmaintaining banking system stability had reduced Kazakhstan's monetary
policy predictability and effectiveness, or if we saw external imbalances
continuing to increase.
We could consider revising the outlook to stable if higher oil prices and the
authorities' countercyclical policy response addressed external imbalances
andshort- and medium-term challenges to monetary policy.
KEY STATISTICS
RATINGS LIST
Rating
To From
Kazakhstan (Republic of)
Sovereign Credit Rating
Foreign and Local Currency BBB-/Negative/A-3 BBB-/Negative/A-3
Kazakhstan National Scale kzAA/--/-- kzAA/--/--
Transfer & Convertibility Assessment BBB- BBB-
Senior Unsecured
Foreign and Local Currency BBB- BBB-
Short-Term Debt
Local Currency A-3 A-3
[2016-03-14]