By Michael Heath -
Sep 4, 2012 7:12 AM GMT+0800
The European Union’s outlook was cut
to negative by Moody’s Investors Service, reflecting the risks
to Germany, France,
the U.K. and the Netherlands that account
for about 45 percent of the group’s budget revenue.
The ratings company lowered the outlook on the EU’s Aaa
long-term bond rating from stable, according to a statement
released in Frankfurt late yesterday. It also changed to
negative from stable its outlook on the provisional Aaa rating
for the EU’s medium-term note program.
The change “reflects the negative outlook on the Aaa
ratings of the member states with large contributions to the EU
budget,” Moody’s said. “The creditworthiness of these member
states is highly correlated, as they are all exposed, albeit to
varying degrees, to the euro-area debt crisis.”
Chancellor Angela Merkel told a crowd of beer
drinkers in
Bavaria yesterday that Germany must show solidarity with Europe,
and indicated she would back a more active crisis-fighting role
at the European Central Bank. Her nation shoulders the
largest
cost of bailing out weaker governments.
Risks of a downgrade to
the EU’s sovereign debt rating come
from a “deterioration in the creditworthiness of EU member
states,” Moody’s said. “Additionally, a weakening of the
commitment of the member states to the EU and changes to the
EU’s fiscal framework that led to less conservative budget
management would be credit negative.”
Draghi’s Plan
ECB President Mario Draghi told officials yesterday he would be comfortable buying three-year government bonds to bring down borrowing costs for nations in financial distress.European leaders are stepping up shuttle diplomacy this week as they brace for Draghi’s plan to defend the euro from bond-market turmoil. EU President Herman Van Rompuy is traveling to Berlin for talks with Merkel today as Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti welcomes French President Francois Hollande to Rome.
The yield on Italian 10-year bonds declined 8 basis points yesterday to 5.77 percent. That was still 439 basis points more than the yield on similar maturity German bunds. Spain’s 10-year bonds were yielding 6.85 percent, near the 7 percent level that led Greece, Portugal and Ireland to seek bailouts.
“The outlook for the EU’s ratings could return to stable if the outlooks on the ratings of the key Aaa countries with contributions to the EU budget also returned to stable,” Moody’s said of the 27-member group.
Draghi faces challenges in winning support among the German public for market intervention. Germany reiterated its support yesterday for Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, following reports last week that he had considered resigning over his opposition to ECB bond purchases.
“Moody’s believes that it is reasonable to assume the same probability of default by the EU on its debt obligations as the highest rated key members states’ probability of default,” according to the statement. “Whereas Moody’s acknowledges that there are structural features in place that enhance the EU’s creditworthiness, they are in Moody’s view not sufficient to delink the EU’s ratings from the ratings of its strongest key member states.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Heath in Sydney at mheath1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at sphang@bloomberg.net
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