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Publish Date: Thu, 07 Mar 2024, 17:21 PM
LONDON, March 7 (Reuters) - China's credit rating could be cut if its economic recovery remains weak or is driven largely by extensive stimulus, S&P Global warned on Thursday.
S&P last downgraded China in 2017 but rival agency Moody's put Beijing on a downgrade warning in December, citing concerns Beijing would have to bail out more local governments due to the country's property market crash.
S&P analyst Kim Eng Tan said pessimism about China needs to lift so that the economy rebounds and fiscal pressures ease - an improvement currently factored into S&P's A+ stable credit score.
If this improvement is "postponed quite a bit further into the future than we currently think - which is within the next year or two," S&P may have to reflect this view in the rating, Tan said during a webinar.
That "means there could be a rating action in the negative direction," he added.
Tan stressed that for now the signals were "mixed" and cited a still "decent chance" that the economy rebounds "quite a bit" this year.
If that bounce needs a lot more stimulus than planned, "the arguments for a negative rating action will strengthen" as China's debt would increase faster, he added.
Credit Default Swap markets, which are used to by investors to hedge the risk of holding a country's bonds, have priced in a series of Chinese rating downgrades since 2022.
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/weak-recovery-could-trigger-china-rating-cut-sp-global-says-2024-03-07/