Ratings agency Moodyâs Investors Service (âMoodyâsâ) has today downgraded the Government of Sri Lankaâs long-term foreign currency issuer and senior unsecured debt ratings to Caa2 from Caa1 under review for downgrade. The outlook is stable.
This concludes the review for downgrade initiated on 19 July 2021.
âThe decision to downgrade the ratings is driven by Moodyâs assessment that the absence of comprehensive financing to meet the governmentâs forthcoming significant maturities, in the context of very low foreign exchange reserves, raises default risks.â
In turn, this assessment reflects governance weaknesses in the ability of the countryâs institutions to take measures that decisively mitigate significant and urgent risks to the balance of payments, the statement said.
âExternal liquidity risks remain heightened. A large financing envelope that Moodyâs considers to be secure remains elusive and the sovereign continues to rely on piecemeal funding such as swap lines and bilateral loans, although prospects for non-debt generating inflows have improved somewhat since Moodyâs placed Sri Lankaâs rating under review for downgrade.â
Persistently wide fiscal deficits due to the governmentâs very narrow revenue base compound this challenge by keeping gross borrowing needs high and removing fiscal flexibility, the ratings agency stated.
The statement further said:
âThe stable outlook reflects Moodyâs view that the pressures that Sri Lankaâs government faces are consistent with a Caa2 rating level. Downside risks to foreign exchange reserves adequacy remain without comprehensive financing and narrow funding options. Should foreign exchange inflows disappoint, default risk would rise further. However, non-debt generating inflows particularly from tourism and foreign direct investment (FDI) may accelerate beyond Moodyâs current expectations, which, coupled with the track record of the authorities to put together continued, albeit partial, financing, may support the governmentâs commitment and ability to repay its debt for some time.â
âSri Lankaâs local and foreign currency country ceilings have been lowered to B2 and Caa2 from B1 and Caa1, respectively. The three-notch gap between the local currency ceiling and the sovereign rating balances relatively predictable institutions and government actions against the very low foreign exchange reserves adequacy that raises macroeconomic risks, as well as the challenging domestic political environment that weighs on policymaking. The three-notch gap between the foreign currency ceiling and local currency ceiling takes into consideration the high level of external indebtedness and the risk of transfer and convertibility restrictions being imposed given low foreign exchange reserves adequacy, with some capital flow management measures already imposed.â
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We are facing a foreign exchange crisis. If the foreign exchange inflows disappoint in future, default risk would rise would much greater