Moody’s hits Turkey with unprecedented downgrade, Erdoğan dismisses credit agency ratings

Turkey had its debt rating cut deeper into junk by Moody’s Investors Service, as President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan dismissed credit agency ratings. The sovereign credit rating was cut to B2, five levels below investment grade and on par with Egypt, Jamaica and Rwanda, Bloomberg reported. “Do what you want to do, your ratings are of no importance," Erdoğan said in response.

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Turkey had its debt rating cut deeper into junk by Moody’s Investors Service, which warned of a possible balance-of-payments crisis in assigning the lowest grade it’s ever given to the country, as President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan dismissed credit agency ratings.

The sovereign credit rating was cut to B2, five levels below investment grade and on par with Egypt, Jamaica and Rwanda, Bloomberg reported. The company kept a negative outlook on the rating, saying fiscal metrics could deteriorate faster than currently expected.

“Turkey’s external vulnerabilities are increasingly likely to crystallize in a balance-of-payments crisis,” London-based Moody’s analysts Sarah Carlson and Yves Lemay said in a report Sept. 11.

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Moody’s, which last downgraded Turkey more than a year ago, now ranks it one level lower than S&P Global Ratings and two notches below Fitch Ratings. Turkey held an investment-grade score from two of the three major credit assessors prior to the July 2016 coup attempt.

Turkey’s standing with investors has suffered as Erdoğan pursued an approach that prioritized growth above all else. The reliance on credit stimulus has exposed the vulnerabilities of the $750 billion economy and came at the expense of inflation and currency instability.

Turkey’s credit-default swaps, local-currency debt and the lira have been the worst performers in emerging markets this quarter. The nation has spent its foreign-exchange reserves faster than any other major developing economy this year, with state-run lenders intervening in the market to support the lira as it slid to successive all-time lows.

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The government’s dollar bonds have returned 0.5 percent since end-December, trailing the 2.4 percent gain across emerging-market sovereign debt, according to Bloomberg Barclays indexes.

But authorities have shown little sign of backing away from the unorthodox policies that are compounding an outflow of foreign capital. Erdoğan declared Turkey to be under “economic attack” following Fitch’s decision last month to revise the outlook to negative.

Turkey’s economy is on the rise and not dipping at the moment, but “they are downgrading our ratings again,” Erdoğan said in Istanbul on Sept. 12 after the Moody’s announcement. “Do what you want to do, your ratings are of no importance.”

Moody’s rationale for its decision included concern about the level of Turkey’s foreign-currency reserves, growing dollarization and the erosion of fiscal buffers, once a source of strength.

The rating company also warned that Turkey’s return to growth after this year’s shock won’t be enough “to offset the impact on the upward debt trajectory of primary deficits of around 2 percent and an increasing interest burden.”

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