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Moody's affirms Egypt's B3 rating; maintains stable outlook

Moody's affirms Egypt's B3 rating; maintains stable outlook
Egypt's external liquidity position has significantly improved, the rise in reserves was mainly driven by debt-creating inflows

Cairo - Mubasher: Moody's Investors Service has affirmed the government of Egypt's long-term issuer and senior unsecured bond ratings at B3, and maintained the stable outlook, according to a report issued on Friday.

The rating affirmation is based on Moody's view that the B3 rating appropriately captures Egypt's credit risk profile, the reported noted.

“Very weak government finances will continue to constrain the rating pending further clarity on the sustainability and impact of the reform programme.”

“While Egypt's external liquidity position has significantly improved over the past 12 months, the increase in international reserves has been mainly driven by debt-creating inflows, thus also raising the level of external debt and foreign-currency denominated debt,” the rating agency explained.

Moody’s added that the stable rating outlook reflects its view that upside and downside risks to the rating are balanced.

“Reform progress has been impressive. However, while political stability has improved to some degree, reform momentum may face headwinds, including from the presidential election set to take place by May 2018. Visibility on the extent to which the reform programme will materially improve the sovereign credit profile in the coming years remains limited,” the report indicated.

Moody's has also affirmed the provisional senior unsecured B3 Medium-Term Note programme rating. Egypt's country ceilings stay unchanged at B2/Not Prime (NP) for the foreign-currency bond ceiling, Caa1/NP for the foreign currency deposit ceiling, and Ba2/NP for the local-currency country risk ceilings.

The ratings agency expects Egypt's credit profile to remain heavily influenced by the government's very weak government finances for a sustained period, with already high fiscal deficits continuing to grow in nominal terms over the coming years and declining only gradually as a percentage of GDP.

Moody's estimates that the general government's primary deficit shrank to 1.8% of GDP in fiscal 2017 from 3.7% the year before, and will start to show small surpluses from 2019 onwards.

Debt to GDP ratio to reach 90% by 2019

As a consequence, Egypt's government financial strength will remain very weak for the foreseeable future, with debt and debt affordability metrics continuing to exceed by some margin the median for B3-rated sovereigns. The debt-to-GDP ratio likely peaked at 100% in fiscal year 2017 and Moody's expects that it will decline to about 90% by 2019, still a very high level.

Monetary tightening in response to rapidly rising inflation has driven up the government's domestic funding costs, with the cumulative 700 basis points rise in the Central Bank's policy rate having driven one-year T-bill rates to above 20%. Moody's expects interest payments to remain very high, accounting for close to 40% of revenues over the coming two to three years.

Set against that negative driver, macroeconomic stability has been broadly maintained despite the negative inflation shock resulting from the credit-positive foreign exchange regime liberalization on 3 November 2016. Moody's projects that real GDP growth has held up well, at 4% in fiscal 2017, and that it will continue to pick-up in the coming years.

Foreign Exchange reserves surged to $36 billion

External liquidity has also improved. Reduced uncertainty about exchange rate policy, elimination of the parallel market and unlocking of multilateral funding following the exchange-rate liberalization has led to an increase of the Central Bank of Egypt's (CBE) net international reserves to $36 billion at the end of July from $15.5 billion a year earlier.

The increase in reserves was largely the result of debt-creating inflows, with external debt almost doubling to an estimated 33% of GDP in fiscal 2017 from around 17% the year before. However, repatriation of private remittances through the formal banking system, and to a lesser extent foreign investor participation in the stock market and FDI inflows also contributed to the increase, the report concluded.