Moody's discusses Pakistan's rating in annual sovereign report

ข่าวเศรษฐกิจ Friday December 11, 2009 07:47 —PRESS RELEASE LOCAL

Bangkok--11 Dec--Moody's Investors Service Moody's Investors Service has issued a new sovereign report on Pakistan today that explains its reasoning for the B3 rating and stable outlook. "Pakistan's B3 rating reflects the stabilization of economic and financial strength, albeit at low levels," says Aninda Mitra, Moody's sovereign analyst for Pakistan. "The country's growth downturn is bottoming out, its near-term external liquidity has improved, and macroeconomic imbalances are on the mend," says Mitra, noting that the government's stabilization measures and the strong trend in remittances from overseas Pakistanis were supporting these stabilizing trends. "However, structural problems in the electricity sector and the worsening security environment pose notable risks." "The ratings also reflect the entrenched nature of Pakistan's low savings, narrow tax revenues, and relatively weak external competitiveness," says Mitra, adding that, "although constitutional order is being restored, Pakistani politics remain fractious, which could complicate implementation of much needed structural, policy, and administrative reforms." "The government has toughened its security response against religious extremists. Nonetheless, the fundamental unpredictability of Pakistani politics and uncertainty about the durability of medium-term growth subjects underlying sovereign creditworthiness to a high degree of event risk," writes Mitra. Mr. Mitra also noted that the government had signed on to an aggressive package of reforms, and work is in progress to enhance the government's tax revenue base. Although such efforts contrast with the track record of previous administrations, if sustained progress is in fact achieved, they may constitute credit-supportive developments. "The stable outlook reflects augmentation of the IMF program, which will alleviate external financing needs over the next 15 months and bridge near-term shortfalls in fiscal financing," says the analyst, noting further that, "even though confidence-sensitive foreign private investment may remain volatile, the stable outlook is also supported by recent improvements in monetary confidence and the stabilization of macroeconomic imbalances." The report can be accessed at www.moodys.com. NOTE TO JOURNALISTS ONLY: For more information please contact New York Press Information +1-212-553-0376; EMEA Press Information in London +44-20-7772-5456; Juan Pablo Soriano in Madrid +34-91-310-1454; Alex Cataldo in Milan +39-02-914-81-100; Eric de Bodard in Paris +33-1-5330-1020; Detlef Scholz in Frankfurt +49-69-707-30-700; Mardig Haladjian in Limassol +357-25-586-586; Alex Sazhin in Moscow +7-495-228-60-60; Petr Vins in Prague +4202 2422 2929; Tokyo Press Information +813-5408-4110; Hilary Parkes in Toronto +1-416-214-1635; Hong Kong Press Information +852-2916-1150; Hector Lim in Sydney +612 9270 8102; Luiz Tess in S?o Paulo +5511-3043-7300; Alberto Jones Tamayo in Mexico City +5255-1253-5700; Daniel R?as in Buenos Aires +54 11-4816-2332 ext. 105; Leon Claassen in Johannesburg +27-11-217-5470; Jehad el-Nakla in Dubai +971 4 401 9536; or visit our web site at www.moodys.com Singapore Aninda S. Mitra Vice President - Senior Analyst Sovereign Risk Group Moody's Singapore Pte Ltd. JOURNALISTS: (852) 2916-1150 SUBSCRIBERS: (65) 6398-8308 Singapore Thomas J. Byrne Senior Vice President - Regional Credit Officer Sovereign Risk Group Moody's Singapore Pte Ltd. JOURNALISTS: (852) 2916-1150 SUBSCRIBERS: (65) 6398-8308

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