Home
$1 =
 27.9409 RUR
+0.3349
€1 =
 35.4095 RUR
-0.3071
Moscow
36º F / 2º C 
sun with clouds
St.Petersburg
39º F / 4º C 
rain
Search the Archives:
Today is Dec. 2, 2008 7:01 PM (GMT +0300) Moscow
Forum  |  Archive  |  Photo  |  Advertising  |  Subscribe  |  Search  |  PDA  |  RUS
Life
Other Photos
Open Gallery... Open Gallery...  
Life
Corruption Up in Russian Army
Muscovites Fear Layoffs
Bureaucrats Are Mostly the Victims of ...
Mumbai Attacks Show Terrorist Threat Is ...
Somali Pirates to Release Ukrainian MV ...
Readers' Opinions
You are welcome to share your opinion on the issue.
Oct. 04, 2007
E-mail  |  Home
Standard & Poor's Reconsiders Kazakhstan
Standard & Poor's rating agency lowered Kazakhstan's credit rating from “stable” to “negative” yesterday. The scale of the foreign crediting boom in that country concerns the agency, and it may lower Kazakhstan's country rating on October 9. The agency is now assessing Kazakhstan's readiness to back up the obligations of its state companies, which may also be re-rated. Kazakhstan's sovereign rating and the ratings of a number of Kazakh organizations, the Development Bank, Kazpochta, the Agrarian Credit Corp. and the Kazakh Mortgage Credit Guarantee Fund have been place on the S&P CreditWatch list.
An S&P spokesman told Kommersant that the corrections would most likely be by a single degree. Kazakhstan's rating for foreign and domestic currency is now BB/A-3. The agency will also request addition financial information from the Kazakh government. Questions about Kazakhstan's solvency are linked to the international liquidity crisis.

According to the National Bank of Kazakhstan, the country's foreign debt as of July 1 of this year was over 101 percent of the GDP, up from 79.4 percent a year earlier. The current-account deficit is over 5 percent of the GDP, and the country's gold and currency reserves fell from $23.5 billion in July to $20 billion on September 14.

Experts note a particularly negative tone in the statement on Kazakhstan. The Fitch and Moody's rating agencies may follow in S&P's footsteps in relation to Kazakhstan, and the lowering of its sovereign rating could lead to the outflow of capital from the country. Conflicts between the Kazakh government and the large oil and gas companies in the country are also detrimental to the investment climate.
www.kommersant.com

All the Article in Russian as of Oct. 04, 2007

E-mail  |  Home

Forum  |  Archives  |   Photo  |  About Us  |  Editorial  |  E-Editorial  |  Advertising  |  Subscribe  |  Subscribe to Printed Editions  |  Contact Us  |  RSS
© 1991-2008 ZAO "Kommersant. Publishing House". All rights reserved.