Moody’s downgrades Slovakia
|On the radar
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Industrial producer prices went up by 0.4% m/m and by 1.7% y/y in Czechia for November.
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Today at 11, Croatia will publish their inflation figures for November.
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Tomorrow, the Hungarian Central Bank has a rate setting meeting.
Economic developments
On Friday, rating agency Moody’s downgraded Slovak domestic and foreign-currency long-term issuer and senior unsecured ratings to A3 from A2, revising the outlook to stable from negative. The downgrade reflects Slovakia's broad institutional challenges amid political tensions. According to Moody’s, reforms in the judiciary and media will weaken institutional checks and balances, while increased political fragmentation complicates policymaking. On the fiscal front, despite the government’s commitment to reduce the deficit in line with EU rules, Moody’s expects Slovakia’s debt burden to rise above that of similarly rated peers in the coming years. The Slovak government aims to reduce the headline deficit to 2.9% of GDP by 2027 under the European Commission's excessive deficit procedure. However, Moody’s projects a higher deficit of 3.5% of GDP in 2027 due to implementation uncertainties, particularly regarding the financial transactions tax. Rising debt levels reflect budget rigidity and challenges in executing consolidation measures. Meanwhile, the other two major agencies, S&P and Fitch, have affirmed their ratings in recent weeks. Moody’s rating aligns with Fitch’s, while S&P’s rating is two notches higher. All three agencies maintain a stable outlook.
Market movements
CEE currencies surged on Friday, benefiting from a weakening dollar ahead of this week’s FED decision on rates. Although the EURHUF moved below 410, the Hungarian forint remains weak, which is the key reason for the central bank to keep rates on hold at tomorrow’s meeting. EURCZK dived below the 25 threshold on Friday, given that rate stability is the most likely scenario for this week’s MPC decision. Last week, 10Y bond yields increased quite visibly in Poland (+20bp w/w) while spreads on Slovak vs. Croatia’s 10Y yields widened 20bp w/w.
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