International rating agency,
Fitch Ratings, Thursday downgraded Nigeria’s credit ratings, indicating
increased likelihood that the country will not be able to repay its debt
obligations.
Citing increased fiscal and external
vulnerability, slow fiscal and monetary adjustments and renewed insurgency in
the Niger Delta, the Fitch downgrade Nigeria’s Long-term foreign currency
Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to ‘B+’ from ‘BB-‘ and Long-term local currency IDR
to ‘BB-‘ from ‘BB’. In a statement issued Thursday Fitch said that, “The
Outlooks are Stable. The issue ratings on Nigeria’s senior unsecured
foreign-currency bonds have also been downgraded to ‘B+’ from ‘BB-‘. The
Country Ceiling has been revised down to ‘B+’ from ‘BB-‘ and the Short-Term
Foreign-Currency IDR affirmed at ‘B’.”
The new ratings imply that though
Nigeria is presently meeting financial commitments there is a limited margin of
safety and capacity for continued timely payments is contingent upon a
sustained, favourable business and economic environment. Explaining the
rationale for downgrading the country’s rating, Fitch said, “Nigeria’s fiscal
and external vulnerability has worsened due to a sharp fall in oil revenue and
fiscal and monetary adjustments that were slow to take shape and insufficient
to mitigate the impact of low global oil prices. Renewed insurgency in the
Niger Delta in 1H16 has lowered oil production, magnifying pressures on export
revenues and limiting the inflow of hard currency. Fitch forecasts Nigeria’s
general government fiscal deficit to grow to 4.2 percent in 2016, after
averaging 1.5 percent in 2011-15, before beginning to narrow in 2017.
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