Fitch Ratings has downgraded
Lagos State’s Long-term foreign currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to ‘B+’
from ‘BB-‘ with a stable outlook.
The downgrade, according to
the global rating agency reflected the application of Fitch’s “International
Local and Regional Government’s Rating Criteria – Outside the United States.”
Therefore, following the
recent downgrade of Nigeria’s Long-term foreign currency IDR, it decided to
take a similar rating action on Lagos at the same level as the sovereign.
“Lagos’s ratings are capped
by the sovereign. A downgrade of the sovereign’s ratings would lead to a
corresponding action on Lagos’s IDR. In the absence of a sovereign downgrade,
an operating margin declining towards 30 per cent unfavourable changes in the
national tax policy, debt rising beyond Fitch’s expectations of N350-N400
billion over the medium term and economic instability, even at the local level,
could lead to a downgrade.
“A sovereign upgrade could
be reflected by Lagos’s ratings, provided that improvements in budgetary
performance result in debt levels at 1x the budget size (about N400billion).
Further improvement of the local economy giving additional boost to internally
generated revenues would also be positive for the ratings,” it stated.
Fitch Ratings recently
downgraded Nigeria’s long-term foreign currency IDR to ‘B+’ from ‘BB-‘ as well
as the country’s long-term local currency IDR to ‘BB-‘ from ‘BB’.
But the global rating agency
had assigned a stable outlook to the country. Similarly, Nigeria’s Country
Ceiling was revised down to ‘B+’ from ‘BB-‘ and the Short-Term Foreign-Currency
IDR affirmed at ‘B’.
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