Fitch downgrades Ghana’s credit rating from B- to CCC
Eight months down the line, the agency says the downgrade reflects the deterioration of Ghana’s public finances.
Ghana has suffered another blow as its credit rating has been downgraded by Fitch Ratings from B- to CCC.
This rating did not come with an outlook because Fitch typically does not assign outlooks to ratings of ‘CCC+’ or below.
This update follows Standard and Poor’s (S&P) downgrade of Ghana’s foreign and local credit ratings from B-B’ to CCC+C with a negative economic outlook.
Ghana’s January 2022 B- rating from Fitch came with a negative outlook.
Eight months down the line, the agency says the downgrade reflects the deterioration of Ghana’s public finances.
It said this has “contributed to a prolonged lack of access to Eurobond markets, in turn leading to a significant decline in external liquidity.”
Fitch expects Ghana’s international reserves to fall to close to two months of current external payments by end-2022 without any new external financing sources.
After a rough 2022 that has seen Ghana in the throes of an economic crisis, the Akufo-Addo administration has turned to the IMF for a support programme.
Fitch noted that the government’s high-interest costs and structurally low revenue as a percentage of GDP have increased the likelihood that IMF support would necessitate some form of debt treatment.
It expects a deal with the IMF to crystalise within the next six months.
“We estimate that a programme could disburse as much as USD3 billion and unlock budget support from other multilateral lenders.”
However, Fitch feels that the timing of such a deal is uncertain “and would be dependent on the government’s ability to present a credible fiscal reform plan in line with increasing government revenue and improving debt affordability metrics.”
The ratings agency estimates that Ghana faces $2.75 billion of external debt servicing in 2022, including amortisation and interest, and $2.8 billion in 2023.
For the remainder of 2022, Fitch expects the government to meet its external debt obligations through a combination of a $750 million term loan from the African Export-Import Bank (BBB), $250 million in syndicated loans from international commercial banks, and up to $200 million from the government’s sinking fund.
Source: africanewsweb.com