Home Industry Economy Fitch follows Moody’s by downgrading Oman deeper into junk again Fitch’s latest downgrade brings its ranking of Oman to the same level as that of Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings. by Bloomberg August 19, 2020 Oman received its second downgrade this year from Fitch Ratings because of what it called the “continued erosion” of the country’s fiscal and external balance sheets. Fitch lowered Oman’s sovereign rating one notch to BB-, three steps below investment grade and on par with Brazil, Turkey and Bangladesh, according to a statement on Monday. The outlook is negative. Fitch’s latest downgrade brings its ranking of Oman to the same level as that of Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings. Even before the virus outbreak and declines in oil prices, Oman was already among the most vulnerable economies in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council. It’s now on track to run a budget shortfall that Fitch estimates at nearly 20 per cent of gross domestic product in 2020, compared with about 8 per cent in 2019. “We expect fiscal reform and higher oil prices to narrow the fiscal deficit to the mid-single digits by 2022, but there are considerable downside risks to this forecast,” Fitch analysts including Krisjanis Krustins said in the report. The Gulf nation’s dollar bond due 2048 gave up earlier gains to hit a session low after Fitch’s announcement, with its yield dropping 1 basis point to 7.6 per cent. Oman’s sovereign rating was already downgraded twice in 2020 by Moody’s. Oman’s dire financial straits are a major challenge for Sultan Haitham Bin Tariq Al Said, who took power in January. Fitch said it sees “a real prospect for implementation of substantial fiscal reform” under the new ruler. “The coming three years will be a critical test of the funding flexibility that Oman has displayed in the past, and a steep maturity schedule will keep Oman’s funding needs large beyond that, even as the fiscal deficit is reined in,” Fitch said. More from the report: Government debt projected to increase to over 80 per cent of GDP this year, from 60 per cent in 2019 as a result of a 16 per cent contraction in nominal GDP The current-account deficit seen widening to just over 12 per cent of GDP this year, from 5 per cent in 2019. Fiscal deficits and external debt maturities seen totaling $12bn to $14bn – or about 20 per cent of GDP – per year in 2020-2022 Over half of the government’s funding needs will have to be met with external debt Although assistance from Oman’s Gulf neighbours remains an option, Fitch expects any GCC aid programme “will be calibrated to facilitate but not meaningfully replace debt market funding,” according to the statement. “The size, timing and form of further support remain uncertain amid Oman’s desire to maintain geopolitical neutrality, political and fiscal challenges in the rest of the GCC and the large size of Oman’s funding need,” it said. Tags Fiscal Reform Fitch Ratings GCC Oman Sultan Haitham Bin Tariq Al Said 0 Comments You might also like How REITs are unlocking the potential of UAE real estate GCC region M&A blazes trail as global deals decline Global outstanding sukuk market hits $823bn in Q3 2023 Top marks for GCC nations in digital connectivity index