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Ukraine: S&P and Fitch declare Kyiv in a state of selective bankruptcy

The international rating agencies S&P and Fitch Ratings yesterday downgraded the creditworthiness of the Ukrainian government in terms of bonds and other securities denominated in foreign currencies, explaining that they consider the two-year moratorium on the repayment of Ukraine’s foreign debt to be a selective default.

Earlier this week, Ukraine’s sovereign overseas creditors, including the US, Germany, France, the UK and Japan, finally approved the country’s request for a two-year moratorium on debt repayments worth nearly $20 billion, allowing so in Kyiv to avoid declaring bankruptcy. The moratorium will allow the Ukrainian government to save about $3 billion over the next two years, Bloomberg news agency estimates.

S&P downgraded Ukraine to SD (selective default), Fitch to RD (restricted default), from CCC and C respectively, precisely because of the reprieve it secured in the repayment of its debts.

S&P said it believes macroeconomic and fiscal pressure due to Russia’s military invasion since February 24 may further weaken the Ukrainian government’s ability to service its foreign and domestic currency debts. It also downgraded Kiev’s domestic currency rating to CCC+/C from B+/B. Rather unusually, he did not announce what he believed to be the “outlook” (“positive”, “negative” or “stable”): this hinted at each time whether he expected to upgrade, downgrade or leave the rating unchanged of in the near future).

The Ukrainian economy has collapsed due to the war, with GDP estimated to shrink by 35 to 45% this year (World Bank) and the deficit reaching $5 billion a month.

Source: Capital

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