European Union rules introduced a couple of years ago require Standard and Poor's, Moody's, Fitch and other ratings agencies to publish the review dates of any country they monitor from Europe, which tends to include much of Africa.
Ratings
matter because many investors steer clear of debt judged to be
non-investment grade or 'junk', and concerns are growing that South
Africa could follow Russia and Brazil, which both lost their investment
grades this year.
S&P and Fitch each have
South Africa just one cut away from junk at BBB- and S&P has it on a
negative outlook, meaning the chances are skewed towards a downgrade.
S&P's
first review date is June 3 and obvious concerns include weak demand
for South Africa's commodity exports, chronic power shortages and this
month's sacking of a finance minister whom investors respected.
"We
could lower the ratings if GDP (gross domestic product) growth does not
improve in line with our current expectations, or if state-owned
enterprises require higher government support than we currently expect," S&P said, also noting South Africa's high exposure to China's slowing economy.
In
Europe, Spain will start 2016 with an uneasy search for a coalition
government. Fitch's review of its BBB+ stable grade on Jan. 29 will be
one of first big tests of the year, followed by Moody's, which has a
positive outlook, on Feb. 19.
Uncertainty over
Portugal's new government and its vow to ease off on the austerity
adopted with its EU/IMF bailout is also raising rating questions.
DBRS, a smaller agency, will have key reviews on April 29 and Oct. 21.
Its
BBB (low) is equivalent to BBB- and provides Portugal's sole insurance
that its bonds can be used to maximum value to get ultra-cheap ECB
funding. Without that, Portuguese banks would face holes in their
finances.
"We are fairly sanguine on Portugal at the moment," Fergus McCormick, head of sovereign ratings for DBRS, said. "The coalition is fragile, but the outlook for meeting the fiscal targets appears to be fairly reassuring."
BREXIT RISK
Two of Europe's biggest economies are also likely to face scrutiny.
S&P
has had France's AA rating on a negative outlook for well over a year
and should make a decision either way on April 22 or Oct. 21.
Britain
is expected to vote sometime in the second half of the year on whether
it wants to become the first country to quit the European Union.
S&P
has said it could make a double cut to its UK rating if 'Brexit'
happens and proves ugly, while other agencies have warned about the
signal it would send about Europe's fraying relations.
"Brexit is probably the biggest risk facing Europe next year," DBRS's McCormick said.
Among
those looking to climb the rating ladder, Hungary and Indonesia are
knocking on the door of investment grade, India is on the rise and
Russia's economy appears to be stabilising.
Nevertheless the agencies say there are likely to be more downgrades than upgrades in 2016.
"Who
are we looking at for next year? France negative outlook, Turkey
negative outlook, Russia negative outlook, the UK negative outlook," said S&P's EMEA head of sovereign ratings Moritz Kraemer.
"South
Africa, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria will be interesting to watch and of
course Brazil ... I could throw in China for good measure too, but that
is a story which we believe will be pretty stable for a little while
longer."
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