Text size:
  • Increase
  • Decrease
  • Normal

Current Size: 100%

Monday, May. 21, 2012 |  Syndicate content

Fitch downgrades Greece on debt swap plan

Page last updated at 05:45 GMT, Wednesday, February 22, 2012 - 10:45 EST

Share |

Reuters:

A Greek euro coin is seen amongst coins of other Euro zone countries in Athens April 11, 2010.
All photographs come from the aforementioned news sources, and full copyright ownership is maintained by those sources. This site uses the images purely for reference to the original source and educational purposes, and does not profit in any way from their use.
Fitch cut Greece's long-term ratings on Wednesday to its lowest rating above a default, becoming the first ratings agency to make the widely expected downgrade after the country announced a bond exchange plan to ease its massive debt burden.

It said Greece would be designated as having technically defaulted after the bond exchange is formalised, but the new bonds would be give and new rating.

All three big ratings agencies -- Fitch, Moody's and Standard & Poor's -- downgraded Greece in July when an initial debt swap plan was unveiled and have warned that losses for private creditors would trigger a temporary default.

As expected, Fitch said it was downgrading Greece to "C" from "CCC", and would follow up with further downgrade to a "restricted default" when the bond swap is completed.

It will then reassess the country's ratings when new bonds are issued as part of the debt exchange.

"It would come out to a low, speculative grade rating," Fitch analyst Paul Rawkins told Reuters on the ratings after the reassessment, noting that rating would factor in the country's economic prospects and new debt profile.

Read the whole story: Reuters

Greece-World News