Tuesday 20 November 2012

France downgraded from AAA to Aa1 by Moody`s

Moody's Investors Service on Mondaydowngraded France, stripping it of its prized AAA credit rating due to concernsover its prospects for economic growth and its exposure to Europe's financial crisis.
Moody's lowered France's rating one notch to Aa1. It kept the rating's outlook at negative, meaning it could face future downgrades.
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The ratings agency said that it is becoming increasingly difficult to predict how resilient France will be to future euro-area shocks.
But the agency noted that the country's rating remains high compared with many other European countries. It cited for this France's diversified economy and "a strong commitment to structural reforms and fiscal consolidation."
The downgrade will likely heighten fears that Europe's debt crisis is spreading from the so-called peripheral nations like Greece, Portugal and Ireland to the core of the euro region. Standard & Poor's, a rival rating agency, lowered its rating on France's debt one notch from AAA to AA+ in January, citing the deepening political, financialand monetary problems within the eurozone.
Pierre Moscovici, the French finance minister, blamed the downgrade on the policies of previous governments thathad failed to restore the competitiveness of the nation's economy.
"French debt still remains among the most liquid and safest of the eurozone," said Moscovici, a member of the ruling Socialist government."The French economy is large and diversified and the government has shown proof of its serious plan to implement structural reformsand restore public finances."