India's sovereign rating by Moody's stands at 'Baa3', the lowest investment grade and just a notch above 'junk' status, while it earlier had a 'stable' outlook for the country.
Fitch, which maintained its equivalent 'BBB-' rating with stable outlook, on the other hand projected 8 per cent GDP growth for the current fiscal, higher than 7.8 per cent estimate of the RBI. It also indicated positive rating action if the government follows its fiscal consolidation roadmap.
The sovereign rating and outlook of a country are often used by foreign investors and global bodies to gauge its investment climate. They also have a bearing on the cost of overseas borrowing by domestic companies.
On the outlook upgrade, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the action is "significant", but the government has to do more to further boost economy.
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The stock markets responded positively with the benchmark BSE Sensex rising 177 points to one-month high of 28,885.21.
Since 2004, Moody's has rated India at Baa3 -- at par with countries like Indonesia, Iceland and Turkey. Another agency S&P also has a similar rating for India and it recently upgraded its outlook from 'negative' to 'stable'.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said it is a "positive perception of what we have done over the past few quarters."
"We should not celebrate upgrades as we did not worry about downgrades. There are a lot of low-hanging fruits that need to be picked," he added.