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S&P Global will likely raise India's rating within 2 years, says Citi

S&P raised India's sovereign rating outlook to 'positive' from 'stable' on Wednesday, citing the country's strong economic fundamentals. It, however, kept the rating itself at 'BBB-'

Indian economy, Economy

S&P's action, Citi said, reaffirmed its long-held view of the benchmark 10-year bond yield moving toward 6.50 per cent by March 2025 from around 7 per cent currently | Photo: Shutterstock

Reuters Mumbai

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Citi expects S&P Global Ratings' to upgrade India's sovereign rating by late 2026 given the ratings agency's confidence in the South Asian nation's macro drivers as well as the flow of economic and political cycles, it said on Thursday.
 
S&P raised India's sovereign rating outlook to 'positive' from 'stable' on Wednesday, citing the country's strong economic fundamentals. It, however, kept the rating itself at 'BBB-'.
 
"In the past, S&P had a positive outlook on India in mid-2004 and mid-2006. In both instances, an actual rating upgrade happened within six months," Citi economists wrote in a note.

 
They expect an upgrade around late 2026 but said it could happen earlier if S&P felt confident about India's fiscal trajectory.
Citi said India's fiscal health was probably the "main weakness" in S&P's rating profile and an improvement would be the key to an upgrade.
 
India aims to narrow its fiscal deficit to 4.50 per cent of gross domestic product by the end of 2025/26, from an expected 5.8 per cent in 2023/24.
 
The discussion among market participants will now move from the possibility of a rating upgrade to the timing of one, Citi said.
That positive sentiment, it added, should help depress risk premium for Indian debt and alter external borrowing costs for corporates.
 
S&P's action, Citi said, reaffirmed its long-held view of the benchmark 10-year bond yield moving toward 6.50 per cent by March 2025 from around 7 per cent currently.
 
DBS reiterated Citi's view, stating the outlook revision coming close on the heels of the Reserve Bank of India's record high surplus transfer to the government added to the positive view for local debt.
 
S&P's move "leaves the door open for a rating upgrade within two years" depending on the general government deficit easing below 7 per cent of GDP on a sustained basis and a further rise in public investment in infrastructure, DBS said in a note on Thursday.
 
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: May 30 2024 | 10:46 AM IST

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