Business

Conditions in Apac to improve in 2021: Moody’s

Early Covid-19 containment in Asian nations will see recovery of economic activities

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 19 Jan 2021 1:30PM

Conditions in Apac to improve in 2021: Moody’s
According to Moody’s Investors Service, although the negative rating trend for Apac corporates will continue to ease this year, their credit conditions will differ by sector and region. – The Vibes file pic, January 19, 2021

KUALA LUMPUR – Conditions in Asia Pacific (Apac) are expected to improve this year, supported by the gradual recovery of economic activities, given the early containment of the pandemic in several Asian economies, said Moody’s Investors Service.

In a report, the credit rating company said the ongoing fiscal and monetary support in both the advanced and emerging markets will also aid in improving conditions, but noted that renewed lockdowns in parts of the world have stalled the nascent global economic recovery and created uncertainty around improving credit conditions.

Moody’s group credit officer and senior vice-president Clara Lau said the rating trend for Apac corporates was overwhelmingly low last year, with the number of negative rating actions hitting a record high of 254, against a low of 30 positive actions during the year.

“That said, the negative rating trend somewhat abated in the second half of the year, with the share of ratings with negative implications improving to 26% at the end of last year, from a high of 29% in the second quarter of last year.”

Moody’s said although the negative rating trend will continue to ease this year, credit conditions for Apac corporates will differ by sector and region.

“China, as a result of early containment of the virus, is having a healthy improvement on the supply side, and its increasing household consumption will slowly broaden the recovery, offsetting the impact of slowing exports due to the resurgence of the virus elsewhere.”

Moody’s expects that central banks will likely keep interest rates at very low levels, and continue to provide fiscal and monetary stimulus, including asset purchase programmes and lending facilities for banks to boost lending to the private sector.

It said these supportive measures will be credit-positive across sectors, as they will lower funding costs and support corporates’ debt repayment capacity, but companies with weak liquidity and/or high leverage will continue to face refinancing risk.

Lau said ultimately, a sustained economic recovery, and thus a continued improvement in credit trends, will depend on effective pandemic management, progress of vaccinations and government policy support. – Bernama, January 19, 2021

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