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Brazil’s debt downgraded to junk status

by The Associated Press   

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The move by rating agency Standard & Poor's comes as the nation enters recession and is expected to see an even worse 2016

RIO DE JANEIRO—The Brazilian government’s sovereign debt rating was cut Sept. 10 to “junk” status by one of the major credit agencies, ratcheting up pressure on President Dilma Rousseff to find a way out of an economic and political crisis.

Standard & Poor’s said in a note that Brazil’s hard-fought investment grade status that it held for seven years was gone and that its outlook on the country was negative, just as the nation enters recession and is expected to see an even worse 2016.

That means that it will be far more expensive for the Brazilian government to tap international credit markets and that much investor money, such as mutual funds that only plow money into investment-grade nations, will automatically be yanked out of the country.

S&P said that extreme political challenges for Rousseff “have continued to mount, weighing on the government’s ability” to shore up its finances as promised.

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The downgrade comes on the heels of Rousseff submitting a budget to Congress that already had a built-in deficit of about $10 billion, meaning she tossed to legislators the burden of figuring out where to make cuts.

The downgrade, while widely expected, came earlier than many analysts forecast and arrives at a time of extreme volatility for the Brazilian economy, with inflation hovering around 10 per cent and unemployment the highest it has been in decades.

Additionally, Rousseff has almost no political backing, with her approval rating in the single digits, the worst seen by any leader since the nation’s return to democracy three decades ago.

S&P said that “the negative outlook reflects what we believe is a greater than one-in-three likelihood of a further downgrade due to a further deterioration of Brazil’s fiscal position.”

In particular, the agency cited the “fluid political dynamics” of Rousseff’s leadership and a “further lack of cohesion within the president’s cabinet . due to greater economic turmoil than we currently expect.”

The news couldn’t be worse for Roussef, coming while her ruling Workers’ Party is fighting for its political life amid the biggest corruption scandal yet uncovered in Brazil.

The scandal involves a decade-long kickback scheme that saw what prosecutors say was $2 billion in bribes paid to politically appointed executives at the state-run oil company Petrobras, who awarded Brazil’s top construction and engineering firms contracts whose final costs were wildly inflated.

S&P stated that its negative view of Brazil is linked to “ongoing investigations of corruption allegations against high-profile individuals and companies” have led to “increased near-term political uncertainty” and that “we expect Brazil’s external vulnerability will rise somewhat over the next several years.”

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