S&P presents Kazakhstan National Credit Rating Scale

Published: 25 November 2004 y., Thursday
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services launched its national credit rating scale for the Republic of Kazakhstan (foreign currency BBB-/Stable/A-3; local currency BBB/Stable/A-3; national scale rating 'kzAAA'), S&P said in a press release. Tailored to meet the specific needs of local and foreign participants on Kazakhstan's capital and money markets, the new scale will enable Standard & Poor's to offer a much finer distinction in the credit quality of local debt issuers than is allowed by the existing global scale. "The introduction of the Standard & Poor's Kazakhstan national credit rating scale is especially important, in view of the rapid development of the Kazakhstan economy, with its growing need for international investment, expanding bond market, and influx of foreign investors," said Rob Richards, Standard & Poor's Managing Director and Chief Credit Officer for the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). "The scale is a unique instrument for measuring the credit risk associated with issuers and debt instruments operating and used on the Kazakhstan market." Standard & Poor's Kazakhstan national credit rating scale is designed to better meet the needs of issuers, counterparties, intermediaries, and investors on the country's financial markets. It provides both debt ratings, which apply to a specific debt instrument, and issuer credit ratings, which apply to a specific obligor. Pursuant to this scale, debt and issuer credit ratings are based, first and foremost, on a comparative analysis of the credit risk associated with obligations and entities active on Kazakhstan's financial markets. This means that the ratings provide credit risk estimates which emphasize the relative creditworthiness of debt issues and issuers on the money and capital markets of Kazakhstan. Standard & Poor's has gained a significant amount of experience in the use of national rating scales worldwide. It assigns national scale ratings in the Republic of Argentina, the Federative Republic of Brazil, the Nordic region, Canada, the United Mexican States, Taiwan (Republic of China), the Republic of France, and The Russian Federation. The company currently monitors more than 800 national scale ratings worldwide.
Šaltinis: Interfax
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

BP pledges millions to Georgia in controversial pipeline project

British oil major BP is pledging millions of dollars to Georgia as part of the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline more »

Poles line up for shares in bank

Poles signed waiting lists Sunday for a chance to buy shares in their largest bank, using a signup system from communist times to impose order on the crush of interested investors more »

The Ceremony

"GLOBAL FINANCE": KOMERCIJALNA BANKA, BEST BANK IN MACEDONIA FOR 2004 more »

Gov't Stands Firm Over PKO BP Privatization

The Polish government did not bow to pressure following Parliament's resolution on Friday's declaring that foreign investors would be excluded from the privatization of bank PKO BP more »

RUSSIAN SKY MAY CLOSE FOR ARMENIAN PLANES

Russia may stop providing air navigation lines to the national airlines of CIS member countries, including Armenia, for their debts more »

Ex-Im Bank $180 Million Guarantee Backs U.S. Exports

A four-lane highway linking Romania westward to Hungary and the rest of Central Europe and eastward to the Black Sea will be built with the assistance of a $180 million loan guarantee from the Export-Import Bank more »

Lithuania chokes over use of euro

The Lithuanian government has written to the Dutch Presidency expressing outrage at a recent decision to standardise the word 'euro' across all EU languages more »

Kazakhstan announces plans to raise oil output

Kazakhstan plans to produce about 1.3m barrels (160,000 tons) of oil a day in 2005 more »

YUKOS pays most of its tax debt

The Russian oil company YUKOS has paid RUR 75bn (about $2.53bn) out of its RUR 99.4bn (about $3.4bn) tax debt for 2000 more »

Japan Allocates Grants for US$364,971 to Uzbekistan

Representatives of Japanese embassy in Uzbekistan will sign new grant contracts in Tashkent on 8 October more »