International rating agency Moody's on Tuesday said the bleeding rupee, the twin deficits and weaker growth are already factored in the
current Baa3 sovereign rating, and thus do not accentuate already weak fundamentals of the country.
Moody's became the first rating agency to retain the sovereign rating of Baa3 for the country after the
rupee dived below 64 to the dollar early Tuesday morning.
"While the
current rupee depreciation may be a new development, the factors that underpin it are not, and have been incorporated into the Baa3 rating," Atsi Sheth, Moody's Investors Service vice-president and senior credit officer at its sovereign risks group, said in a note.
This is because the current sovereign rating of Baa3 incorporates the macroeconomic challenges of weaker growth, the steep plunge of the rupee and the twin deficits, Sheth said.
She also pointed out that even when the going was good for the country on the growth front, while averaging at 7-10 per cent, Moody's did not revise its rating outlook considering the weak fundamentals in terms of large government deficit and public debt, coupled with poor infrastructure.
Moody's is the only agency that has a stable outlook on the country's Baa3 sovereign rating, while others hold a BBB- rating with a negative outlook.
Citing lower-than-anticipated growth and a steep fall in the rupee, which lost 17.5 per cent as of today since the beginning of the fiscal, Sheth said it will be "very challenging" for the government to meet fiscal deficit target of 4.8 per cent.
Sheth further said the problem the country now faces are a reflection of the current global growth and financial environment.