[India criticised Moody's ratings methods and pushed aggressively for
an upgrade, documents reviewed by Reuters show, but the U.S.-based
agency declined to budge citing concerns over the country's debt
levels and fragile banks.
Winning a better credit rating on India's sovereign debt would have
been a much-needed endorsement of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
economic stewardship, helping to attract foreign investment and
accelerate growth.]

http://www.business-standard.com/article/reuters/exclusive-how-india-lobbied-moody-s-for-ratings-upgrade-but-failed-116122300614_1.html

Exclusive - How India lobbied Moody's for ratings upgrade, but failed
Reuters         |  NEW DELHI
December 23, 2016       Last Updated at 15:54 IST

By Aditya Kalra and Rajesh Kumar Singh

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - ***India criticised Moody's ratings methods and
pushed aggressively for an upgrade, documents reviewed by Reuters
show, but the U.S.-based agency declined to budge citing concerns over
the country's debt levels and fragile banks.*** [Emphasis added.]

***Winning a better credit rating on India's sovereign debt would have
been a much-needed endorsement of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
economic stewardship, helping to attract foreign investment and
accelerate growth.*** [Emphasis added.]

Since storming to power in 2014, Modi has unveiled measures to boost
investment, cool inflation and narrow the fiscal and current account
deficits, but his policies have not been rewarded with a ratings
upgrade from any of the "big three" global ratings agencies, who say
more is needed.

Previously unpublished correspondence between India's finance ministry
and Moody's shows New Delhi failed to assuage the ratings agency's
concerns about the cost of its debt burden and a banking sector
weighed down by $136 billion in bad loans.

In letters and emails written in October, the finance ministry
questioned Moody's methodology, saying it was not accounting for a
steady decline in the India's debt burden in recent years. It said the
agency ignored countries' levels of development when assessing their
fiscal strength.

Rejecting those arguments, Moody's said India's debt situation was not
as rosy as the government maintained and its banks were a cause for
concern, the correspondence seen by Reuters showed.

Moody's and one of its lead sovereign analysts, Marie Diron, declined
to comment on the correspondence, saying ratings deliberations were
confidential. India's finance ministry did not respond to requests for
comment.

Arvind Mayaram, a former chief finance ministry official, called the
government's approach "completely unusual".

"There was no way pressure could be put on rating agencies," Mayaram
told Reuters. "It's not done."

DEBT BURDEN, BAD LOANS

India has been the world's fastest growing major economy over the past
two years, but that rapid expansion has done little to broaden the
government's revenue base.

At nearly 21 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), India's revenues
are lower than the 27.1 percent median for Baa-rated countries. India
is rated at Baa3 by Moody's, the agency's lowest notch for debt
considered investment grade.

A higher rating would signify to bond investors that India was more
creditworthy and help to lower its borrowing costs.

While India's debt-to-GDP ratio has dropped to 66.7 percent from 79.5
percent in 2004-05, interest payments absorb more than a fifth of
government revenues.

Moody's representatives, including Diron, visited North Block, the
colonial sandstone building in the Indian capital that houses the
finance ministry, on Sept. 21 for a discussion on a ratings review.

The atmosphere at the meeting with Economic Affairs Secretary
Shaktikanta Das, one of the ministry's most senior officials, and his
team was tense, according to an Indian official present, after Diron
had told local media the previous day that a ratings upgrade for India
was some years away.

On Sept. 30, Moody's explained its methodology to Indian officials in
a teleconference.

LOBBYING FOR AN UPGRADE

Four days later, the finance ministry sent an email to Diron
questioning Moody's metrics on fiscal strength. The government cited
the examples of Japan and Portugal, which enjoy better ratings despite
debts around twice the size of their economies.

"Given that countries are on different stages of economic and social
development, should countries be benchmarked against a median or mean
number (as is done by Moody's)" the email asked.

In India's case, "while the debt burden lowered significantly post
2004, this did not get reflected in the ratings", the ministry argued.

New Delhi urged Diron to look at improvements in the factors - better
forex reserves and economic growth - that Moody's had considered when
handing India its last ratings upgrade in 2004.

In a reply the next day, Diron said that, not only was India's debt
burden high relative to other countries with the same credit rating,
but its debt affordability was also low.

She added that a resolution to the banking sector's bad loan problems
was "unlikely" in the near-term.

In a last-ditch effort on Oct. 27, Economic Affairs Secretary Das sent
a six-page letter to Singapore-based Diron, addressed to Moody's New
York headquarters.

Reiterating points on India's fiscal strength, Das asked Moody's for a
"better appreciation of the factual position".

Das dismissed Moody's concerns on India's public finances as
"unwarranted" and told the agency that there was "scope for further
lowering" the political risk perception to "very low".

"In the light of stable external debt parameters and the slew of
reforms introduced in the realm of foreign direct investment, you may
like to reconsider your assessment on 'external vulnerability risk',"
he wrote.

Moody's on Nov. 16 affirmed its Baa3 issuer rating for India, while
maintaining a positive outlook, saying the government's efforts had
not yet achieved conditions that would support an upgrade.

(Editing by Douglas Busvine and Alex Richardson)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is
auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)


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