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Indonesia's Proposed Senior Unsecured Notes Assigned 'BBB' Long-Term Foreign Currency Rating
  • 06-Jan-2020 22:02 EST
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SINGAPORE (S&P Global Ratings) Jan. 7, 2020--S&P Global Ratings today assigned its 'BBB' long-term foreign currency issue credit rating to Indonesia's proposed benchmark-sized U.S.-dollar- and euro-denominated senior unsecured notes.

The notes represent direct, general, unconditional, unsecured, and unsubordinated obligations of Indonesia (BBB/Stable/A-2), and rank equally with the sovereign's other unsecured and unsubordinated debt obligations.
 
Fitch Downgrades Atlantia, ASPI and AdR; Ratings on RWN
08 JAN 2020 02:42 PM ET



Fitch Ratings - Milan - 08 January 2020:

Fitch Ratings has downgraded Atlantia SpA's EUR10 billion euro medium-term note (EMTN) programme to 'BB' from 'BBB'. Fitch has also downgraded Autostrade per l'Italia Spa's (ASPI) Long-Term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) to 'BB+' from 'BBB+' and Aeroporti di Roma's (AdR) IDR to 'BBB-' from 'BBB+'. The ratings remain on Rating Watch Negative (RWN). Both ASPI and AdR are infrastructure assets managed and owned by Atlantia.

A full list of rating actions is detailed below.







RATING RATIONALE


The rating action follows the Italian government's decision to unilaterally change the existing toll-road concession rules by law which, in our view, has a significant negative impact on the group's credit profile at a time when the government is considering an early termination of the ASPI concession agreement.

The probability of this significantly negative termination is on the rise as is the risk of a lengthy legal challenge by ASPI, whose timing and outcome is unpredictable at this stage. The RWN reflects significant uncertainty on future developments ranging from a renegotiation to early termination of the ASPI concession.

 
Fitch Assigns Indonesia's USD and EUR Bonds Final 'BBB' Ratings
20 JAN 2020 04:22 AM ET



Fitch Ratings - Hong Kong - 20 January 2020:

Fitch Ratings has assigned Indonesia's USD1.2 billion 2.85% bonds due 2030, USD800 million 3.5% bonds due 2050 and EUR1 billion 0.9% bonds due 2027 final ratings of 'BBB'. This replaces the expected rating of 'BBB(EXP)' that Fitch assigned on 7 January 2020.
 
Buongiorno

Secondo voi quante possibilità ci sono che il bond Mediobanca IT0005118796 sia richiamato in anticipo il 12/6/2020 ?
Grazie
 
Announcement of Periodic Review:
Moody's announces completion of a periodic review of ratings of Saudi Arabian Oil Company

27 Jan 2020
London, 27 January 2020 -- Moody's Investors Service ("Moody's") has completed a periodic review of the ratings of Saudi Arabian Oil Company and other ratings that are associated with the same analytical unit. The review was conducted through a portfolio review in which Moody's reassessed the appropriateness of the ratings in the context of the relevant principal methodology(ies), recent developments, and a comparison of the financial and operating profile to similarly rated peers. The review did not involve a rating committee. Since 1 January 2019, Moody's practice has been to issue a press release following each periodic review to announce its completion.



This publication does not announce a credit rating action and is not an indication of whether or not a credit rating action is likely in the near future. Credit ratings and outlook/review status cannot be changed in a portfolio review and hence are not impacted by this announcement. For any credit ratings referenced in this publication, please see the ratings tab on the issuer/entity page on www.moodys.com for the most updated credit rating action information and rating history.



Key rating considerations are summarized below.



Saudi Arabian Oil Company's (Saudi Aramco) A1 rating reflects its very large operational scale, significant downstream integration and strong financial flexibility given its low cost structure and low leverage relative to cash flows. This provides resilience through oil price cycles. At the same time, credit linkages to the Government of Saudi Arabia (A1 rating) are significant, and result in constraining Saudi Aramco's rating to that of the government. Saudi Aramco is expected to remain largely under government ownership with the government's budget highly reliant upon contributions from the company in the form of royalties, taxes and dividends.
 
Rating Action:
Moody's downgrades Boeing's senior unsecured rating to Baa1; keeps review open on uncertain timing of MAX's return to service

30 Jan 2020
New York, January 30, 2020 -- Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") downgraded its senior unsecured debt ratings for The Boeing Company and of subsidiary, Boeing Capital Corporation, to Baa1 from A3. These ratings remain on review for downgrade. Moody's also affirmed the Prime-2 short-term rating, which is not on review.



"Boeing's Q4 earnings indicate significantly higher cash burn in 2020 than previously anticipated, increasing reliance on debt for funding the impact of a lower-for-longer recovery of the MAX program," said Moody's Senior Vice President and lead analyst, Jonathan Root. "We now anticipate that the road to restoring the MAX production system and Boeing's credit profile will run into 2023 and will be much costlier given significant negative free cash flow near $10 billion in 2020, even if the FAA ungrounds the aircraft by mid-spring," said Root.



The downgrade to Baa1 considers Moody's updated projections in which funded debt increases by upwards of $14 billion in 2020 because of negative free cash flow of about $10 billion, including about $4.6 billion for annual dividends. Moody's assumes Boeing will also complete the $4+ billion investment in Embraer's commercial aircraft business in 2020. Moody's previously expected about $3 billion of positive free cash flow in 2020, prior to the company's earnings release. It now anticipates that free cash flow will inflect positively in 2021, to about $4 billion, all of which will be used to reduce debt. The downgrade also reflects what Moody's views as an aggressive financial policy, evidenced by the board's decision to hold the dividend in lieu of organically preserving liquidity and an otherwise stronger balance sheet. Based on Moody's projections, about $12 billion, or almost half of the roughly $27 billion increase in debt Moody's projects between the end of 2018 and the end of 2020, will have funded returns to shareholders.



The review for downgrade mainly reflects the ongoing uncertainty of when the US Federal Aviation Administration ("FAA") will unground the MAX and the potential financial impact of various associated risks, including MAX delivery and production rates, supply chain health, integrity of the order book, customer compensation and financial policy.
 

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