MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Moody’s Investors Service on Friday cut Mexico’s credit rating by one notch as it expects weak investment prospects and increased structural rigidities to constrain activity in Latin America’s second-largest economy.
Edging closer to speculative grade, Mexico’s senior unsecured long-term rating is now “Baa2”.
“The economic scarring that took place during the pandemic will not be reversed and, consequently, there will be a persistent gap between the pre-pandemic trend level for GDP and current estimates for 2022-24,” the agency said in a note.
Weak investment dynamics have been an important driver of economic underperformance, especially since 2018, when Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador was elected president, said Moody’s.
“This, along with a constrained fiscal support package, have contributed to a lagged economic recovery from the pandemic shock,” it added.
In the absence of unanticipated shocks and assuming rising economic and fiscal pressures, the agency changed Mexico’s outlook to “stable”, arguing that the credit profile will remain aligned with similarly-rated governments through the end of the current administration.
It also noted that prudent fiscal management under austere Lopez Obrador has limited the deterioration in the government’s debt burden.
Reiterating its promise to strengthen public finances and keep a lit on debt, the finance ministry responded in a statement that the country has the “financial shock absorbers” to withstand global risks.
Julio Ruiz, chief economist for Mexico at Brazilian bank Itau, argued the Mexican economy still had a long way to go to reach its pre-pandemic levels.
“Assuming a context where external factors are favorable, at the very least companies would need more certainty from the government to increase investment,” said the former finance ministry official. “There can’t be constant policy changes.”
Earlier this week, rival ratings agency S&P Global Ratings lifted Mexico’s credit outlook to “stable” from “negative” on fiscal and monetary policy improvements, and what it called “less uncertainty about energy policy”.
Lopez Obrador failed earlier this year to push through a controversial constitutional electricity overhaul.
(Reporting by Arunima Kumar in Bengaluru and Stefanie Eschenbacher in Mexico City; Editing by Devika Syamnath and Diane Craft)