Fitch downgrades Greece credit rating deeper into junk territory

Fitch downgrades Greece credit rating deeper into junk territory

PanARMENIAN.Net - An influential financial ratings agency has downgraded debt-crippled Greece deeper into junk territory, Belfast Telegraph reported.

Fitch warned of a "probable" Greek exit from the euro currency union if new national elections next month produce an anti-bailout government.

The agency cut Greece's rating by one notch, from B- to CCC, the lowest possible grade for a country that is not in default.

"The downgrade of Greece's sovereign ratings reflects the heightened risk that Greece may not be able to sustain its membership of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)," the agency said in a statement.

In addition to its acute financial woes, Greece has entered a protracted political crisis after elections on May 6 left no party with enough seats in parliament to govern alone, and nine days of hectic talks failed to reach a coalition deal.

The country is now headed for a new vote next month, most probably on June 17, and anti-austerity parties which recorded strong gains on May 6 are again expected to do well.

That has raised deep concerns that, if the new government reneges on Greece's austerity pledges, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) could cut off the flow of bailout loans. Those rescue funds have shielded the country from bankruptcy for two years but had been agreed in exchange for deeply unpopular cutbacks.

"In the event that the new general elections scheduled for 17 June fail to produce a government with a mandate to continue with the EU-IMF programme of fiscal austerity and structural reform, an exit of Greece from (the euro) would be probable," Fitch said.

"In the event of a Greek exit from EMU, Fitch would treat the forcible re-denomination of sovereign and private sector debt into a new Greek currency as a default event," it added.

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