PHOTO
Fitch Ratings-Hong Kong/London-June 18: Abu Dhabi's new economic stimulus programme will have limited sovereign credit impact given the sovereign's strong balance sheet and low fiscal break-even oil price, Fitch Ratings says. But it highlights the winding down of fiscal adjustment and suggests that the fiscal policy-making framework has seen little improvement during the period of low oil prices, despite sharp spending cuts and increases in non-oil revenue.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Abu Dhabi's crown prince, earlier this month approved a three-year stimulus package worth AED50 billion (USD13.6 billion), or around 6% of Abu Dhabi GDP. Objectives include job creation, increasing tourism, and improving private sector development. Full details have yet to be set out and government departments will spend the next three months preparing their spending plans. To support the private sector and attract investment, they have also been instructed to speed up payments to private sector suppliers and ease licensing requirements and regulations for companies.
Abu Dhabi's fiscal break-even oil price is among the lowest for Fitch-rated oil producers, estimated at slightly above USD60/bbl, and its fiscal and external positions are among the strongest, with sovereign net foreign assets estimated at 281% of GDP last year, and government debt at just 8% of GDP.
As such, spending the budgetary windfall created by higher oil prices should have a limited impact on key metrics. Fitch has increased its oil price forecasts to USD70/bbl for 2018 and USD65/bbl for 2019, from USD57.5/bbl for both years. Under these new forecasts, and assuming the gradual ramp-up of stimulus spending, we now expect budget surpluses of 3.2% of GDP in 2018 and 0.9% in 2019, from an estimated deficit of 3.2% of GDP in 2017. These figures include the estimated investment income of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.
Strong fiscal and external metrics are key credit strengths that support Abu Dhabi's 'AA'/Stable sovereign rating. A 25% spending cut between 2014 and 2016 helped safeguard fiscal strengths, at the expense of a slowdown in non-oil growth. Some structural fiscal adjustments have been made, including energy subsidy reforms and the introduction of VAT at the start of this year, although it is still not clear to what extent VAT revenue will accrue to the individual emirates of the UAE. The UAE was the first member of the GCC to link domestic petrol prices to international benchmarks.
But the stimulus package confirms our view, expressed when we affirmed the sovereign rating in December last year, that active fiscal adjustment to the 2014 oil price shock is over. Spending targets were revised higher throughout 2017, largely due to higher foreign aid and federal contributions, and SOE funding (the areas that saw the biggest cuts in 2014-2016). Moreover, the decision to adopt a stimulus package during a period of high oil prices suggests that fiscal policy is still not grounded in a medium-term framework, and annual budgets represent only a weak constraint to spending. The overall economic policy-making framework remains a weakness relative to 'AA' category peers outside the GCC region.
Alongside higher oil prices, the stimulus package will support Abu Dhabi's growth recovery. We expect non-oil growth of 3.5% in 2018 and 4.0% in 2019, from 1.8% in 2017. The reforms of the type outlined would further support improvements in the business environment, giving some boost to non-oil growth and diversification over time, but Abu Dhabi's economy will remain highly reliant on hydrocarbon production and government spending for the foreseeable future.
Contact:
Krisjanis Krustins
Director, Sovereigns
+852 2263 9831
Fitch (Hong Kong) Ltd
19/F Man Yee Building
68 Des Voeux Road Central
Hong Kong
Jan Friederich
Senior Director, Sovereigns
+852 2263 9910
Mark Brown
Senior Analyst, Fitch Wire
+44 20 3530 1588
Media Relations: Elizabeth Fogerty, New York, Tel: +1 (212) 908 0526, Email: elizabeth.fogerty@fitchratings.com; Wai-Lun Wan, Hong Kong, Tel: +852 2263 9935, Email: wailun.wan@fitchratings.com.
The above article originally appeared as a post on the Fitch Wire credit market commentary page. The original article can be accessed at
ALL FITCH CREDIT RATINGS ARE SUBJECT TO CERTAIN LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS. PLEASE READ THESE LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS BY FOLLOWING THIS LINK:
Copyright 2018 by Fitch Ratings, Inc., Fitch Ratings Ltd. and its subsidiaries. 33 Whitehall Street, NY, NY 10004. Telephone: 1-800-753-4824, (212) 908-0500. Fax: (212) 480-4435. Reproduction or retransmission in whole or in part is prohibited except by permission. All rights reserved. In issuing and maintaining its ratings and in making other reports (including forecast information), Fitch relies on factual information it receives from issuers and underwriters and from other sources Fitch believes to be credible. Fitch conducts a reasonable investigation of the factual information relied upon by it in accordance with its ratings methodology, and obtains reasonable verification of that information from independent sources, to the extent such sources are available for a given security or in a given jurisdiction. The manner of Fitchs factual investigation and the scope of the third-party verification it obtains will vary depending on the nature of the rated security and its issuer, the requirements and practices in the jurisdiction in which the rated security is offered and sold and/or the issuer is located, the availability and nature of relevant public information, access to the management of the issuer and its advisers, the availability of pre-existing third-party verifications such as audit reports, agreed-upon procedures letters, appraisals, actuarial reports, engineering reports, legal opinions and other reports provided by third parties, the availability of independent and competent third- party verification sources with respect to the particular security or in the particular jurisdiction of the issuer, and a variety of other factors. Users of Fitchs ratings and reports should understand that neither an enhanced factual investigation nor any third-party verification can ensure that all of the information Fitch relies on in connection with a rating or a report will be accurate and complete. Ultimately, the issuer and its advisers are responsible for the accuracy of the information they provide to Fitch and to the market in offering documents and other reports. In issuing its ratings and its reports, Fitch must rely on the work of experts, including independent auditors with respect to financial statements and attorneys with respect to legal and tax matters. Further, ratings and forecasts of financial and other information are inherently forward-looking and embody assumptions and predictions about future events that by their nature cannot be verified as facts. As a result, despite any verification of current facts, ratings and forecasts can be affected by future events or conditions that were not anticipated at the time a rating or forecast was issued or affirmed.
The information in this report is provided as is without any representation or warranty of any kind, and Fitch does not represent or warrant that the report or any of its contents will meet any of the requirements of a recipient of the report. A Fitch rating is an opinion as to the creditworthiness of a security. This opinion and reports made by Fitch are based on established criteria and methodologies that Fitch is continuously evaluating and updating. Therefore, ratings and reports are the collective work product of Fitch and no individual, or group of individuals, is solely responsible for a rating or a report. The rating does not address the risk of loss due to risks other than credit risk, unless such risk is specifically mentioned. Fitch is not engaged in the offer or sale of any security. All Fitch reports have shared authorship. Individuals identified in a Fitch report were involved in, but are not solely responsible for, the opinions stated therein. The individuals are named for contact purposes only. A report providing a Fitch rating is neither a prospectus nor a substitute for the information assembled, verified and presented to investors by the issuer and its agents in connection with the sale of the securities. Ratings may be changed or withdrawn at any time for any reason in the sole discretion of Fitch. Fitch does not provide investment advice of any sort. Ratings are not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. Ratings do not comment on the adequacy of market price, the suitability of any security for a particular investor, or the tax-exempt nature or taxability of payments made in respect to any security. Fitch receives fees from issuers, insurers, guarantors, other obligors, and underwriters for rating securities. Such fees generally vary from US$1,000 to US$750,000 (or the applicable currency equivalent) per issue. In certain cases, Fitch will rate all or a number of issues issued by a particular issuer, or insured or guaranteed by a particular insurer or guarantor, for a single annual fee. Such fees are expected to vary from US$10,000 to US$1,500,000 (or the applicable currency equivalent). The assignment, publication, or dissemination of a rating by Fitch shall not constitute a consent by Fitch to use its name as an expert in connection with any registration statement filed under the United States securities laws, the Financial Services and Markets Act of 2000 of the United Kingdom, or the securities laws of any particular jurisdiction. Due to the relative efficiency of electronic publishing and distribution, Fitch research may be available to electronic subscribers up to three days earlier than to print subscribers.
For Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan and South Korea only: Fitch Australia Pty Ltd holds an Australian financial services license (AFS license no. 337123) which authorizes it to provide credit ratings to wholesale clients only. Credit ratings information published by Fitch is not intended to be used by persons who are retail clients within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001
Fitch Ratings, Inc. is registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as a Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization (the "NRSRO"). While certain of the NRSROs credit rating subsidiaries are listed on Item 3 of Form NRSRO and as such are authorized to issue credit ratings on behalf of the NRSRO (see