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Moody’s Slashes China Outlook And Affirms Rating

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US credit rating firm Moody’s Investor Service lowered its outlook for China’s credit rating from stable to negative, citing "rising debt" and "continued depletion of foreign reserves." (Moody's kept the still-decent Aa3 grade on its sovereign debt, however.)

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The move comes on the heels of weak manufacturing data for the new year and the latest G-20 meeting, which focused heavily on China’s ailing economic outlook, the Wall Street Journal reports.

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Moody’s says it expects China’s weakening fiscal strength to fall further due to the high amounts of debt taken on by local governments, policy banks and state-owned enterprises.

Chinese debt rose to 40.6% of GDP at the end of 2015, a marked increase from its 32.5% 2012 level. Moody’s expects the ratio to climb to 43% by 2017. 

The ratings firm says it will raise China’s rating outlook back to stable if it concludes the government successfully prioritizes economic reforms. [WSJ]