IMPLICATIONS: The global credit ratings agencies play a very significant role in the capital markets. They provide investors with a snapshot opinion of a borrower’s capacity and willingness to pay back its debt obligations. On the flip side, for borrowers themselves, credit ratings are very powerful determinants of the funding costs they face. Positive ratings can lead to more liquid credit markets by way of lowering the “risk premium” demanded by investors when dealing with scarcity of information regarding a potential borrower. At home, as a nation’s capital markets mature, the need for a viable credit ratings system becomes apparent, and good credit ratings come to be seen as essential for the stability of the corporate sector of the economy. Abroad, positive ratings act to encourage continued flows of capital from foreign investors into a growing, diversifying economy. In the case of Kazakhstan, rapid growth, driven by hydrocarbon exports, has provided much of the raw capital for reliable debt service but is not the sole reason that the capital markets have acknowledged the country’s creditworthiness. Many countries receive abundant foreign exchange from oil and gas exports yet have missed an investment-grade rating. From a ratings perspective, Kazakhstan’s hyperinflation in the early 1990s proved to be a blessing in disguise, because it compelled the government to commit to prudent management of its debt burden to increase its stock of capital, through accumulation of hard-currency reserves and foreign direct investment when needed. In addition, the authorities oversaw the creation of a robust pension funds system which, through its investments in the bonds of local Kazakh issuers, spurred the development of the country’s debt securities market. The gradual upgrades and increasingly positive assessments of Kazakhstan’s debt securities made over the last few years have attracted a wider group of players in the capital markets, so-called “crossover investors”, who look to diversify their investments but are otherwise reluctant to lend money to borrowers they know little about. Their diversification into Kazakhstan has resulted in sizeable profits for many of them. However, the improving ratings have created a perception of investment safety in Kazakhstan’s debt markets that is paradoxically at odds with the goals of other classes of investors, whose appetite for risk leads them on a search for greater yield than can be provided by investing in higher-rated debt. In Kazakhstan, the government is flush with cash and currently does not have much of a need to borrow. Moreover, local corporate businesses that choose to borrow abroad are still largely limited to the banking and hydrocarbon sectors of the economy, in spite of the government’s avowed efforts to promote business outside these sectors. So, until the economy diversifies there is little impetus, or even need, for further inflows of global capital. This paradox is overcome in a nation such as neighboring Russia, whose government is rated like Kazakhstan’s but whose corporate sector, because of its greater diversity, size and risk, offers more opportunity to capture investment yield.
CONCLUSIONS: Although it is a useful and even necessary tool for many investors, a credit rating does not purport to forecast a debtor’s economic future. Nor does it predict the direction or stability of a security’s price, should the debtor borrow by issuing securities. In the view of many investors interested in Kazakhstan, favorable credit assessments cannot obscure the fact that investment opportunities are still limited. Although it is often claimed that Kazakhstan’s market will always be too small and isolated to attract much money to the alternative sectors of its economy, there are more than enough investors who would be willing to provide at least portfolio capital, if the conditions were right. The question is whether a significant number of firms will arise outside the oil and gas sectors and become large enough to source capital in the global markets, as opposed to financing with local banks or through local equity investors. This will depend on how much the mineral wealth stimulates growth of other sectors of the economy, as well as on the degree of the government’s commitment to the diversification of business.
AUTHOR BIO: Peter G. Laurens is Senior Associate, Fixed Income Credit Analysis at FH International Financial Services, Inc.