HomeNewsWorldMarket sentiment had weakened before US downgrade: S&P

Market sentiment had weakened before US downgrade: S&P

Global stock market sentiment had weakened before Standard & Poor's cut the US credit rating to AA+ from AAA, the rating agency's global head of sovereign ratings David Beers said on Friday.

August 26, 2011 / 12:57 IST
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Global stock market sentiment had weakened before Standard & Poor's cut the US credit rating to AA+ from AAA, the rating agency's global head of sovereign ratings David Beers said on Friday.


"From our perspective, it's an oversimplification to say this was happening because of S&P's downgrade," Beers said, referring to views that their downgrade caused volatility in the market
S&P earlier this month cut the US rating and said the outlook remained negative, sparking a rout in global stock markets.
The rating agency also said that outlook for Asian sovereigns was stable, but was showing some downside risks.
Most Asian countries, especially those with a higher share of exports to the US, Europe, like Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, will be hurt if the US, Europe economies slowed down, said Elena Okorotchenko, managing director at S&P.
first published: Aug 26, 2011 10:57 am

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