HomeEUMoody's cuts Budapest's rating to junk due to row with national government

Moody’s cuts Budapest’s rating to junk due to row with national government

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BUDAPEST, Dec 30 (Reuters) - Ratings ​agency Moody's has downgraded Budapest's credit rating to Ba1 from Baa3 and placed it on review for a further reduction, citing its weak liquidity and a ⁠financial dispute with Viktor Orban's national government.

The downgrade comes at a delicate time for Budapest, which is run by the liberal mayor Gergely Karacsony, as nationalist Prime ‍Minister Orban will likely face parliamentary elections in April. The centre-right opposition Tisza party is leading ​most polls.

"The action follows the disclosure of Budapest's liquidity position highlighting concerns about the city's capacity to repay all of its obligations as required by 31 December 2025," ​Moody's said late on Monday.

"Uncertainty around the timing and receipt of ordinary transfers, together with very weak liquidity to absorb unexpected cash flow gaps, materially increases the city's near-term credit risk."

Moody's put Budapest's rating on review for a further downgrade "to reflect the increased risk of default and the potential acceleration of repayment ‌of the city's long-term debt due to liquidity concerns."

On Facebook, Karacsony said the ‌downgrade was the result of "the government's irrational and narrow-minded tax policy."

Budapest's leadership has been in conflict with Orban's ​government over the "solidarity tax," a levy the city has to pay to the state. Moody's said the tax rose 31% from a year earlier to 76 ‌billion forints ($231.50 million) in 2024 and is expected to be 89 billion forints in 2025, ⁠or 21% of projected revenues.

"Ongoing legal disputes over the tax amount, ‌which exceeds the funding received from the ​central government, add system instability and jeopardize the budgeting process and cash balances," Moody's said, adding the ratings also reflected the partial freezing of European Union funds to ⁠Hungary.

The EU has suspended billions ⁠of euros in funds to Hungary over the government's erosion of democratic rights, allegations ​that Orban denies.

Orban has said the government was ready to throw a financial lifeline to Budapest.

($1 = 328.2900 forints)

(Reporting by ‌Krisztina Than; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

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