
Moody’s: Asian ex-Japan corporates face uneven but gradual recovery
Uneven pace of economic recovery for Asian ex-Japan corporates underpins its stable outlook for the sector, with multiple indicators showing

Uneven pace of economic recovery for Asian ex-Japan corporates underpins its stable outlook for the sector, with multiple indicators showing

The coronavirus crisis will have a long-lasting impact on China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), including rising credit strains across

Financially weak privately-owned enterprises (POEs) in China will face more liquidity and refinancing difficulties in the upcoming months as investors

Coronavirus-related stimulus and sizeable infrastructure spending will drive a significant rise in overall public sector debt to 45% of GDP

China is increasingly focused on the quality of economic growth, over the pace of economic growth, said Moody’s Investors Service

Global credit conditions will likely improve overall in 2021, aided by unprecedented fiscal and monetary policy support in the wake

Chinese onshore and offshore corporate bond defaults will continue to rise over the next 12 months due to the country’s

While many companies ramped up borrowing to ensure they had adequate liquidity runways through the initial economic crisis, they now

Asia-Pacific banks’ creditworthiness should remain largely intact through the current economic downturn, despite substantial risks, said Moody’s Investors Service. “We

Indonesia’s (Baa2 stable) key growth drivers are under significant strain this year, said Moody’s Investors Service recently. While growth should rebound

The sharp slowdown in India’s economic growth, exacerbated by the coronavirus outbreak, will hurt public sector banks’ (PSBs) asset quality

Moody’s Investors Service said that its Asian Liquidity Stress Indicator (ALSI) decreased to 38.1% in July from 39.7% in June,