(ECUA; Caa3/B-/B-)
• We pointed out this past Friday after the upgrade by Fitch from ‘Caa1’ to ‘B-‘, the 383bp yield differential between ECUA 35s and Fitch/S&P equal rated El Salvador (ELSALV; B3/B-B-) 35s. That yield differential has now compressed to 305bp: https://mni.marketnews.com/4oZlqwm
• Ecuador is reliant on accessing the international market to refinance upcoming debt obligations so doing so would be the trigger for a further compression but the challenge is a poor credit track record, like frequent defaulter Argentina. We note that El Salvador’s market friendly Bukele has been president since 2019 so a longer track record of political stability than Noboa. El Salvador also has refinanced a lot of short-term debt so doesn’t have any significant maturities until 2029.
• Moody’s affirmed its ‘Caa3’ rating June 2025, citing concerns about future ability to repay debt given an increased debt amortization profile and lower IMF disbursements. The rating agency noted an IMF funding assumption of external market issuance of USD1.5bn in 2025 and USD2bn per year in 2026-2028 which they viewed as unlikely given high credit risk implied by current trading levels.
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MNI's preview of the October FOMC has been published - Download Full Report Here
MNI’s separate preview of sell-side analyst summaries to follow on Monday Oct 27
Moody's has lowered its outlook on France to negative from stable.
USDCAD has pulled back from its recent highs. The trend condition is bullish and a move lower is considered corrective. Moving average studies are in a bull-mode position, highlighting a dominant uptrend. Sights are on 1.4111, the Apr 10 high, and further out, scope is seen for an extension towards 1.4167, a Fibonacci retracement. First key support lies at 1.3907, the 50-day EMA. Support at the 20-day EMA lies at 1.3979.