Kill the wabbit? |
In a statement
issued Wednesday, Moody’s said the change in outlook reflects the company’s
view that the provincial government’s “credit profile will weaken due to the
sharp decline in oil prices and its reduced budgetary flexibility to adjust to
this shock. Under Moody's base case, oil prices are expected to average
$40-$45/bbl in 2020 before returning to $50-$55/bbl in 2021…”.
Moody’s
expects the provincial deficit for 2020 could reach 25% of revenue in 2020 and
about 11% in 2021. Previously, Moody’s had forecast deficits of 11% and 4%
respectively for those years.
Moody’s
expects the provincial debt will reach 270% of revenue by 2023 with pressure
that this will increase after 2023. In
other words, Moody’s doesn’t believe that the government will balance the
budget in 2023.
The company
said the negative outlook reflects the increasing likelihood that – in the
absence of a detailed and proven rate mitigation plan – the provincial
government will “need to support electricity rate mitigation efforts which
would further impact the fiscal outcomes of the province.”
But Get
This…
There’s a flip side to Moody’s rating that defies the
tale of woe told by Dwight Ball in his letter to the Prime Minister on 20 March
20 (see below) and repeated whole by
CBC on Wednesday.
Moody’s maintained the government’s A1 rating because the
provincial government has ongoing “credit strengths”.
“Newfoundland
and Labrador has unfettered access to a wide range of revenue measures as well
as the ability to alter spending plans,” according to Moody’s. As well, the provincial “treasury management
is also a credit strength. With regular inflow of tax receipts, with levels
often determined by a lagged calculation, the impact of the current crisis on
cash flow will be delayed, allowing the province the opportunity to put in
place mitigating measures before the impact is fully felt on treasury
operations.”
Moody’s also
considered the low interest rate environment would help the provincial government
take on more debt successfully. Plus,
the rating includes “an assumption of a high level of extraordinary support
from the Government of Canada”.
Decidedly
not the picture Dwight Ball has been pushing since late last week.
The
Panicked Letter to Ottawa
That doesn’t mean the provincial government will have
an easy time of things.
Until earlier this week, the provincial government hadn’t
been able to raise the last $200 million needed to finish its borrowing for
long-term debt for the 2019 fiscal year (ended 31 Mar 20).
The government needed $1.425 billion but had stalled
out at $1.2 billion in the middle of November 2019, according to Laurentian Bank Securities weekly report on provincial financing programs posted on Twitter each Friday. The provincial government puts the figures at $1.2 billion and $1.0 as late as 29 Mar 20. (See note at end)
So, the government’s problems raising money in the markets didn’t start with the onset of COVID-19, as CBC reported. They started before Christmas.
So, the government’s problems raising money in the markets didn’t start with the onset of COVID-19, as CBC reported. They started before Christmas.
As late as last Friday - see chart at right - there was still $200 million
in borrowing left to do in the fiscal year that ended on Tuesday, 31 March
2020.
Tom Osborne confirmed to NTV’s
Michael Connors on Wednesday that
the provincial government finished off its 2019 borrowing in a series of
placements. It got the support of the Bank
of Canada on three short-term placements.
Another offering for long-term debt didn’t need the Bank’s support.
Another offering for long-term debt didn’t need the Bank’s support.
But here’s the thing: Tom needed to find $200 million in long-term
debt.
As SRBP reported last week, the Bank of Canada intervened to support provincial short-term debt. It will buy 40% of any provincial treasury bills or promissory notes with a term less than 12 months.
As SRBP reported last week, the Bank of Canada intervened to support provincial short-term debt. It will buy 40% of any provincial treasury bills or promissory notes with a term less than 12 months.
So, if, as Osborne says, the Bank of Canada helped
out with some of that, it means the province went to the short-term markets for
what it couldn’t place in the long-term debt markets. That may have turned up cash, but it means
the government will have to go back to the market again in less than 12 months
and either pay off some of that or borrow more and roll it over. That’s just a temporary patch.
And by the looks of things, Dwight Ball’s poorly
written, panicked letter to the federal government confirms chatter a couple of
weeks ago that the provincial government had run into problems in the short-term
markets as well. After a long recitation
of general information, Ball stated flatly that “our recent attempts to finalize our borrowing program,
both short term and long term, have been unsuccessful.” So yeah, without help they wouldn't have met payroll in April.
What's troubling though is that when asked
repeatedly last week about financial problems, Ball kept talking about
authority to borrow from the House of Assembly. That was meaningless. He wouldn’t tell the truth about
his letter to the Prime Minister or the difficulties his administration had run
into the week before raising cash. That's meaningful.
Dwighterdammerung
Dwighterdammerung
By Friday,
though, Ball did start talking about a looming financial crisis that would
supposedly turn up after the health emergency had passed. That contradicts Moody’s estimate of the
government’s ability to manage its own finances, by the way. The government can management finances, of
course, just like every other government in Canada has managed to do.
All of the
problems Ball points to in his letter either exaggerate the current and
immediate future problems the government faces or – with things like the public
debt - ignore entirely that they result from his own unwillingness to take
difficult but necessary decisions. This is a point made repeatedly around this
parts, most recently on
Monday.
Wednesday
morning, an early explanation for the CBC story was that someone in Ottawa had
leaked Ball’s letter. By the end of the
day, though, and given Ball’s eager recitation of a lurid but grossly
exaggerated tale of imminent financial collapse in Newfoundland and Labrador, one could not be blamed for thinking that
Ball himself had leaked the letter to CBC in a feeble effort to pressure the
federal government with a bluff that gets media attention but that falls on deaf
bureaucratic and political ears in Ottawa.
It’s a
familiar, clumsy stunt for local premiers.
Danny Williams tried it in early 2004 when he tried to get a federal
bailout in the form of a permanent Equalization payment from Ottawa. He failed.
Paul Davis tried it with CETA. He failed.
And Dwight
has been doing it for five years with his incessant demand for Equalization or
something like Equalization, in addition to having one of the most prosperous
economies in the country.
And guess
what? Dwight is failing, too.
The impact
of such a gambit as leaking your own letter might not come out as expected, if
that is what Dwight actually did. The
federal government will help with cash flow, as it did last week through the
Bank of Canada, but there is no sign it will ever be willing to take on
long-term provincial debt the way Ball expects.
In the
meantime, the people of Newfoundland and Labrador are panicked even more than
they are already. And in the markets,
they may extract a higher price than usual for the money Ball needs. That will
just put Ball in a harder financial spot than he is in.
In the end, Dwight
Ball would either have to make the decisions he has refused to make so far, or
he would walk away from the Premier’s Office having properly bollocksed it all.
Any bets
which path Dwight will take?
Because you
can be damn sure Dwight won’t get the money from Ottawa he is trying to get.
Update: (0810 hrs)
-srbp-
Laurentian appears to have confused the total borrowing needed for 2018 with 2019. Pretty simple mistake, but it doesn't affect the basic elements of the story.
Either way, the province was unable to raise $200 million in long-term debt as late as 29 Mar 20. Over the next two days, it covered its remaining 2019 requirements through a combination of short-term and long-term debt.