Fitch Warns of Eastern European Downgrades if Greenland Strife Cracks NATO
A raft of European countries could face a one-notch credit rating downgrade if tensions with the U.S. over Greenland fracture NATO and raise the prospect of more trouble with Russia, Fitch’s top sovereign analyst said on Thursday.
“Clearly that’s the one thing we’d have to look at for any of the sovereigns in Europe where structurally we need to think about that,” Longsdon said in an interview.
Read more: Denmark-US Rift Persists as NATO Nations Deploy to Greenland
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, who has warned a conflict with the U.S. over Greenland would spell the end of NATO, told Reuters on Thursday there remained a “fundamental disagreement” with the U.S. after President Donald Trump again insisted that the U.S. “needs” Greenland.
Longsdon stressed that Fitch would “have to see how these things play out first” and that any rating action would require careful assessment, though proximity to Russia would be a key factor.
“It could be where you felt the vulnerability to a geopolitical event would be most obvious,” he said.
“That’s the broad rule of thumb, so the further away you are from Russia, the least likely that is to be the case.”
Longsdon said it wasn’t possible to put a timeline for any potential moves given it remained theoretical, or if the cuts could be synchronized or happen individually in conflict over Greenland broke out.
He also highlighted Moldova hadn’t yet had this kind of downward adjustment to its B+ rating despite Russia maintaining about 1,500 troops in the breakaway region of Transdniestria, and that the situation was complicated given some parts of central and eastern Europe also had friendlier relations with Moscow than others.
However, he said tensions over Greenland were unlikely to affect Denmark’s triple-A rating. Denmark is among a small group of European countries with the top credit score, alongside Germany, Switzerland and Norway, and has one of the lowest debt levels in the shrinking global club of triple-A sovereigns.
“Greenland is a large land mass, but it’s very small economically and fiscally for Denmark,” Longsdon said. “It is a very solid triple-A sovereign rating, so I think just the size differential makes it very hard to see a situation that would be so consequential.”
(Reporting by Marc Jones; editing by Mark Potter and Diane Craft)