Bukele’s Bitcoin trade raises El Salvador’s sovereign credit risk: Moody’s

Share This Post

The credit rating agency believes El Salvador’s Bitcoin experiment has elevated the country’s risk profile and could limit its access to foreign debt markets.

El Salvador’s historic embrace of Bitcoin (BTC) could have negative consequences on the country’s sovereign credit outlook, according to Moody’s Investors Service. 

Moody’s analyst Jaime Reusche told Bloomberg this week that El Salvador’s Bitcoin gambit “certainly adds to the risk portfolio” of a country that has struggled with liquidity issues in the past.

Under the leadership of President Nayib Bukele, El Salvador has recognized Bitcoin as legal tender and issued a state-run crypto wallet to facilitate payments, transfers and ownership. Along the way, El Salvador has amassed a treasure chest of 1,391 BTC, with President Bukele famously “buying the dip” on several occasions by using Bitcoin’s volatility to add to his country’s holdings.

However, Reusche warned that accumulating more BTC would elevate El Salvador’s risk of default. “If it gets much higher, then that represents an even greater risk to repayment capacity and the fiscal profile of the issuer,” he said.

In addition to downgrading El Salvador’s credit rating, Moody’s has warned that the country’s so-called Bitcoin volcano bond could limit its access to foreign bond markets. Proceeds of the volcano bond, which is expected to raise roughly $1 billion, will be used to fund El Salvador’s Bitcoin City project. 

Related: Tonga to copy El Salvador’s bill making Bitcoin legal tender, says former MP

Attacks on El Salvador’s Bitcoin gambit by legacy financial institutions are nothing new. In November 2021, the Washington-based International Monetary Fund warned El Salvador against using Bitcoin as legal tender. Meanwhile, the World Bank has rejected the country’s request for assistance in implementing its Bitcoin Law over alleged environmental and transparency concerns.

Nevertheless, El Salvador has remained steadfast in embracing Bitcoin and in creating an attractive environment for crypto investors and entrepreneurs. Last week, finance minister Alejandro Zelaya said the country’s Bitcoin Law has already attracted foreign investment.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

SUI Price Soars 12% In Minutes, Triggering Huge Liquidations: Predictions For The Altcoin

The native token of the decentralized smart contract platform Sui (SUI) kicked off the week with an all-time high of $496, buoyed by an overall bullish trend in the cryptocurrency market The momentum

Fuel for rent: Harnessing idle GPU power can drive a greener tech revolution

The following is a guest post by Jakub Ondrasek, CEO at Clore AI Tech innovations such as AI, cryptocurrency, quantum computing and VR are redefining modern life Most consumers don’t know how

$2.2 Billion Lost: Crypto Hacks Stolen Funds Surge 21% In 2024 – Report

This year, crypto hacks increased in the total value stolen and the number of attacks compared to last year According to a recent report, the industry lost over $2 billion in the past 12 months, with

Crypto Scam Busted—Victims One Step Closer to Justice

A South Lake Tahoe man, Daniel Chartraw, 51, faces a 12-count federal indictment for wire fraud linked to a cryptocurrency trading scheme, per US Attorney Phillip A Talbert Arrested recently,

SEC Greenlights First Hybrid Bitcoin And Ethereum ETFs From Franklin Templeton, Hashdex

Amid yesterday’s crypto market slump, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved the first-ever dual Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) index exchange-traded funds (ETFs) from Franklin

Bitcoin Price Could Rally To $178,000 If History Repeats — Here’s Why

The price of Bitcoin fell to around $92,000, Friday afternoon, December 20 after the US Federal Reserve’s rate cut triggered a sharp selloff in the crypto market However, the premier cryptocurrency