Search Site

Trends banner

SEC H1 net profit $1.67bn

Revenue grew by 24% to $7.38 billion.

DEWA profit after tax $789m

It will pay $843m in H1 dividend.

IHC H1 net profit $2.94 billion

The company posted 31% increase in revenue.

ADNOC Gas signs LNG deal

Will supply 0.5mmtpa of LNG to India's HPCL.

Alpha Dhabi H1 profit $1.79bn

Adjusted EBITDA rises to $2.36bn.

Moody’s puts Israel’s credit ratings on review for downgrade

Moody's announced that it was putting a number of the Israeli government's credit ratings on review for a downgrade. (AFP)
  • Moody's statement comes after Fitch Ratings announced on Tuesday that it was placing Israel's A+ foreign-and local-currency issuer default ratings on "Ratings Watch Negative"
  • Fitch cited "the heightened risk of a widening of Israel's current conflict to include large scale military confrontations with multiple actors, over a sustained period of time"

Washington, United States– The US ratings agency Moody’s has put the Israeli government’s A1 credit ratings on review for downgrade, citing the “unexpected and violent conflict between Israel and Hamas.”

The severity of the conflict, sparked by the deadly attack by Hamas on southern Israel on October 7, “raises the possibility of longer lasting and material credit impact,” Moody’s said in a statement Thursday.

More than 1,400 people were killed in the attack, mostly civilians who were shot, mutilated or burnt to death on the first day of the raid, according to Israeli officials.

Israeli responded to the attacks by unleashing a barrage of airstrikes on the Gaza Strip, which have killed at least 3,785 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

Moody’s announced that it was putting a number of the Israeli government’s credit ratings on review for a downgrade, including its long-term foreign-currency and local-currency ratings, because of the war.

“Israel’s credit profile has proven resilient to terrorist attacks and military conflict in the past,” it said.

“However, the severity of the current military conflict raises the possibility of longer lasting and material credit impact,” it added.

Moody’s statement comes after Fitch Ratings announced on Tuesday that it was placing Israel’s A+ foreign- and local-currency issuer default ratings on “Ratings Watch Negative.”

In its announcement, Fitch cited “the heightened risk of a widening of Israel’s current conflict to include large scale military confrontations with multiple actors, over a sustained period of time.”