Austria tacha de incomprensible la rebaja de Rating...pero no habla de Hungría¡
*LO que no dice su gabinete de economía es como es posible que un país tan solvente haya arriesgado tanto teniendo un 18% de su deuda en HUNGRIA¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
Austria es patética...y como tal sufrirá...
Francia se pasó de lista con GRecia...y como tal sufrirá....
Austria con Hungría...
Lo malo es que Alemania tiene un 2.05% con deuda Austriaca...a ver como la consiguen vender...)
La suma producto que tiene Alemania, es tal...
que por todos lados está Hundiéndose...ya que , quien tiene que pagar a Alemania, cada vez está peor y peor...lo que implícitamente aumenta el riesgo de Alemania.
Pero bueno, Merkel se lo está guisando con patatas ella solita...
Por cierto
*Mensaje para navegantes....
EL REINO UNIDO NO ES AAA ,aunque lo pongan en los papelitos..
(Aguantan hasta las olimpiadas, luego,,,la que le va a venir al Reino Unido va a ser de abandona el país (TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN)
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VIENNA, Jan 14, 2012 (AFP)
Austria said Standard and Poor's downgrade of its credit rating to AA+ from AAA was "incomprehensible" and risked undermining the progress of recent weeks in the eurozone crisis.
"It is incomprehensible when one of three US rating agencies decides to go it alone and downgrade eurozone countries' ratings or give them a negative outlook," a government statement said late Friday.
"What appears to be incomprehensible here is the uneven assessment (by S&P) of the different eurozone countries that previously had AAA ratings, even though solutions have been and are being worked out in close cooperation."
Vienna was working "intensively" on budget cuts, parliament has passed legislation on cutting the deficit and Moody's and Fitch had recently affirmed their AAA ratings, it added.
The head of Austria's central bank, Ewald Nowotny, said S&P was "much more aggressive" than the other rating agencies and that its decision to downgrade Austria and a string of other countries was "political."
"My fear is that this action could undermine the exclusively positive development that we have had in recent weeks in Europe," Nowotny, also on the European Central Bank's board of governors, told public television late Friday.
"Of course there are lots of reasons to be unhappy with progress in Europe but what has now happened will most likely make things more difficult."
S&P cut Austria and France's AAA rating one notch to AA+, lowered the ratings of Cyprus, Italy, Portugal and Spain by two notches, and reduced those of Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia by one notch. Germany was left unchanged at AAA.
Belgium, Estonia, Finland, Ireland, Luxembourg and the Netherlands all had their current ratings confirmed, but were placed on "negative watch" -- meaning they could be downgraded in due course.