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What Credit Rating Agencies Look For

Understand how Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch assess Malaysia’s creditworthiness and what factors influence sovereign credit ratings.

8 min read Intermediate March 2026
Professional economist reviewing credit rating analysis reports and financial documents at modern office desk with multiple charts and data

Why Rating Agencies Matter for Sovereign Debt

Credit rating agencies don’t just assign letters to countries — they’re essentially evaluating a nation’s ability and willingness to pay back its debts. When Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, or Fitch downgrades Malaysia’s rating, it doesn’t happen in isolation. It ripples through financial markets, affecting borrowing costs for the government and potentially for businesses and households too.

Think of it this way: if you’re lending money to someone, you’d want to know whether they’ll actually pay it back. Rating agencies are doing that analysis on a national scale. They’re looking at dozens of factors — some obvious, some more subtle — to determine whether Malaysia represents a safe or risky bet.

Financial analyst studying credit rating methodologies with government bonds and economic indicators displayed on computer screen

The Core Factors Agencies Evaluate

Rating agencies use a structured framework, but they’re not robots following a formula. They blend quantitative metrics with qualitative judgment.

Debt-to-GDP Ratio

This is the headline metric everyone watches. Malaysia’s ratio sits around 60-65%, which is manageable but worth monitoring. Agencies want to see this trending downward or at least stable, not climbing year after year.

Revenue Generation

Can the government actually collect enough tax revenue to service its debt? They’ll examine tax rates, collection efficiency, and whether the tax base is diversified or dependent on one or two sources like oil and gas.

Fiscal Balance

Is the government spending more than it takes in? A persistent budget deficit signals trouble ahead. Agencies look at whether deficits are structural or temporary, and whether there’s a credible plan to reduce them.

Economic Growth

A growing economy makes debt easier to manage. If GDP’s expanding at 4-5% annually, the debt burden becomes lighter over time. Stagnation or recession works in the opposite direction.

Political Stability

Can the government actually implement reforms and stick to fiscal discipline? Frequent political turmoil or institutional weakness makes agencies nervous about whether commitments will hold.

External Position

How much does Malaysia owe to foreign creditors? Is the country accumulating foreign reserves? External vulnerability matters because it affects ability to weather international shocks.

Malaysia’s Debt Profile Under Scrutiny

Malaysia’s government debt has been rising steadily over the past decade. In 2010, it was around 41% of GDP. Fast forward to 2024, and you’re looking at 62-65% depending on which source you consult. That’s not a crisis level — many developed nations carry higher ratios — but it’s definitely something rating agencies are watching.

What matters to them isn’t just the number itself. It’s the trajectory and what’s driving it. If debt’s rising because the government’s investing in infrastructure that’ll generate future economic returns, that’s different from debt rising because of inefficient spending or vanishing tax revenues. Agencies want to understand the story behind the statistics.

Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) have historically been well-regarded. The yields are competitive, liquidity’s decent, and there’s a stable investor base. That said, if debt keeps climbing without clear fiscal adjustment, confidence could erode and borrowing costs could rise.

Government debt and economic indicators displayed on financial dashboard with Malaysia-specific metrics and year-over-year comparison charts
Credit rating methodology framework showing interconnected factors and analysis process used by international rating agencies

How the Rating Process Actually Works

Rating agencies don’t lock themselves in a room and guess. There’s a formal process. Analysts dig into government budget documents, central bank statements, and economic forecasts. They conduct calls with finance ministry officials. They examine peer countries to see how Malaysia compares.

The analysis gets presented to a rating committee — usually a group of experienced analysts and economists — who debate whether to maintain the current rating, upgrade, or downgrade. These aren’t snap decisions. A typical review process takes weeks or months.

Here’s what’s important to understand: the agencies assign a rating like “A-” or “Baa1,” but they’re also publishing outlooks (“stable,” “positive,” or “negative”) that signal where they think things are heading. A stable outlook means they’re comfortable holding the rating. A negative outlook? That’s a warning. You’ve got maybe 6-24 months to improve fundamentals before a downgrade could happen.

The Three Major Agencies: Different Views, Same Goal

Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch each have their own methodologies and sometimes disagree on ratings.

Moody’s

Uses a numeric rating scale (Aaa, Aa1, A1, etc.). They’re known for detailed sector analysis and tend to emphasize institutional strength and governance quality. For Malaysia, they’ve maintained an “A1” rating with stable outlook in recent years, though they’re closely monitoring debt trends.

Standard & Poor’s

Uses letter grades (AAA, AA, A, BBB, etc.). S&P places significant weight on political risk and institutional stability. Their Malaysia rating sits at “A-” with a stable outlook. They’ve emphasized the importance of maintaining fiscal discipline given the rising debt levels.

Fitch

Also uses letter grades and is sometimes seen as the most focused on near-term credit events. Fitch rates Malaysia “A-” with stable outlook. They’ve highlighted the importance of revenue-side reforms to address fiscal sustainability concerns.

Key Takeaways

Credit rating agencies aren’t perfect — they’ve missed major crises before and sometimes move slowly. But they’re not irrelevant either. A downgrade makes borrowing more expensive, which affects the entire economy.

For Malaysia, the immediate risks aren’t existential. The country has a solid investment-grade rating from all three major agencies. But the trend matters. If debt keeps climbing without fiscal consolidation, if revenue sources become less reliable, or if political instability undermines policy credibility, you could see downgrades.

The bottom line? Rating agencies are looking at whether Malaysia can sustain its debt load long-term. They’re watching debt-to-GDP, fiscal balance, growth prospects, and political will to reform. Understanding these factors helps you see what the agencies are really concerned about — and what policymakers need to address to maintain confidence in Malaysian Government Securities and the broader fiscal outlook.

Financial professional presenting economic outlook and credit rating implications to audience in professional seminar setting

Important Disclaimer

This article is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice, financial advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any securities. Credit ratings are opinions and can change. Economic conditions vary, and rating agencies sometimes disagree. If you’re considering Malaysian Government Securities or making any investment decisions based on credit ratings, consult with a qualified financial advisor who understands your personal circumstances and risk tolerance. Past ratings and outlooks don’t guarantee future results.