By Gavin Jones
ROME (Reuters) -Credit ratings agency S&P Global upgraded Italy on Friday in a surprise move just days after Rome halved its economic growth forecast amid global market turmoil and said its huge public debt would rise this year and next.
S&P Global raised Italy’s sovereign debt rating to BBB+ from BBB, citing its falling budget deficit, resilient exports and high domestic savings rate, and confidence that the European Central Bank will keep any inflationary pressures in check.
It said the new rating carried a stable outlook.
“The upgrade reflects Italy’s improved economic, external, and monetary buffers amid rising global headwinds, and the gradual progress it has made in stabilizing public finances since the (COVID-19) pandemic’s onset,” S&P Global said.
Earlier this month Fitch affirmed its BBB rating with a positive outlook, while Moody’s rates Italy Baa3 with a stable outlook.
S&P’s upgrade is a boost for Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni ahead of a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in Washington on Thursday expected to focus on U.S. trade tariffs which have hit financial markets worldwide and clouded economic prospects.
S&P Global noted that Italy’s net external creditor position had strengthened over the last five years to around 15% of gross domestic product, compared with close to balance just before the pandemic.
“S&P’s judgment rewards the seriousness of the Italian government’s approach to budget policy,” said Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti. “In the general uncertain climate, prudence and responsibility will continue to be our course of action.”
The agency had made no change to Italy’s rating or outlook since July 2022, when it revised the outlook to stable from positive following the collapse of the government of former Prime Minister Mario Draghi.
STAGNANT ECONOMY
On Wednesday, Italy committed to keeping its budget deficit in check even as it slashed its economic growth forecasts against a backdrop of mounting uncertainty connected to the U.S. trade tariffs.
Yet even before Trump’s tariff announcements, the euro zone’s third largest economy has posted virtually no growth since mid-2024.
Italian GDP edged up by 0.1% in the fourth quarter of last year from the previous three months after stagnating in the third quarter. No pick-up is expected in the near term.
In its multi-year economic framework issued on Wednesday, the government cut its forecast for 2025 GDP growth to 0.6% from a projection of 1.2% made in September, and lowered its 2026 forecast to 0.8% from 1.1%.
The Treasury confirmed its previous 2025 budget deficit estimate at 3.3% of national output and also confirmed its goal of bringing the fiscal gap below the European Union’s 3% of GDP ceiling in 2026, maintaining a 2.8% target.
However, it said the public debt – the second highest in the euro zone after Greece’s – would climb from 135.3% of GDP last year to 137.6% by 2026, before edging down marginally the following year.
S&P also forecast Italy’s GDP growth at 0.6% this year, in line with Meloni’s government, and said the country’s rising debt would not stabilise until 2028.
Nonetheless, it said Trump’s latest decision to suspend previously announced 20% tariffs on European Union goods for three months, and to impose a milder 10%, meant the hit to Italy’s economy would be “manageable”.
The governor of the Bank of Italy, Fabio Panetta, said he had expected the S&P upgrade and saw leeway for further rises.
“Italy’s rating could still improve. Of course, let’s see what happens to the world economy, but I am certainly not surprised by what happened last night,” he told a conference in the northern city of Trento.
(Reporting by Gavin Jones; Additional reporting by Unnamalai L; Editing by Susan Fenton and Crispian Balmer)