Standard and Poor’s stripped the Netherlands of its AAA credit rating today. This ignominy means that the Dutch, now rated merely AA+, are considered less creditworthy than the Germans, on a par instead with the Americans.Although  considered part of the euro zone’s sturdy northern “core,” the Dutch  economy has performed more like the wobbly southern “periphery”  recently, with GDP set to shrink by 1.2% this year, according to  S&P. The size of the Dutch economy won’t surpass its 2008 peak until  2017, reckons the ratings agency. Future growth will be weighed down by aggressive government austerity and falling house prices. 
Not  that any of this really matters. For widely held, extensively  scrutinized bonds like those issued by the Dutch government, the opinion  of one ratings agency doesn’t move markets much; Fitch and Moody’s, the  other two big agencies, still give the Netherlands the top grade. Dutch  bond spreads barely budged on the downgrade news, and continue to fetch  lower yields than fellow AA+ rated America (as does AA rated France,  for that matter). 
Read more: The Netherlands is now less creditworthy than Microsoft - Quartz
S&P also cut France’s rating earlier this month, to a notch below the Netherlands. Economist Holger Sandte of Nordea bank expects a gradual convergence of ratings  among euro members, driven by French and Dutch-style downgrades rather  than upgrades of lower-rated countries; Germany, Luxembourg and Finland  are now the only members of the 17-nation euro zone with the top rating  from all three leading credit agencies. S&P upgraded its outlook for Spain today, to “stable” from “negative,” but left its BBB- rating in place. 
Read more: The Netherlands is now less creditworthy than Microsoft - Quartz
 
