Saint-Marin’s sovereign credit rating reflects its government’s ability and willingness to meet debt obligations. It is assigned by major agencies such as S&P, Moody’s, Fitch, DBRS, and Scope, and represents how international markets view Saint-Marin’s credit risk.
Has Saint-Marin’s credit rating changed recently?
This page lists the latest rating and outlook actions for Saint-Marin, showing when each agency last reviewed or changed its assessment.
Why does Saint-Marin’s credit rating matter to investors?
Ratings directly affect borrowing costs, investor confidence, and market access. Changes can influence Saint-Marin's bond yields, currency, and equity flows as investors reassess risk.
How does Saint-Marin’s rating compare to other countries?
You can explore how Saint-Marin ranks globally using our Credit Ratings Hub, which displays all countries’ ratings from S&P, Moody’s, Fitch, DBRS, and Scope.
What do outlooks like Positive, Stable, and Negative mean?
They indicate the expected direction of a rating. Positive signals a possible upgrade, Stable means no change is likely, and Negative points to potential downgrade risk
What is the difference between investment grade and speculative grade?
Investment grade (BBB−/Baa3 or higher) means relatively low risk and steady market access. A speculative grade (BB+/Ba1 or lower) signals higher risk and volatility, but can attract yield-seeking investors.