http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/fitch-warns-of-downgrade-risk-in-malaysias-rating-outlook
Malaysia's  deteriorating currency position – reflected in the ringgit's sharp  depreciation, falling foreign exchange reserves and shrinking current  account surplus – could force Fitch Ratings to restore the negative  outlook attached to the country's credit rating, it said this week.
  The warning comes a week after rival Moody's Investors Service said  clouds were gathering over its positive outlook on Malaysia's A3 rating  because of political risks, weak commodity prices and the threat posed  by China's economic slowdown.
  Fitch said recent political uncertainty was in line with Malaysia's relatively weak governance ranking.
                                                                 
                 On June 30, Fitch bumped the outlook on Malaysia's 'A-' sovereign  credit rating up to "stable" from "negative". The decision had been a  "close call", said Andrew Colquhoun, Fitch's Head of Asia-Pacific  Sovereigns Rating.  "In June we put more weight on the structural improvements, but the  weights aren't fixed. Continued erosion of external liquidity in the  context of deteriorating investor risk appetite could eventually lead us  to change our assessment again," said Colquhoun.
  On July 3 a political storm erupted over a Wall Street Journal  article on debt-laden state fund 1MDB stating that almost US$700  million(RM2.6 billion) from 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) had been  deposited in Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak's bank account.
  Najib has denied any wrongdoing, saying that he has not received  money from 1MDB or any state agency for his personal gain. Malaysia's  anti-graft agency has said the funds were a political donation from a  Middle East Arab family.
  Since the 1MDB storm broke over Najib's premiership, the ringgit has  lost 10% of its value, plumbing levels unseen since the depths of the  Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s. Foreign currency reserves have  dropped US$11 billion since the end of June to US$94.5 billion on  August 14 – the lowest level for six years.
  The current account surplus has shrunk from a peak in 2008 to RM7.6  billion in the second quarter this year, down from RM10 billion in the  previous quarter.
  While there have been investor concerns around Malaysia's declining  current account surplus, triggering portfolio outflows, the fallout from  the 1MDB scandal enveloping Najib has amplified investor unease in a  country with ongoing governance concerns.
  Colquhoun said that the debt run up by 1MDB did not constitute a  major risk in itself, but there were dangers that controversy would  distract policymakers.
  "I think the main impact investors I speak to are worried about is  the potential for the issue to take the government's collective eye off  the ball of the economy and undermine reform momentum," he said.
  Colquhoun said there was no evidence of that. – Reuters, September 1, 2015.
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http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/...malaysias-rating-outlook#sthash.1LRR7j9I.dpuf
Wonder wat will be the repercussion if indeed Msia downgraded to "negative"...