Rating

Credit rating of the City of Ostrava by Moody’s – June 2026 update: Aa3/stable

Credit rating determines the economic quality of the entity, its ability to repay all of its debts on time and in full. It is carried out by independent rating agencies which express their final assessment in the form of a credit rating grade from a rating scale. Assigning long-term rating also includes the assignment of an outlook that determines the future direction of the rating, usually in the medium term. The rating can affect the prices of resources (bonds, notes, loans) that an entity can obtain on the financial markets.

The creditworthiness assessment of the City of Ostrava has been carried out since 1996. Over the years, Ostrava has been rated by two independent global rating agencies, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s. Currently, it is Moody’s who rates Ostrava.

Ostrava has been rated by Moody’s since 1997. In 1997–2001, the rating was first carried out on debt securities. Since 2002, Ostrava has also been included in the issuer rating. The awarded rating grade has seen an upward trend over the years, i.e. the city has worked its way from Baa1 rating to its so far highest grade of Aa3 (see table).

Table Development of Ostrava’s rating in 2002–2026

year 2002 2003-2005 2006-2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 May 2019 October
rating Baa1 A3 A2 A2 A1 A1 A1  Aa3
outlook - stable stable positive stable positive positive stable
year 2020-2021 2022 June 2022 August  2023 June  2023 December  2024 2025 2026
rating Aa3 Aa3 Aa3 Aa3 Aa3 Aa3 Aa3 Aa3
outlook stable stable negative negative
 
stable
 
stable stable stable

In June 2026, Moody’s affirmed the City of Ostrava’s current Aa3 rating with a stable outlook based on a detailed review of the City’s performance over the past year, its current financial position, financial outlook and taking into account the environmental, social and governmental risks.

The Aa3 rating of the City of Ostrava reflects the following factors:

₋         strong and stable operating performance, with consistently high operating surpluses,

₋         very strong liquidity, providing a significant financial buffer,

₋         low and well-managed debt with high debt availability,

₋         population decline, which weighs on the economic base and long-term revenue growth prospects,

₋         pressure on financial performance resulting from substantial investment needs. 

The rating outlook is stable – it reflects the city´s capacity to preserve solid operating performance, high liquidity, and moderate debt levels over the medium term.

The city of Ostrava thus achieved the highest possible rating, which is identical with the rating of the Czech Republic (Aa3 with a stable outlook). The city of Prague and Brno achieved the same rating, which results from the rating assessments currently published on the website of the Moody's agency.

The official rating report in PDF format is not freely available for download, as it is the property of Moody’s.

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