S&P revises Ireland's outlook on Apple back-tax boost; Fitch affirms ratings
BY Reuters | CORPORATE | 11/15/24 04:44 PM ESTNov 15 (Reuters) - S&P Global Ratings revised Ireland's outlook to "positive" from "stable" on Friday, citing extraordinary overperformance in corporate tax receipt collections, while peer agency Fitch affirmed its ratings at "AA" with a "stable" outlook.
"The positive outlook reflects the significant fiscal overperformance, particularly driven by corporation tax receipts, which are rebuilding the Irish government's fiscal buffers," S&P said.
Ireland's tax collection increased by 14.9% in the first 10 months of the year, compared with the same period in 2023, as the first portion of a 14 billion euro ($14.74 billion) back-tax windfall boosted already healthy revenues.
According to Fitch, the country has a prudent domestic fiscal framework designed to mitigate risks from the large and highly-concentrated windfall corporate tax revenue.
An explosion in corporate tax revenues, mainly paid by a few large U.S. multinationals, has
handed Ireland one of Europe's few budget surpluses, and a one-off collection of back taxes from
Apple Inc
S&P estimates the Irish government will run a fiscal surplus equivalent to 7.4% of national
income, 2.8% excluding the Apple's
Fitch expects Ireland's budget surplus for 2024 to be 4.3% of gross domestic product - 1.5%
excluding revenue from Apple
"In our view, the government's plans to stash a large portion of future surpluses into newly setup savings funds will improve Ireland's fiscal and economic resilience," S&P added.
S&P affirmed the "AA/A-1+" long- and short-term ratings for the country.
Both Fitch and S&P upgraded Ireland's ratings in May due to its fiscal framework, Moody's followed in August with an outlook revision to "positive" and affirmed its ratings. ($1 = 0.9498 euros) (Reporting by Nishara K.P in Bengaluru; editing by Alan Barona)