Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Moody’s raises Israel’s rating outlook to stable

Israel’s outlook has been deemed negative since 2024.

Tel Aviv skyline
An evening view of the Tel Aviv skyline, Oct. 26, 2025. Photo by Moshe Shai/Flash90.

Moody’s changed the Israeli government’s credit outlook to stable from negative, the U.S.-based rating agency company announced on Friday.

It cited the truce in Gaza with Hamas as a stabilizing factor for the adjustment, according to Bloomberg.

Israel’s outlook has been deemed negative since 2024.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich reacted to the change, tweeting on Saturday evening: “We weren’t alarmed when the rating dropped; we believed in Israel’s economy, managed it properly, and knew that with victory in the war, the economy too would triumph with God’s help and demonstrate unparalleled resilience.”

He continued, “We’re continuing to say this today and are glad that finally the rating agencies are also understanding that the miracle of the Israeli economy is unprecedented.”

The American company’s report also affirmed its “Baa1” credit for Israel.

The country’s Baa1 credit rating was affirmed in the American company’s report.

In September 2024, Moody’s downgraded Israel’s credit rating by two notches from the A2 level enjoyed by Poland, Lithuania and Slovakia to the “Baa1” level shared by Spain and Bulgaria.

Israel currently has a different rating at each of the three major credit rating agencies. At Fitch, Israel’s rating (A) is one notch higher than at Moody’s, alongside Japan and Slovenia. S&P Global Ratings also grades Israel at A, alongside Spain, Saudi Arabia and Iceland.

Moody’s, which has faced allegations of political bias also over its 2016 warning that a Trump presidency would “significantly” hurt the U.S. economy, lowered Israel’s outlook in 2023, before the outbreak of war, citing domestic political considerations.

In April 2023, Moody’s lowered Israel’s rating outlook from “positive” to “stable” due to the judicial reform effort led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

At the time, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich dismissed the downgrade as a “pessimistic and unfounded political manifesto.”

See more from JNS Staff
The trip underscores Israel’s growing diplomatic outreach in Latin America, the President’s Office said.
Sir Mark Rowley, head of the Metropolitan Police, requested an additional 300 officers to defend the community.
Troops opened fire to remove the danger. Several hits were reported.
The letter, whose author claimed to “work with Hezbollah,” ended with the words: “Kill and fumigate all Jews.”
The search is on-going, U.S. Africa Command said.
“This is not a protest. It is hatred,” said Israel’s Foreign Ministry.