Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Moody’s shifts NYC economic outlook from ‘stable’ to ‘negative’

While the city comptroller called it a “sobering wake-up call,” the mayor said the decision to revise the rating was “premature.”

Wall Street, New York City
Wall Street in New York City. Credit: PredragKezic/Pixabay.

New York City Comptroller Mark Levine warned of looming financial challenges after Moody’s Ratings revised the city’s credit outlook from “stable” to “negative” on March 11.

“Moody’s decision to revise New York City’s outlook to negative is a sobering wake-up call about the fiscal challenges ahead for us,” Levine said in a statement.

Moody’s said the change cited “large and persistent imbalances under still-favorable economic and revenue conditions,” warning of widening multiyear budget gaps.

The ratings agency maintained the city’s Aa2 rating, but noted that the negative rating signals a downgrade if monetary pressures worsen or if officials fail to address structural deficits.

Levine said city leaders must take steps to stabilize finances. He added that he looks forward to working with them and with New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani “to ensure we get to a strong, sustainable fiscal plan for the uncertain years ahead.”

According to Moody’s, New York City retains key credit strengths, including a large and diverse economic base; high property values; and strong revenue-generation capacity.

“The decision to revise the outlook frankly is premature,” said Mamdani.
S&P Global Rating is also raising concerns, warning on March 13 that “it may downgrade the city’s credit rating if Mamdani moves forward with draining the city’s financial reserves to balance his $127 billion proposed budget.”

The man appeared to wear a Hitler-style mustache and a red armband, while standing on an Israeli flag and giving a Nazi salute to passing runners.
The Liberian envoy said that the Islamic Republic’s siege of the pivotal Gulf waterway has led to “the creeping normalization of disruption as leverage.”
“Penn does not have a strong chance of prevailing on appeal but makes, narrowly, a showing of irreparable harm,” U.S. District Judge Gerald J. Pappert wrote in his ruling.
Jeanne Litvin, 78, who had been missing since April 14, was reportedly found at Community Hospital of Huntington Park, where she had been taken in as a “Jane Doe” patient.
“Some actions that took place over the weekend violated the student code of conduct and the college’s time, place and manner policies,” a college spokesman told JNS.
A lawyer for the suspect’s ex-wife stated that his client and her family were “detained 10.5 months for a crime their father/ex-husband committed.”