France faces Thursday the first real test of its market credibility in the wake of Standard & Poor\'s decision to strip it of its cherished triple-A rating when it seeks to sell long-term bonds. The sale, an attempt to raise between 7.5 billion and 9.5 billion euros (between $9.5 billion and $12 billion), will be watched keenly to see whether France will pay higher yields or whether the markets will shrug off the downgrade as they did last year when S&P downgraded the United States. New York-based S&P cut the credit rating of nine debt-laden European countries on Friday, including stripping France of its top-notch AAA rating. Though expected, the S&P downgrade highlighted increasing concerns over French public finances. However rival ratings agency Moody\'s on Monday confirmed its triple-A rating for France, while the third major ratings agency, Fitch, has said it doesn\'t foresee stripping France of its top rating this year unless a major crisis hits the eurozone. Finance Minister Francois Baroin voiced confidence ahead of Thursday\'s issue, saying France remained a no-risk bet for investors. \"An investment is rarely risk free, which is why it\'s often profitable. But a risk-free investment does exist, that\'s an investment in the sovereign wealth of our country,\" he said on Monday. \"France is a great country with a solid ... diversified economy, a skilled workforce, a highly resistant banking system and a high savings level,\" Baroin said. \"So we can have confidence,\" he said, adding that the S&P downgrade needed to be kept in perspective. \"This is one message among others.\" If President Nicolas Sarkozy\'s government finds itself saddled with high yields on Thursday, it will call into question the credibility of his deficit reduction plan and plunge the eurozone into further turmoil. An unsuccessful auction would also likely hit Sarkozy\'s re-election hopes with only three months to go before a presidential vote. Facing a tough challenge from Socialist candidate Francois Hollande, Sarkozy is desperate to shore up his economic credentials. France successfully sold 8.59 billion euros in short-term bonds on Monday, paying a lower rate of interest than at a previous similar auction despite the loss of its triple-A. But analysts said Thursday\'s auction will be the real test. \"The longer-term debt auction on Thursday is much more of a challenge,\" said Kathleen Brooks, research director at trading site Forex.com. \"Last week we saw good demand for short-term Italian debt, but a lukewarm reception to longer-dated securities issued by Rome. If that happens at the French auction on Thursday then we could see a sharp decline in euro-based assets.\" In its last long-term bond issue on January 5, France raised just shy of eight billion euros. Analysts described demand in that auction as \"solid\" but France was forced to pay slightly higher interest rates. The rate on France\'s benchmark 10-year bond rose to 3.29 percent in that auction, up from 3.18 percent during the last long-term bond issue on December 1. French 10-year bonds yielded 3.132 percent on the secondary market on Wednesday evening. Last month, France said it will need to raise 178 billion euros in medium- and long-term bonds in 2012, slightly less than last year, as the state will have to meet a budget deficit of 78.7 billion euros and repay 97.9 billion in debt. Struggling to get its public finances under control, the French government has imposed two deficit-cutting packages aimed at saving a total of 72 billion euros since August. It has said it needs to save 100 billion euros to balance its budget by 2016 but Sarkozy has vowed no new austerity measures ahead of the election in April. Spain also taps the market Thursday for the first time since a two-notch downgrade by S&P, looking to raise between 3.5 and 4.5 billion euros in an auction of medium- and long-term sovereign debt.
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