Whatever debt swap arrangement Greece can work out with its creditors will likely still leave it with a default rating, according to John Chambers of Standard & Poor's. Also, since the debt level remaining after the conclusion of the deal will still be quite high, the country's rating will remain low.
Bloomberg reported that Chambers, managing director of sovereign ratings at S&P, discussed the Greek debt situation at the Bloomberg Link Sovereign Debt Conference in New York on Tuesday. He was quoted saying, "The very least that would happen in Greece is an exchange that would qualify by our criteria as a default. Their debt burden is still going to be very, very high. So their rating post-default will still be a low rating."