#10 The Credit Rating Agencies Are Corrupt
Have all
been taught that the credit rating agencies are supposed
to be objective. But in the real world things are not that simple.
For example, just a short time after
long-term U.S. government debt was
downgraded, the head of Standard & Poor's is
resigning, and is being
replaced
by Douglas Peterson, the former COO of
Citigroup. Do you think the former
COO of Citigroup is going to come down hard on his former comrades over at the
big Wall Street banks?
Also,
a whistleblower has come forward
with some stunning revelations about Moody's. The following is what
formeranalyst William Harrington says was going on over at that credit
agency during the financial crisis....
"The track record of management influence in
committees speaks for itself – it produced hollowed-out (collateralized debt
obligation) opinions that were at great odds with the private opinions of
committees and which were not durable for even a short period after
publication"
---------
Moody's managers pressured analysts: ex-staffer
First Posted: 08/19/11 05:50 PM ET
Updated: 10/19/11 06:12 AM ET
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An
ex-Moody's Corp derivatives analyst said the credit-rating agency intimidated
and pressured analysts to issue glowing ratings of toxic complex, structured
mortgage securities. In a 78-page letter to the Securities and Exchange
Commission, William Harrington outlined how the committees that make
the ratings decisions are not independent and how managers
often intimidated analysts.
"The management of Moody's,
the management of Moody's Corporation and the board of Moody's Corporation are
squarely responsible for the poor quality of previous Moody's opinions that
ushered in the financial crisis,"
He wrote. "The track record
of management influence in committees speaks for itself -- it produced
hollowed-out (collateralized debt obligation) opinions that were at
great odds with the private opinions of committees and which were not durable for even a short period
after publication,"
He added. Harrington's August 8
letter, which was sent in response to a 517-page proposal by the SEC on
credit-rating regulations, raises similar issues that are already at the heart
of a Justice Department probe into McGraw-Hill's Standard & Poor's.
"We cannot emphasize
strongly enough the importance Moody's places on the quality of our ratings and
the integrity of our ratings process," said Moody's Corp spokesman
Michael Adler.
"For that very reason, we
have robust protections in place to separate the commercial and analytical
aspects of our business, and our ratings are assigned by a committee -- not by
any individual analyst."
The Justice Department has been
looking into what S&P analysts wanted to do with ratings during the financial
crisis, and what they were told to do, according to one source familiar with
the matter. A second source has said the department also has been investigating
Moody's in connection with structured product ratings during the crisis,
although the exact focus on that probe is unclear.
Earlier this year, a U.S. Senate
panel led by Michigan Democrat Carl Levin found that Moody's and
S&P helped trigger the financial crisis after the two rating agencies gave overly
positive ratings to toxic mortgage-related products and then later downgraded
those ratings en masse.
Last year's Dodd-Frank Wall
Street overhaul law tightens regulations for raters, including improving the transparency
of the methodology used and curbing potential conflicts of interest.
The SEC in May issued a proposal seeking comments on many of the Dodd-Frank
provisions on rating agencies.
Harrington, who said he worked as
an analyst in the derivatives group from 1999 until July 2010, said he thinks
that if the SEC's proposed rules had been in place in 2002, they would still
not have gotten to the heart of the problems at Moody's.
"Many of the proposed rules still give more license to the
management of Moody's to step up its long-standing intimidation and harassment
of analysts, to the detriment of opinion formation," he said
.
(Additional reporting by Jeremy
Pelofsky)
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