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    CREDIT RATING

    AN ANALYSIS OF THE CREDIT RATING AGENCIES

    AN SH UM AN DUT TA ,

    1YR DoMS, NITT

    ROLL NO-21511107

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    CONTENTS

    INTRODUCTION--------------------------------------------------------------------------2

    ROLE OF CREDIT RATING ON COUNTRIES------------------------------------3

    ECONOMIC RESILIENCY--------------------------------------------------------------3

    FINANCIAL ROBUSTNESS-------------------------------------------------------------3

    STANDARD & POOR---------------------------------------------------------------------5

    MOODYS CORPORATION------------------------------------------------------------7

    FITCH-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------8

    USES OF RATING-------------------------------------------------------------------------8

    METHODS OF RATING-----------------------------------------------------------------9

    RATING USED IN STRUCTURED FINANCE------------------------------------10

    CRITICISM------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10

    KEY FACTS ON RATING-------------------------------------------------------------15

    CONCLUSION----------------------------------------------------------------------------16

    REFERENCE------------------------------------------------------------------------------18

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    INTRODUCTION

    Credit rating agencies (CRA) are companies that assign credit ratings for issuers of certain types

    ofdebt obligations as well as the debt and in certain cases the services of the underlying debt are

    also provided ratings.

    The impact of credit rating agencies on financial markets has become one of the most important

    policy concerns facing the international financial architecture. Ratings indicate a relative credit

    risk and serve as an important metric by which many investors and regulations measure credit

    risk.

    A major problems faced by developing countries is the difficulty in mobilizing funds to increase

    investment. The level of income is often too low to generate sufficient savings, and the domestic

    financial system often does a poor job of directing those funds back into domestic capital

    formation. This makes access to international capital markets an important resource for obtaining

    funds to raise the level and accelerate the pace of investment and growth. In order to gain access,

    developing countries must first obtain a favorable rating of their creditworthiness by one or more

    credit rating agencies.

    The credit rating represents the credit rating agency's evaluation of qualitative and quantitative

    information for a company or government; including non-public information obtained by the

    credit rating agencies analysts. Credit ratings are not based on mathematical formulas. Instead,

    credit rating agencies use their judgment and experience in determining what public and private

    information should be considered in giving a rating to a particular company or government.

    A poor credit rating indicates a credit rating agency's opinion that the company or government

    has a high risk of defaulting, based on the agency's analysis of the entity's history and analysis of

    long term economic prospects.

    The credit score does not take into account future prospects or changed circumstances.

    HISTORY

    The use of credit ratings arose in the U.S. out of the desire by the growing investing class to have

    more information about the many new securitiesespecially railroad bondsthat were being

    issued and traded. In the middle of the 19th century, the U.S. railroad industry began expanding

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_ratinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issuerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issuerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating
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    across the continent and into undeveloped territories. The industrys demand for capital exceeded

    the ability or willingness of banks and direct investors to provide it. In order to reach a broader

    and deeper capital market, railroads and other corporations began raising new capital through the

    market for private corporate bonds.

    Role of credit ratings on countries

    Countries can issue government bonds denoted in the countrys currency in order to raise capital.

    Bonds can also be issued in foreign currency, referred to as sovereign bonds. Bonds are often

    referred to as risk free due to the fact that they are government owned and hence, governments

    can at any time raise taxes or create extra currency in order to redeem their bonds upon maturity.

    However, as we have seen recently, the issue of Greece counters this statement.

    Bonds are rated on various parameters such as:

    Economic Resiliency

    The countrys economic strength, captured in particular by the GDP per capita thesingle best indicator of economic robustness and, in turn, shock-absorption capacity.

    Institutional strength of the country, the key question being whether or not the quality ofa countrys institutional framework and governance such as the respect of property

    right, transparency, the efficiency and predictability of government action, the degree ofconsensus on the key goals of political actionis conducive to the respect of contracts.

    Financial Robustness

    The financial strength of the government. The question is to determine what must berepaid and the ability of the government to mobilize resources: raise taxes, cut spending,

    sell assets, and obtain foreign currency.

    The susceptibility to event riskthat is the risk of a direct and immediate threat to debtrepayment, and, for countries higher in the rating scale, the risk of a sudden multi-notch

    downgrade. The issue is to determine whether the debt situation may be (further)

    endangered by the occurrence of adverse economic, financial or political events.

    Combining these indicators rating agencies determine degrees of financial robustness and

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    refine the positioning of the country on the rating scale- very high, high, moderate, low or

    very low.

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    Standard & Poor's

    Henry Varnum Poor first published the "History of Railroads and Canals in the United States

    in1860, the forerunner of securities analysis and reporting to be developed over the next century.

    Standard& Poors (S&P) was created in 1941 through the merger with Standard Statistics and

    Poors Publishing. The company provides a wide range of information on financial products and

    markets. Standard & Poors sells investment data, valuations, analysis and opinions. The flagship

    product is their S&P 500, an index that tracks the high capitalization equity markets in the

    United States. McGraw-Hill Companies acquired Standard & Poors in 1966. In 2001, McGraw

    Hill Companies had sales of $4.6 billion and income of $377 million. Standard & Poors

    contributed to the total with sales of almost $1.5 billion and operating profit of $435 million.

    Table 2: Standard and Poor's sovereign ratings methodology profile Poor's sovereign

    ratings methodology profile

    Political risk

    Stability and legitimacy of political institutions;

    Popular participation in political processes;

    Orderliness of leadership successions;

    Transparency in economic policy decisions and objectives;

    Public security; and

    Geopolitical risk.

    Income and economic structure

    Prosperity, diversity and degree to which economy is market-oriented;

    Income disparities;

    Effectiveness of financial sector in intermediating funs availability of credit;

    Competitiveness and profitability of non-financial private sector;

    Efficiency of public sector;

    Protectionism and other non-market influences; and

    Labour flexibility.

    Economic growth prospects

    Size and composition of savings and investment; and

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    Rate and pattern of economic growth.

    Fiscal flexibility

    General government revenue, expenditure, and surplus/deficit trends;

    Revenue-raising flexibility and efficiency;

    Expenditure effectiveness and pressures;

    Timeliness, coverage and transparency in reporting; and

    Pension obligations.

    General government burden

    General government gross and net (of assets) debt as a per cent of GDP;

    Share of revenue devoted to interest;

    Currency composition and maturity profile; and

    Depth and breadth of local capital markets.

    Offshore and contingent liabilities

    Size and health of NFPEs; and

    Robustness of financial sector.

    Monetary flexibility

    Price behaviour in economic cycles;

    Money and credit expansion;

    Compatibility of exchange rate regime and monetary goals;

    Institutional factors such as central bank independence; and

    Range and efficiency of monetary goals.

    External liquidity

    Impact of fiscal and monetary policies on external accounts;

    Structure of the current account;

    Composition of capital flows; and

    Reserve adequacy.

    External debt burden

    Gross and net external debt, including deposits and structured debt;

    Maturity profile, currency composition, and sensitivity to interest rate changes;

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    Access to concessional lending; and

    Debt service burden.

    Source: Standard and Poor's (October 2006). Sovereign Credit Ratings: A Primer.

    Notes: NFPEs: Non-Financial Public Sector Enterprises

    Moody's Corporation

    John Moody and Company first published "Moody's Manual" in 1900. The manual published

    basic statistics and general information about stocks and bonds of various industries. In 1909

    Moody began publishing "Moody's Analyses of Railroad Investments", which added analytical

    information about the value of securities. Expanding this idea led to the 1914 creation of

    Moody's Investors Service. By the 1970s Moody's began rating commercial paper and bank

    deposits, becoming the full-scale rating agency that it is today.

    Table 3: Moodys Sovereign Categories

    1. Economic Structure and Performance

    - GDP, inflation, population, GNP per capita, unemployment, imports and exports

    2. Fiscal Indicators

    - Government revenues, expenditures, balance, debt all as percentage of GDP

    3. External Payments and Debt

    - Exchange rate, labor costs, current account, foreign currency debt and debt service ratio

    4. Monetary and Liquidity Factors

    - Short-term interest rates, domestic credit, M2/foreign exchange reserves, maturing

    debt/foreign exchange reserves, liabilities of banks/assets of banks

    http://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/moodys.asphttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/commercialpaper.asphttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/commercialpaper.asphttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/moodys.asp
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    Fitch Rating

    John Knowles Fitch founded the Fitch Publishing Company in 1913. Fitch published financial

    statistics for use in the investment industry via "The Fitch Stock and Bond Manual" and "The

    Fitch Bond Book."

    In 1924, Fitch introduced the AAA through the rating system that has become the basis for

    ratings throughout the industry. With plans to become a full-service global rating agency, in the

    late 1990s Fitch merged with IBCA of London.

    Fitch Ratingsprovides ratings and research to over 75 countries

    Uses of ratings

    Credit ratings are used by investors, issuers, investment banks, broker-dealers, and governments.

    For investors, credit rating agencies increase the range of investment alternatives and provide

    independent, easy-to-use measurements of relative credit risk; this generally increases the

    efficiency of the market, lowering costs for both borrowers and lenders. This in turn increases

    the total supply ofrisk capital in the economy, leading to stronger growth. It also opens the

    capital markets to categories of borrower who might otherwise be shut out altogether: smallgovernments, startup companies, hospitals, and universities.

    A poor credit rating indicates a credit rating agency's opinion that the company or government

    has a high risk of defaulting, based on the agency's analysis of the entity's history and analysis of

    long term economic prospects. A poor credit score indicates that in the past, other individuals

    with similar credit reports defaulted on loans at a high rate. The credit score does not take into

    account future prospects or changed circumstances.

    Methods of Credit Ratings:

    The key measure in credit risk models is the measure of the Probability of Default (PD) but

    exposure is also determined by the expected timing of default and by the Recovery Rate (RE)

    after default has occurred:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investorhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issuerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investment_bankhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broker-dealerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_riskhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borrowerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenderhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_capitalhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_marketshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_marketshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_capitalhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenderhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borrowerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_riskhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broker-dealerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investment_bankhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issuerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investor
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    Standard and Poor's ratings seek to capture only the forward-looking probability of theoccurrence of default. They provide no assessment of the expected time of default or

    mode of default resolution and recovery values.

    By contrast, Moody's ratings focus on the Expected Loss (EL) which is a function ofboth Probability of Default (PD) and the expected Recovery Rate (RE). Thus EL =PD

    (1- RE).

    Fitch's ratings also focus on both PD and RE (Bhatia, 2002). They have a moreexplicitly hybrid character in that analysts are also reminded to be forward looking and

    to be alert to possible discontinuities between past track records and future trends.

    The credit ratings of Moody's and Standard and Poor's are assigned by ratingcommittees and not by individual analysts.

    There is a large dose of judgement in the committees final ratings.

    Ratings use in structured finance

    Credit rating agencies may also play a key role in structured financial transactions. Unlike a

    "typical" loan or bond issuance, where a borrower offers to pay a certain return on a loan,

    CRAs provide little guidance as to how they assign relative weights to each factor, though

    they do provide information on what variables they consider in determining sovereign

    ratings.

    Identifying the relationship between the CRAs' criteria and actual ratings is difficult, in part

    because some of the criteria used are neither quantitative nor quantifiable but qualitative.

    The analytical variables are interrelated and the weights are not fixed either across

    sovereigns or over time.

    Even for quantifiable factors, determining relative weights is difficult because the agencies

    rely on a large number of criteria and there is no formula for combining the scores to

    determine ratings.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured_financehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured_finance
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    structured financial transactions may be viewed as either a series of loans with different

    characteristics, or else a number of small loans of a similar type packaged together into a series

    of "buckets" (with the "buckets" or different loans called "tranches"). Credit ratings often

    determine the interest rate or price ascribed to a particular tranche, based on the quality of loans

    or quality of assets contained within that grouping.

    Companies involved in structured financing arrangements often consult with credit rating

    agencies to help them determine how to structure the individual tranches so that each receives a

    desired credit rating. For example, a firm may wish to borrow a large sum of money by issuing

    debt securities. However, the amount is so large that the return investors may demand on a single

    issuance would be prohibitive. Instead, it decides to issue three separate bonds, with three

    separate credit ratingsA (medium low risk), BBB (medium risk), and BB (speculative) (usingStandard & Poor's rating system).

    The firm expects that the effective interest rate it pays on the A-rated bonds will be much less

    than the rate it must pay on the BB-rated bonds, but that, overall, the amount it must pay for the

    total capital it raises will be less than it would pay if the entire amount were raised from a single

    bond offering. As this transaction is devised, the firm may consult with a credit rating agency to

    see how it must structure each tranchein other words, what types of assets must be used to

    secure the debt in each tranchein order for that tranche to receive the desired rating when it is

    issued.

    Criticism

    Credit rating agencies have been subject to the following criticisms:

    Credit rating agencies do not downgrade companies promptly enough. For example,Enron's rating remained at investment grade four days before the company wentbankrupt, despite fact that credit rating agencies had been aware of the company's

    problems for months. Or, for example, Moody's gave Freddie Mac preferred stock the top

    rating until Warren Buffett talked about Freddie on CNBC and on the next day Moody's

    downgraded Freddie to one tick above junk bonds.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranchehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bond_%28finance%29http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secured_debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freddie_Machttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Buffetthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNBChttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-yield_debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-yield_debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNBChttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Buffetthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freddie_Machttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secured_debthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bond_%28finance%29http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranche
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    Large corporate rating agencies have been criticized for having too familiar a relationshipwith company management, possibly opening themselves to undue influence or the

    vulnerability of being misled. These agencies meet frequently in person with the

    management of many companies, and advise on actions the company should take to

    maintain a certain rating. Furthermore, because information about ratings changes from

    the larger CRAs can spread so quickly (by word of mouth, email, etc.), the larger CRAs

    charge debt issuers, rather than investors, for their ratings. This has led to accusations that

    these CRAs are plagued by conflicts of interest that might inhibit them from providing

    accurate and honest ratings. At the same time, more generally, the largest agencies

    (Moody's and Standard & Poor's) are often seen as promoting a narrow-minded focus on

    credit ratings, possibly at the expense of employees, the environment, or long-term

    research and development.

    While often accused of being too close to company management of their existing clients,CRAs have also been accused of engaging in heavy-handed "blackmail" tactics in order

    to solicit business from new clients, and lowering ratings for those firms. For instance,

    Moody's published an "unsolicited" rating ofHannover Re, with a subsequent letter to the

    insurance firm indicating that "it looked forward to the day Hannover would be willing to

    pay". When Hannover management refused, Moody's continued to give Hannover

    ratings, which were downgraded over successive years, all while making payment

    requests that the insurer rebuffed. In 2004, Moody's cut Hannover's debt to junk status,

    and even though the insurer's other rating agencies gave it strong marks, shareholders

    were shocked by the downgrade and Hannover lost $175 million USD in market

    capitalization.

    The lowering of a credit score by a CRA can create a vicious cycle, as not

    only interest rates for that company would go up, but other contracts with

    financial institutions may be affected adversely, causing an increase in

    expenses and ensuing decrease in credit worthiness. In some cases, large loans

    to companies contain a clause that makes the loan due in full if the companies'

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannover_Rehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicious_cyclehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicious_cyclehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannover_Re
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    credit rating is lowered beyond a certain point (usually a "speculative" or "junk

    bond" rating).

    The purpose of these "ratings triggers" is to ensure that the bank is able to lay claim to aweak company's assets before the company declares bankruptcy and a receiver is

    appointed to divide up the claims against the company.

    The effect of such ratings triggers, however, can be devastating: under a worst-casescenario, once the company's debt is downgraded by a CRA, the company's loans become

    due in full; since the troubled company likely is incapable of paying all of these loans in

    full at once, it is forced into bankruptcy (a so-called "death spiral"). These rating triggers

    were instrumental in the collapse ofEnron. Since that time, major agencies have put extra

    effort into detecting these triggers and discouraging their use, and the U.S. Securities and

    Exchange Commission requires that public companies in the United States disclose their

    existence.

    Agencies are sometimes accused of being oligopolists, because barriers to market entryare high and rating agency business is itself reputation-based (and the finance industry

    pays little attention to a rating that is not widely recognized). Of the large agencies, only

    Moody's is a separate, publicly held corporation that discloses its financial results without

    dilution by non-ratings businesses, and its high profit margins (which at times have beengreater than 50 percent of gross margin) can be construed as consistent with the type of

    returns one might expect in an industry which has high barriers to entry.

    Credit Rating Agencies have made errors of judgment in rating structured products,particularly in assigning AAA ratings to structured debt, which in a large number of cases

    has subsequently been downgraded or defaulted. The actual method by which Moody's

    rates CDOs has also come under scrutiny. If default models are biased to include

    arbitrary default data and "Ratings Factors are biased low compared to the true level of

    expected defaults, the Moodys [method] will not generate an appropriate level of

    average defaults in its default distribution process. As a result, the perceived default

    probability of rated tranches from a high yield CDO will be incorrectly biased downward,

    providing a false sense of confidence to rating agencies and investors.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junk_bondhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junk_bondhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankruptcyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receivershiphttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_spiral_financinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enronhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligopolyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligopolyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enronhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_spiral_financinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receivershiphttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankruptcyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junk_bondhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junk_bond
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    Little has been done by rating agencies to address these shortcomings indicating a lackof incentive for quality ratings of credit in the modern CRA industry. This has led to

    problems for several banks whose capital requirements depend on the rating of the

    structured assets they hold, as well as large losses in the banking industry. AAA rated

    mortgage securities trading at only 80 cents on the dollar, implying a greater than 20%

    chance of default, and 8.9% of AAA rated structured CDOs are being considered for

    downgrade by Fitch, which expects most to downgrade to an average of BBB to BB-.

    These levels of reassessment are surprising for AAA rated bonds, which have the same

    rating class as US government bonds.[20][21] Most rating agencies do not draw a

    distinction between AAA on structured finance and AAA on corporate or government

    bonds (though their ratings releases typically describe the type of security being rated).

    Many banks, such as AIG, made the mistake of not holding enough capital in reserve in

    the event of downgrades to their CDO portfolio. The structure of the Basel II agreements

    meant that CDOs capital requirement rose 'exponentially'. This made CDO portfolios

    vulnerable to multiple downgrades, essentially precipitating a large margin call. For

    example under Basel II, a AAA rated securitization requires capital allocation of only

    0.6%, a BBB requires 4.8%, a BB requires 34%, whilst a BB(-) securitization requires a

    52% allocation. For a number of reasons (frequently having to do with inadequate staff

    expertise and the costs that risk management programs entail), many institutional

    investors relied solely on the ratings agencies rather than conducting their own analysis

    of the risks these instruments posed. (As an example of the complexity involved in

    analyzing some CDOs, the Aquarius CDO structure has 51 issues behind the cash CDO

    component of the structure and another 129 issues that serve as reference entities for $1.4

    billion in CDS contracts for a total of 180. In a sample of just 40 of these, they had on

    average 6500 loans at origination. Projecting that number to all 180 issues implies that

    the Aquarius CDO has exposure to about 1.2 million loans.) Pimco founder William

    Gross urged investors to ignore rating agency judgments, describing the agencies as "an

    idiot savant with a full command of the mathematics, but no idea of how to apply them.

    Ratings agencies, in particular Fitch, Moody's and Standard and Poors have beenimplicitly allowed by governments to fill a quasi-regulatory role, but because they are

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating_agency#cite_note-19http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIGhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basel_IIhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pimcohttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Grosshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Grosshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Grosshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Grosshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pimcohttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basel_IIhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIGhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating_agency#cite_note-19http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_rating_agency#cite_note-19
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    for-profit entities their incentives may be misaligned. Conflicts of interest often arise

    because the rating agencies, are paid by the companies issuing the securitiesan

    arrangement that has come under fire as a disincentive for the agencies to be vigilant on

    behalf of investors. Many market participants no longer rely on the credit agencies ratings

    systems, even before the economic crisis of 2007-8, preferring instead to use credit

    spreads to benchmarks like Treasuries or an index. However, since the Federal Reserve

    requires that structured financial entities be rated by at least two of the three credit

    agencies, they have a continued obligation.

    Many of the structured financial products that they were responsible for rating, consistedof lower quality 'BBB' rated loans, but were, when pooled together into CDOs, assigned

    an AAA rating. The strength of the CDO was not wholly dependent on the strength of the

    underlying loans, but in fact the structure assigned to the CDO in question. CDOs are

    usually paid out in a 'waterfall' style fashion, where income received gets paid out first to

    the highest tranches, with the remaining income flowing down to the lower quality

    tranches i.e.

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    Rating agencies have come under criticism for a narrow-minded view of governmentdefault from investors' perspective. A government that does not run a sustainable budget

    might be forced to print money to meet credit payments, this will then inflate the

    economy and devalue the currency. USA is for example thought to be unlikely to default

    on their payments since they have the printing power of the dollar, which a country like

    Greece does not have for its currency, the Euro. However the Euro, which was introduced

    in year 1999 on an even exchange rate with the dollar, was trading almost 50% higher

    than the dollar only 10 years after its launch. At that time, because of investor fear for a

    default in the peripheral states of EU, Greece's government bond credit rating was in the

    junk bond category, while the USA credit rating was still in the top category. The

    criticism escalated in summer, 2011, when the European Commission and EC President

    and former Portuguese premier Jos Manuel Barroso, respectively, criticized Moody's

    downgrade of Portuguese bonds.

    After Moody's reported a surge in "toxic" municipal debt (money owed to banks bymunicipalities) in China in summer, 2011, Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist

    Ting Lu deemed the assessment too pessimistic," saying he disagreed with the

    assumptions and the math and the translation-of-terms used by the rating agency.

    Moody's had also estimated that "between 8% to 12% of loans extended by Chinese

    banks could eventually be classed as non-performing," according to a news report.

    Key facts about credit ratings Credit ratings are only opinions about the relative credit risk of the subject Credit ratings are not investment advice, or buy, h old, or sell recommendations. They are just one factor

    investors might consider in making investment decisions Credit ratings are not indications of the market liquidity of a debt security or its price

    in the secondary market. Credit ratings are not guarantees of credit quality or of future credit risk

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Commissionhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Manuel_Barrosohttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_sovereign_debt_crisis#Portugalhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_financial_systemhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_of_America_Merrill_Lynchhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economisthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economisthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_of_America_Merrill_Lynchhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_financial_systemhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_sovereign_debt_crisis#Portugalhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Manuel_Barrosohttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Commission
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    VI. Conclusions

    CRAs play a key role in financial markets by helping to reduce the informativeasymmetry between lenders and investors, on one side, and issuers on the other side,

    about the creditworthiness of companies (corporate risk) or countries (sovereign risk).

    CRAs' role has expanded with financial globalization and has received an additionalboost from Basel II which incorporates the ratings of CRAs into the rules for setting

    weights for credit risk.

    In making their ratings, CRAs analyse public and non-public financial and accountingdata as well as information about economic and political factors that may affect the

    ability and willingness of a government or firms to meet their obligations in a timely

    manner. However, CRAs lack transparency and do not provide clear information about

    their methodologies.

    Ratings tend to be sticky, lagging markets, and then to overreact when they do change.This overreaction may have aggravated financial crises in the recent past, contributing to

    financial instability and cross-country contagion(downgrade of US credit rating).

    Moreover, the action of countries which strive to maintain their rating grades through

    tight macroeconomic policies may be counterproductive for long-term investment and

    growth.

    The recent bankruptcies of Enron, WorldCom, and Parmalat have prompted legislativescrutiny of the agencies. Criticism has been especially directed towards the high degree

    of concentration of the industry, which in the United States has reflected a registration

    and certification process in the form of NRSRO designation biased against new entrants.

    The effect of such concentration has been the absence of the discipline enforced by

    competition and a low level of innovation.

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    In the United States, policy action has included the 2006 Credit Rating Agency ReformAct which has overhauled the regulatory framework by prescribing procedural

    requirements for NRSRO registration and certification and by strengthening the powers

    of the SEC.

    At international level, the main initiative has been the publication by IOSCO of its Codeof Conduct. This Code aims at developing governance rules for CRAs to ensure the

    quality and integrity of the rating process, the independence of the process and the

    avoidance of conflict of interest and greater transparency. In its 2005 Technical Advice to

    the European Commission on possible Measures Concerning Credit Rating Agencies, the

    CESR recommended the implementation of the IOSCO Code and adoption of a "wait and

    see" attitude.

    Definitive assessment of these initiatives would still be premature. The industry willreceive a fillip from implementation of Basel II. The major CRAs will undoubtedly seek

    a substantial share of the new business which will result. Promotion of competition may

    require policy action at national level to encourage the establishment of new agencies and

    to channel business generated by new regulatory requirements in their direction.

    Regulatory action at the national level may also be necessary to ensure that the agencies

    operate in accord with levels of accountability and transparency matching the

    recommendations of the IOSCO Code.

    Ratings agencies do serve a purpose in financial markets. Their value in assessing default risk

    and thereby affecting credit spreads plays a critical role in financial markets and especially the

    flow of capital to developing countries. Improvements can be made by encouraging more

    accurate ratings and requiring more timely ratings. Additional improvement can come through

    investor education about the method and meaning of credit ratings, and greater transparency by

    the agencies to level the playing field for all investors. Increasing competition may be one

    strategy to increase investment and more accurate ratings, but its potential negative

    consequences will need to be monitored and supervised to prevent "rate shopping."

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    References:-

    http://www.investopedia.com/ http://www.forexpromos.com/what-are-credit-rating-companies-and-their-impact-on-the-

    economy

    CREDIT RATING AGENCIES AND THEIR POTENTIAL IMPACT ONDEVELOPING COUNTRIES,Marwan Elkhoury,No. 186,January 2008