Credit rating firms are like cancer to the financial system |
Date: Thursday, April 2, 2009
Author: Michael Hiltzik, LA Times.com
If the mortgage meltdown teaches us anything, it's that the work of
these agencies isn't worth the paper it's on. Yet eradicating their
influence may be the toughest regulatory challenge we face.
The chilling realization that some things in high finance will never
change, notwithstanding the current crisis, came to me the other day
when I discovered that the Federal Reserve would accept only AAA-rated
securities as collateral for its new program to finance consumer loans.
On
the surface this seems only prudent -- after all, what could be more
gilt-edged than paper given a top investment grade by two of the three
most-recognized credit rating agencies, as the Fed demands?
But
the problem isn't the ratings. It's the raters. If the mortgage
meltdown teaches us anything, it's that the work of the credit rating
companies isn't worth the paper it's scribbled on.
The slipshod performance of these firms -- Moody’s Investors Service and Standard & Poor’s
Ratings Services are the largest by far -- was a major contributing
factor to the crisis. Yet the raters are so deeply embedded in the
financial system that eradicating their pernicious influence may be the
toughest regulatory challenge we face.
"They're like a cancer
that's spread throughout our law, our banking regulations, our
securities regulations, our insurance regulations," Frank Partnoy, who dealt with derivatives as an investment banker and now teaches law at the University of San Diego, told me this week.
By order of the Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, money
market funds can't invest in paper below a certain rating.
Institutional investors such as pension funds are often barred from
buying bonds below a certain grade.
That
means a rating firm's word can determine whether the market for a bond
is huge or minuscule. For corporate issuers, a top credit rating is
money in the bank because it means lower borrowing costs.
For
investment managers, the ratings provide cover for half-baked
decisions: If you blow a billion for a pension fund on a bad bond
issue, you can always point to the AAA grade it got from Moody's or
S&P (or both) and say, "Don't blame me."
Yet the rating
process is shot through with conflicts of interest. The agencies get
almost all of their income from fees for rating securities, and those
fees are paid by the issuers of those securities. As a result, the
raters are wary of giving low grades, fearing customers will get ticked
off and take their business to a competitor that might be more, shall
we say, flexible.
In a 2007 internal memo unearthed by the House
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, a Moody's executive wrote
that the firm had been struggling for years to balance the quest for
market share with the need to preserve the quality of its ratings.
The problem it kept running into was that the clients -- i.e., the issuers -- didn't want "good" ratings; they wanted high ratings. “Ratings quality has surprisingly few friends,” the executive wrote.
Issuers
learned they could game the process by jawboning the agencies or
applying a thin layer of rouge to junk securities. Partnoy, in his book
about his Wall Street career titled "F.I.A.S.C.O.,"
tells of using some creative cosmetics to get an AAA rating from
S&P for an investment trust that largely held bonds of a
graft-ridden Philippines power company. (S&P eventually backed off
the rating, but not by much.)
These practices contributed mightily to the disaster epic known as the mortgage-backed securities market.
Billions
of dollars of mortgage bonds were blessed with AAA ratings even though
the agencies hadn't looked closely at the underlying home loans, much
less reevaluated them after home prices topped out. According to
congressional testimony and documents, the firms often simply plugged
into their rating formulas the representations about loan quality they
were given by the issuers -- including such upstanding lenders as
Countrywide and IndyMac.
The agencies try to defend this system.
They take fees from issuers, they say, because that allows them to make
all their ratings public without charging a subscription. They note
that they downgraded mass quantities of mortgage securities as soon as
the problems in the market emerged. (Critics contend they should have
identified the problems before the rest of the world knew.) The
firms say they're only giving opinions about creditworthiness, and
shouldn't be blamed for "unanticipated developments in the markets," as
a Moody's man told the House committee.
Partnoy and others say
the financial system would be well-served by stripping the agencies of
their regulator-endorsed authority. "No one has been as wrong as they
were," he says, "yet we continue to rely on them."
Among the
options to replace them, he suggests, why not try the markets, which
have been much better at gauging the credit risk of bonds and other
securities?
An investment manager might be limited to buying
securities with market interest rates no more than a certain number of
percentage points above the yields on bonds of known risk, such as
Treasuries. The change would force investors to use their own judgment,
rather than outsourcing it to S&P and Moody's.
Indeed, many
leading institutional investors weaned themselves from official ratings
years ago. One investment executive told Moody's in 2007 (according to
another memo published by the House committee) that people who accepted
the firm's ratings were "sucker" investment managers.
That's some endorsement. Now if only the Federal Reserve would get the message.
Michael Hiltzik's column appears every Monday and Thursday. Reach him at michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.
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