March 02, 2009

The credit rating agencies were not just innocent bystanders

Sir, Vickie Tillman, Executive Vice-President of Standard & Poor Ratings Services, in “Rating firms do not capture risk in one measure”, March 2, writes, “credit ratings are opinions about future default risk and do not address the many other risks that have affected debt securities in recent months and accounted for the bulk of losses reported by financial institutions … policymakers should review regulations that may inadvertently encourage undue reliance on ratings. If rating opinions are used as benchmarks of creditworthiness – which, incidentally we have never encouraged – other benchmarks and factors should be considered as well.”

Does this mean that I have wrongfully been accusing these poor credit rating agencies, that they are only innocent bystanders and that they have nothing to do with this crisis that is going to result in so much misery for the world? Of course not!

Granted, the primary responsibility lies with the regulators who enabled the regulatory framework that incited this crisis and then with those investment bankers who took advantage of the system failures but in no way should we allow the credit rating agencies to go free of any historic guilt; as we should neither allow those financial newspapers that still have the gall calling the credit rating agencies “indispensable” something that even the credit rating agencies would not dare to do, to wash their hands.