This Is What Is Missing From Rating Agency Reform

May 14, 2010 4:54 PM ETIYF, MCO, SPY, SPGI3 Comments
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We previously discussed the Franken and Lemieux amendments that passed in the Senate, which regulates the Ratings Agencies. It’s important to realize how strong the House bill was in this manner, and how the Senate is still missing some things.

Shahien Nasiripour has the best overview of what did not happen yesterday with rating agency reform, Senate Approves New Curbs On Rating Agencies, Though One Provision Overlooked:

But in passing a measure that attempts to end their oligopoly, the Senate purposely did not include a provision in the House bill that forces major credit rating agencies to be accountable to investors by scrapping a Securities and Exchange Commission rule that has shielded them from civil lawsuits for nearly 30 years.

The provision, known as Rule 436(g), insulates the 10 credit rating agencies recognized by the government as “Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations” from liability if they knowingly make false or misleading statements in connection with securities registration statements to dupe investors. Other experts — like the rating agencies not part of the group of 10 — are legally liable for their statements “to assure that disclosure regarding securities is accurate,” according to a 2009 SEC document supporting the removal of the exemption.

In short, if a Standard & Poor’s or Moody’s Investors Service (MCO) knowingly tries to deceive an investor, under current law that investor can’t sue….

“In the eyes of investors, regulators and the market at large, rescinding the exemption would remove [the 10 major credit rating agencies] from the pedestal they have come to occupy,” according to the Council’s letter.

“Nearly 30 years ago, the SEC adopted a rule that effectively exempts recognized credit rating agencies from experts’ liability under the Securities Act,” wrote David Becker, the SEC’s general counsel and senior policy director. “No other experts have this protection.”…

This article was written by

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Mike Konczal, a former financial engineer, is a fellow with the Roosevelt Institute, working on financial reform, the 21st century economy, structural unemployment, inequality, risk sharing, consumer access to financial services and more generally what it means to have a social contract in a financialized, post-industrial economy. His work has appeared at The Atlantic Monthly’s Business Channel, NPR’s Planet Money, Baseline Scenario, Seeking Alpha, Huffington Post and The Nation. Originally from Chicago, he enjoys finance, economics, sociology, theory, tacos and center-left politics on the side.

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