Credit Rating Agencies

Credit-ratings agencies had been held up historically as neutral arbiters of risk. That turned out to be far from the truth, as evidenced by the numerous mortgage-backed securities and other risky securities that states and municipalities in particular bought because they had been slapped with a AAA rating - meaning they were supposed to be virtually risk-free. The problem was that credit rating agencies made money by giving their customers the ratings they wanted. There was little or no accountability for the agencies because it was nearly impossible to sue them.

Rules and Oversight

Conflict of Interest

Liability

Universal Ratings

Reliance on Ratings

Rating Agency Governance

Post-Rating Surveillance

Public Rating Utility

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