HOW RATING AGENCIES WORK, WHY THEY ARE FEARED
Ratings are a requirement for many investment funds before they make a decision to buy a given security
DEPENDING on whom you ask, ratings agencies are either wouldbe guardians of financial probity or an indispensable valuation tool for investors.
Their reputation was badly tarnished by the 2008 financial crisis when critics said they failed to notice the warning signs in overextended banks.
But since then, they have tightened up, promising new rigour in their analysis of government and corporate finances to ensure investors make the best-informed decisions possible.
Their actions — like S&P which on Friday upped pressure on Rome by downgrading its outlook for Italy’s sovereign debt, while leaving its credit rating untouched — accordingly have great influence over markets, investment decisions and governments needing to raise money.
The world’s top three rating agencies are American: Moody’s, Fitch Ratings and S&P Global, formerly known as Standard & Poor’s.
Their job is to judge the creditworthiness of countries and companies. Governments and corporations pay them in return for a critical review of their debt.
The agencies’ ratings, designed to be fully impartial and credible, are a requirement for many investment funds before they make a decision to buy a given security, be it a share in a company or a government bond.
The investment return or yield demanded by creditors will vary according to the agencies’ reports. A weak notation will push borrowing rates higher, while a strong one may bring them down.
Ratings range from top grade “AAA” all the way down to “D”, which signals a default.
Only 11 countries have a “triple A” rating. They are Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Canada, Australia and Singapore.
At the other end of the spectrum, Venezuela and Mozambique are believed to be incapable of paying back their debts.
Agencies regularly revise their ratings but can also, in a less drastic step, change the outlook for their current note from “negative” to “positive” via “neutral”, a move that often leads to a later change in the rating.
Political developments, major social and economic events or a large company acquisition can all trigger notation updates.
An agency ratings downgrade can quickly become a thorn in the side of spendthrift governments which suddenly find themselves with greater debt-servicing costs.
Since their creation early in the 20th century, ratings agencies have often been the target of bitter complaints.
European Unin governments, for example, protested against the downgrade of nine eurozone countries in February 2012, at the height of the financial crisis.
The pressure that governments feel when agency notations turn against them is considerable.
If the agencies declare that governments are having trouble servicing their debt, investors will sometimes demand drastic measures before returning to the market, usually deep cuts in government spending or much higher rates of return.
“The greatest capacity to force the hands of a government lies with the markets today,” says Christopher Dembik, an analyst at Saxo Bank.