Testimony:
The Role and Impact of Credit Rating Agencies on the Subprime Credit Markets
by Chairman Christopher Cox
U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission

Before the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
September 26, 2007
Chairman Dodd, Senator Shelby, and Members of the Committee:

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the important work the Securities and 
Exchange Commission is doing concerning credit rating agencies. In giving the 
Commission statutory authority in the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act of 2006 
(Rating Agency Act) to oversee credit rating agencies registered with the 
Commission as nationally recognized statistical rating organizations 
("NRSROs"), Congress explicitly found that Commission oversight would serve the 
interest of investor protection by fostering competition, accountability, and 
transparency in the industry.

The Rating Agency Act grants the Commission broad authority to examine all 
books and records of an NRSRO. This broad examination authority permits the 
Commission to examine an NRSRO on a periodic basis for compliance with 
substantive Commission rules applicable to NRSROs, including rules addressing 
conflicts of interest and rules prohibiting certain unfair, coercive, or 
abusive practices. Although the Commission was granted authority to regulate an 
NRSRO as such, the Act expressly stated that the Commission has no authority to 
regulate the "substance of the credit ratings or the procedures and 
methodologies" by which any NRSRO determines credit ratings. In striking this 
balance, the legislation recognizes an appropriate role for the Commission in 
promoting competition and policing NRSRO activities such as conflicts of 
interest, and at the same time declares that it is not our role to second-guess 
the quality of the rating agencies' ratings.

The Rating Agency Act is still only months old, and it set out an aggressive 
schedule for implementation. The Commission is ahead of that schedule. The 
Commission proposed six new rules on February 2, 2007, just four months after 
the law was signed, and adopted final rules on May 23, 2007, more than a month 
ahead of the June 26, 2007 statutory deadline. And earlier this week, the 
Commission issued orders granting registration as NRSROs under the Rating 
Agency Act to seven credit rating agencies. Each of these applications was 
swiftly reviewed, evaluated, and determined within the 90-day timeframe 
specified by the Act. These seven credit rating agencies now are subject to 
both the provisions of the Act and the Commission's final rules implementing it.

Recent Events Regarding Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities

In recent months, the credit rating agencies have been heavily criticized 
regarding the accuracy of their ratings of certain structured finance products, 
especially subprime residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). Critics have 
faulted the rating agencies for initially assigning ratings to those securities 
that were too high; for failing to adjust those ratings sooner as the 
performance of the underlying assets deteriorated; and for not maintaining 
appropriate independence from the issuers and underwriters of those securities.

For their part, the rating agencies generally have stated that incidence of 
mortgage delinquencies in 2006 far exceeded their original credit loss 
expectations, particularly for subprime mortgages. In the past, their 
expectations had been more conservative than the actual loss experience. They 
have noted several factors that seem to have caused the unexpected losses: 
fraud in the mortgage origination process; deterioration in loan underwriting 
standards; and finally, lending standards quickly became more restrictive 
thereby making it more difficult for over-leveraged borrowers to re-finance.

We have as yet formed no firm views on any of the reasons put forth by the 
credit rating agencies, but we are carefully looking into each of them in the 
context of an examination the Commission has begun with respect to NRSROs 
active in rating RMBS. This examination - which is being conducted on a 
non-public basis - was commenced in response to the recent events in the 
mortgage markets. In particular, the Commission is examining whether these 
NRSROs were unduly influenced by issuers and underwriters of RMBS to diverge 
from their stated methodologies and procedures for determining credit ratings 
in order to publish a higher rating. The examination is also focusing on 
whether the NRSROs followed their stated procedures for managing conflicts of 
interest inherent in the business of determining credit ratings for RMBS. In 
this regard, the examination will seek to determine whether the NRSROs' role in 
the process of bringing RMBS to market impaired their ability to be impartial.

In addition to the Commission's examination of NRSROs, the President has 
requested that the President's Working Group on Financial Markets examine the 
role of credit rating agencies in lending practices, how their ratings are 
used, and how securitization - the repackaging and selling of assets - has 
changed the mortgage industry and related business practices. As a member of 
the President's Working Group, the Commission is taking a leading role in this 
study.

The Commission is also a member of the credit rating agency task force created 
by the International Organization of Securities Commissions ("IOSCO") and we 
recently hosted an IOSCO meeting at which the credit rating agencies most 
active in rating residential mortgage-backed securities made presentations with 
respect to their role in developing structured finance products, and how they 
manage the conflicts of interest that arise in providing rating services.

The History and Role of Credit Rating Agencies in the Financial Markets

In considering recent events, it is useful to review the history of credit 
rating agencies and their role in the financial markets. Credit ratings have 
been used to distinguish among grades of debt creditworthiness since early last 
century. But it was only beginning in 1975 that the SEC began to make explicit 
reference to credit ratings in its rules, using credit ratings by 
market-recognized rating agencies to distinguish among grades of 
creditworthiness for various purposes under the federal securities laws. The 
Commission originally adopted the term "NRSRO" in 1975 solely for determining 
capital charges on different grades of debt securities under the Commission's 
net capital rule for broker-dealers. Over time, however, the NRSRO concept was 
incorporated into a number of additional SEC rules and regulations, including 
rules issued under the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934, and the Investment Company Act of 1940. Congress, too, began to use the 
NRSRO concept in legislation, as have other regulatory bodies, including 
banking regulators both at home and abroad.

Despite the fact that the NRSRO concept was used by the SEC for regulatory 
purposes prior to the enactment of the Rating Agency Act, no legislation had 
yet given the Commission statutory regulatory authority over credit ratings 
agencies as such. Before the Rating Agency Act was enacted, the Commission 
staff identified credit rating agencies as NRSROs through the no-action letter 
process. In that process, the staff would review information and documents 
submitted by the credit rating agency, including how broadly its credit ratings 
were used in the securities markets, to determine whether the agency had 
achieved broad market acceptance for its ratings. If in the staff's view that 
acceptance had been achieved, the staff would issue a letter stating that it 
would not recommend enforcement action against broker-dealers who used the 
agency's credit ratings for purposes of complying with the Commission's net 
capital rule.

The SEC staff previously identified 11 firms as NRSROs under this process. 
However, several NRSROs subsequently consolidated so that five of the credit 
rating agencies that were identified under the no-action letter process 
remained in business at the time that the Rating Agency Act was enacted: A.M. 
Best Company, Inc.; DBRS Limited; Fitch, Inc; Moody's Investors Service, Inc.; 
the Standard & Poor's Division of the McGraw Hill Companies, Inc. Two 
additional NRSROs were identified between the passage of the Rating Agency Act 
and its implementation: Japan Credit Rating Agency, Ltd.; and Rating and 
Investment Information, Inc.

The Credit Rating Agency Reform Act of 2006

The Rating Agency Act replaced the no-action letter process with a program of 
Commission oversight of credit rating agencies that elect to register as 
NRSROs. Under the Rating Agency Act, a credit rating agency seeking to be 
registered as an NRSRO must apply for registration with the Commission, make 
public in its application certain information to help persons assess its 
credibility, and implement procedures to manage the handling of material 
nonpublic information and conflicts of interest. Consistent with the statutory 
mandate, the Commission's implementing rules require disclosure of an NRSRO's 
conflicts of interest, and proscribe certain conflicts of interest. Key 
provisions of the Rating Agency Act and the new Commission rules are summarized 
below.

Disclosure Requirements and Performance Measurement Statistics

The Rating Agency Act and its implementing rules require an NRSRO to disclose 
in its public filings with the SEC a general description of its procedures and 
methodologies for determining credit ratings. In addition, an NRSRO must make 
public certain performance measurement statistics including historical 
downgrade and default rates within each of its credit rating categories over 
the short, medium, and long terms. These statistics are intended to serve as 
important indicators of the performance of an NRSRO in terms of its ability to 
assess the creditworthiness of issuers and obligors. Finally, as described in 
the Commission's adopting release in June 2007 regarding the NRSRO rules, the 
Commission is studying whether it would be appropriate to require additional 
types of performance statistics to be disclosed as an alternative, or in 
addition, to historical default and downgrade rates, such as a credit rating 
downgrade that occurs long after a significant drop in the value of the 
securities being rated. We believe that the disclosure requirements of the 
Rating Agency Act, as implemented now and in the future through our rulemaking, 
will assist users of credit ratings in assessing the reliability of an NRSRO's 
ratings over time, and will increase transparency with respect to the accuracy 
of an NRSRO's ratings.

Conflicts of Interest and Prohibited Practices

The Rating Agency Act requires an NRSRO to disclose the conflicts of interest 
that are inherent in its business of determining credit ratings and to 
establish, maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably 
designed, taking into consideration the nature of its business, to address and 
manage the conflicts of interest. The Rating Agency Act also provided the 
Commission with authority to prohibit or require the management and disclosure 
of conflicts of interest relating to the issuance of credit ratings by an 
NRSRO. Pursuant to this authority, the Commission adopted rules that prohibit 
an NRSRO from having certain conflicts of interest if it has not complied with 
the requirements in the Rating Agency Act to disclose and manage them. One of 
the conflicts in this category is receiving compensation from an issuer or 
underwriter to rate securities issued or underwritten by the entity. The 
Commission's rules also prohibit an NRSRO from having certain other conflicts 
in all circumstances. One of the conflicts in this category is receiving 
compensation for determining a credit rating where the person paying for the 
credit rating provided the NRSRO with net revenue in the most recently ended 
fiscal year that equaled or exceeded 10% of the NRSRO's total net revenue.

Finally, the SEC rules, among other things, also address the handling of 
material non-public information by an NRSRO and prohibit certain unfair, 
coercive, or abusive practices by the NRSROs - including modifying or 
threatening to modify a credit rating or otherwise departing from systematic 
procedures and methodologies in determining credit ratings, based on whether 
the obligor, or an affiliate of the obligor, purchases the credit rating or any 
other service or product of the NRSRO or any person associated with the NRSRO.

Books and Records, Financial Reports, and Examination

In addition to significant disclosure requirements and conflict of interest 
provisions, the Rating Agency Act and the Commission's implementing rules also 
require an NRSRO to make and keep certain books and records, including 
documentation of its established procedures and methodologies used by the NRSRO 
to determine credit ratings. These recordkeeping rules will allow Commission 
examiners to review whether an NRSRO is following its stated procedures and 
methodologies and otherwise complying with the Rating Agency Act. NRSROs also 
are required to keep external and internal communications received and sent by 
the NRSRO or its employees that relate to initiating, determining, maintaining, 
changing or withdrawing a credit rating.

The Rating Agency Act and implementing rules also require NRSROs to furnish to 
the Commission, on a confidential basis, certain financial reports, on an 
annual basis, including audited financial statements. In addition to the 
audited financial statements, the rules also require NRSROs to furnish separate 
unaudited financial reports that will assist the Commission in carrying out its 
statutory responsibilities under the Rating Agency Act.

The Rating Agency Act provides that all records of an NRSRO are subject to such 
reasonable periodic, special, or other examination by representatives of the 
Commission as the Commission deems necessary or appropriate in the public 
interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise in the furtherance of 
the purposes of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Prohibition on Regulating Rating Procedures

Finally, in implementing this statute, the Commission is ever mindful of the 
explicit intent of Congress that we not substitute the Commission's judgment 
for that of the rating agencies.

I appreciate the opportunity to provide the Committee with this update on the 
Commission's oversight of the credit rating agencies. I would be happy to 
answer any questions you might have.



http://www.sec.gov/news/testimony/ts092607cc.htm


Trouble shared is trouble halved. 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Lee Iacocca






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