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WORD COUNT
676
JUNE 10, 2009
WALL ST.
CREDIT RATERS LOBBY BIG TIME – by Michael Beckel
As
Congress and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) eye new rules
and regulations to ameliorate the financial turmoil, credit rating
agencies are coming under increased scrutiny and are reaching out to K
Street lobbyists for a helping hand.
The 10
firms accredited by the SEC to issue credit ratings spent $370,000 on
lobbying during the first three months of 2009, an increase of 42
percent over the first quarter of 2008, the nonpartisan Center for
Responsive Politics (CRP) has found. Of that total, 78 percent came from
the so-called "Big Three" firms, whose inflated ratings of risky
securities, according to some, helped precipitate the financial crisis.
Credit rating behemoth Moody's accounted for most of this lobbying,
spending a total of $180,000. Giant Standard & Poor's dropped $60,000,
and Fitch Ratings, the third major company, spent $50,000.
CRP also
found that employees of these 10 companies and their family members
contributed more than $122,400 to federal candidates, parties and
committees during the 2008 election cycle, nearly double the amount
contributed during the 2004 cycle. Of those, 74 percent went to
Democrats. Moreover, contributions from employees and family members of
Moody's, Standard & Poor's (a wholly owned subsidiary of McGraw-Hill
Companies) and Fitch made up a whopping 92 percent of all industry
donations in 2008.
Congress
and the SEC are grappling with how to prevent inflated credit scores,
the result of a business model that many experts call flawed.
Originally, investors paid credit rating companies for timely and
accurate analyses of risk. But beginning in the 1970s, the Big Three
firms implemented a plan that required the entity seeking the credit
rating (known as the "issuer") to pay for the rating instead. Critics
say there is an inherent conflict of interest in this plan — with big
financial incentives for rating agencies to provide high ratings and for
issuers to shop around for the highest possible ratings.
Some, such
as Sean Egan, the co-founder and managing director of Egan-Jones Rating
Company, which operates on an investor-pays model, are even calling for
the elimination of the issuer-pays practice entirely. "The conflict of
interest whereby the ratings firm is paid by the issuer is not a
manageable conflict," Egan said. "It's lunacy to set up investment
guidelines geared toward [conflicting incentives]."
To ensure
that this point gets heard in Washington, this year Egan-Jones has
stepped up its lobbying efforts, and Sean Egan has become a more
prolific campaign contributor. The firm spent $60,000 on lobbying during
the first three months of 2009. This represents a 500 percent increase
compared to the first quarter of last year and is just $10,000 less than
they spent during all of 2008. Since March 2008, Egan himself also gave
at least $4,500 to federal lawmakers, including Sens. Arlen Specter
(D-Pa.); Mark Warner (D-Va.); and Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), the ranking
Republican member on the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Committee.
But the
other rating agencies, especially the Big Three, may not be so eager to
abandon their current business model. Fitch Ratings declined to comment
and both Moody's and their lobbying firm failed to return multiple
messages. The press office at Standard & Poor's directed this reporter
to their white papers on the subject, which shows the firm's support for
the issuer-pays way of doing business.
"Standard
& Poor's believes that market participants should be free to choose from
a number of business models,” the position paper stated. “Firms
employing the issuer-fee model have a long-term track record of
success.”
Others say
that it isn't the business model that's the problem, but the dependence
on credit raters that regulators and investors have developed. "The key
to policy going forward has to be to stop our reliance on these credit
ratings," Frank Partnoy, a professor at the San Diego School of Law,
recently told Bloomberg. "Even though few people respect the credit
raters, most continue to rely on them. We've become addicted to them
like a drug, and we have to figure out a way to wean regulators and
investors off of them."
--
Michael Beckel is the communications assistant for the Washington-based
Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan organization that follows
the money in politics on its Web site
www.OpenSecrets.org.
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