by TheDude » Mon 22 Sep 2008, 23:22:58
"Blackpool"?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('efarmer', 'H')ank the Tank could just nationalize the agency
rating companies and help them make excellent
ratings decisions.
That would be...going too far...
Remember the episode of the Simpsons where Homer builds a time machine out of a toaster and keeps returning to the present where something is askew? At one point he's in a world where Ned Flanders is dictator, there's an audience of people strapped to their chairs and robot arms swoop down to force everyone to grin madly.
But actually the credibility of Moody's is already suspect:
Moody’s Says Workers Rated Some Securities Incorrectly$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')y VIKAS BAJAJ
Published: July 2, 2008
Already under intense scrutiny for its role in the credit crisis, the Moody’s Corporation said Tuesday that some employees had violated its code of conduct in rating complex European securities.
The company said that it would discipline and possibly fire employees who had been involved in rating the debt, which are known as constant proportion debt obligations. Separately, Moody’s said it was replacing the executive, Noel Kirnon, who was in charge of its structured finance business at its subsidiary, Moody’s Investors Service. It would be the second high-profile executive departure announced by the company in less than two months.
The news comes as policy makers around the world are looking into how Moody’s and its competitors, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings, gave high ratings to mortgage and related securities that turned out to be far riskier than their ratings would have implied and have cost the financial system hundreds of billons of dollars. The companies are the subject of several investigations in the United States and Europe.