National ratings agencies received criticism yesterday at a meeting of the insurance industry for their failure to properly rate residential mortgage-backed securities prior to the crisis.
National ratings agencies received criticism yesterday at a meeting of the insurance industry for their failure to properly rate residential mortgage-backed securities prior to the crisis.
As part of its fall meeting in Washington this week, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners' ratings agency working group discussed the role of ratings agencies in regulators' evaluation of insurance companies, particularly after securities that were once AAA-rated slumped to below investment-grade quality.
Insurers hold close to $3 trillion in rated bonds, and regulators depend on credit ratings to determine insurers' capital reserves.
State regulators said they would seek input from industry members on how they should use these ratings going forward.
“It is clear the ratings agencies did not know what they were doing when they initially rated the [residential-mortgage-backed securities] issued from 2005 to 2007,” Birny Birnbaum, executive director of the Center for Economic Justice, said yesterday.
Noting that most of those AAA-rated securities are now below investment grade, he asked, “If the rating agencies did not know what they were doing a few years ago, why do we have any confidence that they know what they are doing today?”
Rod Dubitsky, executive vice president of Pimco Advisory, chalked up the ratings agencies' failure to the agencies' reliance on flawed third-party due diligence, the fact that structured finance analysts were too far removed from the business underlying the mortgage loans to detect the coming catastrophe, as well as limited incentives for the ratings agencies to be more conservative.
He suggested that the ratings agencies be required to provide more extensive disclosure of their methodology and be subjected to increased regulatory oversight. An accurate definition of a AAA-rating is also necessary, he said.
Representatives from the major ratings agencies acknowledged the public's poor impression of how structured securities were rated, but they also noted that credit ratings should hardly be used alone as a benchmark for regulators.
“While much of the recent difficulty in these markets has related to the price of these securities — a factor that ratings do not and are not intended to address — defaults and ratings volatility have been much higher with these securities than we anticipated or intended,” said Grace Osborne, managing director and lead analytical manager for North American insurance ratings at Standard and Poor's Ratings Services. “We have been disappointed — and we understand that the market has been disappointed — with the extent of volatility in this area,” she said.
Nevertheless, Ms. Osborne said S&P has made improvements, including establishing an ombudsman to address possible conflicts of interest and implementing “look-back” reviews to confirm the integrity of ratings when analysts leave the firm to work for an issuer.