ABSTRACT

Credit rating agencies play an essential role in the modern financial system and are relied on by creditors and investors on the market. In the recent financial crisis, their power and reliability were often questioned, yet a simple rating downgrade could threaten to bankrupt a whole country.

This book examines the governance of credit rating agencies, as expressed by their ability to fairly, ethically and consistently assign higher rates to issuers having lesser default risks. However, factors such as the drive for increased revenue and market share, the inadequate business model, the inadequate methodology of assessing risk, opacity and inadequate internal monitoring have all been identified as critical governance failures for credit agencies. This book explores these issues, and proposes some potential solutions and improvements.

This will be of interest to researchers and advanced students of corporate finance, finance, financial economics, risk management, investment management, and banking.

chapter 2|33 pages

Credit rating agencies

Who they are and what they do

chapter 3|24 pages

The Big 3

The global credit market gatekeepers

chapter 5|20 pages

Ordinal credit ratings

The threat to rating accuracy

chapter 6|18 pages

Credit ratings critics

Telling it like it is

chapter 7|16 pages

Credit rating agencies

External monitoring

chapter 8|14 pages

Credit rating agencies

Internal monitoring

chapter 9|22 pages

Agencies' rating quality control systems

chapter 10|27 pages

The Cha6

Shall they present a serious challenge to the Big 3?

chapter 11|21 pages

Critical perspective and concluding remarks