It is a few weeks now since my business partner, Paul
Gambles, compared long suffering US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to a
transvestite athlete but it seems to have caused quite a stir, so for anyone who
missed it, here is part 2 of what he said to Money Channel’s Banphot
Thanapermsuk when he asked Paul about the recent performance of credit ratings
agencies:
“We have the phrase ‘a pot calling a kettle black’ which
means trying to get the attention off you by blaming somebody else. There’s no
doubt that ratings agencies did a terrible job all the way up until 2008, but we
have to be careful now about who’s criticizing them and why they’re criticizing
them before we can say whether that criticism is actually valid. To be fair, if
S&P did make a bad decision in downgrading US debt, I think that the problem
with the decision is that it should have been done sooner, and maybe it should
have been an even starker downgrade than it was because it’s very unclear to us
that the US deserves its current credit rating. There’s a whole bunch of
systemic risk in the US system that means, to our mind and certainly to the
Chinese and independent rating agencies such as Egan Jones, there’s a lot more
risk in US sovereign debt than a AA rating would even imply. We have to look at
why they’re giving these ratings and really what is a fair basis of criticism or
not. One thing that strikes us that when we’re creating portfolios, we don’t
really take into account what S&P, Fitch’s or Moody’s might think about a
particular security. As president Roosevelt said, ‘There’s nothing to fear
except fear itself.’ What actually happens is that no competent professional
managers actually pay any attention to the S&P, Fitch’s or Moody’s ratings, but
what happens when they get downgraded is that investors worry that other people
are going to pay attention and then it actually becomes a self-fulfilling
prophecy that you had better sell because everyone else is going to start
selling even though you might not agree with what the S&P rating might be.
“There’s another problem, which requires us to understand
what we’re expecting of the rating agencies and what they actually do. A lot of
investments are mandated by reference to the quality of the assets that are
inside the investment as dictated by the credit rating agencies. In a sense,
that makes it easier to understand in that if you buy a AAA rated bond fund, you
know that all the securities in there are AAA rated, but the problem is that
there may be an incentive for some investment managers to go and start using
poorer quality assets because if there are some AAA assets that the market
prices at a certain level, but there are other AAA assets that the market is
saying, ‘We’re not sure about this. We think it might get downgraded. We don’t
really trust the rating.’ That would make a security available at a lower price
or a better yield, and in that case there’s actually a real incentive for some
fund managers maybe to go and try and get a better return, a better yield, by
buying the worst possible quality debt they can find within a stipulated rating
category, and that’s really what happened in Europe. When the EuroZone was
formed and we started to get a common rating across the entire EuroZone, Greece
and Germany fit into the same investment bracket at that stage. The markets knew
that Germany and Greece weren’t the same thing even if they believed that
Germany was going to back-stop Greece, and so maybe there was 100-150 basis
point spread at that point in Greek debt over the German debt, which narrowed
because everybody wanted to buy the Greek debt because it was apparently exactly
the same risk but it was paying a much higher yield, so there really is a danger
that these things create malinvestment by bunching things together and applying
inappropriate ratings.”
As Paul infers, the real problem is that no-one really knows
what the credit agencies’ role should be and, despite this, people still apply
too much faith to these things. On one hand, we have professional managers who
do not really take the ratings particularly seriously and use their own research
and their own ideas. On the other hand, we have parts of the market that still
apply too much faith to the agencies.
People might say that one way round that would be to
introduce regulations, so rating agencies are now covered by Dodd Frank. Also,
we have the S&P leak that France was going to be downgraded being investigated
by the ECB.
What concerns us is, with all this going on, these are meant
to be independent bodies that are going to be giving opinions about, say, the US
government, and if they are going to be regulated by a US government body, but
they are going to be giving negative opinions about the US government, again
that is getting into the conflict of interest area as well. Going forward, it is
very difficult to see what the role of the credit rating agencies will be.
What we would say is largely to tend to ignore them. Get
proper professional analysis of any particular security - do not just rely on
the fact it has got a particular label given to it.
If the ratings agencies are still doing anything wrong today,
they are still being too optimistic about stocks and securities and for too
long. Lehman Brothers was AAA rated virtually until the very end. Irish
sovereign debt was AAA rated until 2009, which was two years after the crisis
began, so there is a real concern that if they are still doing anything wrong,
they are actually still being too lax.
The above data and research was compiled from sources
believed to be reliable. However, neither MBMG International Ltd nor its
officers can accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the
above article nor bear any responsibility for any losses achieved as a
result of any actions taken or not taken as a consequence of reading the
above article. For more information please contact Graham Macdonald on
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