US sues S&P after triple-A downgrade
RT,
5
Febraury, 2013
The
US government is blaming the financial crisis that catapulted the US
into recession in 2007 on debt raters Standard & Poor’s. But by
singling out S&P, the DoJ raises suspicions that it might be
retaliating for a downgraded US credit rating.
In
a Monday evening filing in federal court, the US Justice Department
introduced civil charges against S&P, one of the top three rating
agencies in the country, claiming that the group “knowingly
and with the intent to defraud, devised, participated in and executed
a scheme to defraud investors” between
September 2004 and October 2007.
According
to the government, S&P’s ill-guided ratings decisions
artificially inflated the value of certain mortgage bonds, setting up
the American economy for the catastrophic collapse that signaled the
single-greatest economist disaster in the country’s history since
the Great Depression. S&P lied, the government claims, when they
insisted their ratings “were
objective, independent, uninfluenced by any conflicts of interest.”
In
a statement of response issued after the announcement, S&P
writes, “A
DOJ lawsuit would be entirely without factual or legal merit.”
“It
would disregard the central facts that S&P reviewed the same
subprime mortgage data as the rest of the market – including U.S.
government officials who in 2007 publicly stated that problems in the
subprime market appeared to be contained – and that every CDO that
DOJ has cited to us also independently received the same rating from
another rating agency,” the
company fired back.
Should
the Justice Department see a success in federal court, S&P could
be stuck spending millions, perhaps billions, to pay back the
government over allegations of fraud. For now, however, neither of
other big raters — namely Moody’s and Fitch — have been linked
to the scandal.
“[W]e
have no reason to believe Fitch is a target of any such
action,” Fitch
spokesperson Daniel J. Noonan tells Forbes this week. The outlet says
representatives for Moody’s declined to comment, but a 53 cent
surge for the company during Tuesday’s opening bell suggests that,
at least for many, Moody’s is in the clear.
Anthony
Sabino, a professor at St. John’s University‘s Peter J. Tobin
College of Business, tells Forbes that “This
is part of the federal government’s continued effort to ‘round
up’ anybody and everybody allegedly culpable in the financial
crisis.” With
S&P being the only entity singled out for now, though, it has
others singing a different tune. Could the charges against only S&P
suggest something motivated by more than just holding credit raters
responsible?
If
the Justice Department has a bone to pick with any credit rater, it’s
S&P. While the bonds they sold to banks ended up to 2007 indeed
ended up being at least partially responsible for the recession that
followed, that wasn’t the last time S&P made serious headlines.
In August 2011, the agency dropped their credit rating of the United
States, downgrading it from triple-A for the first time in 70 years.
"The
downgrade reflects our opinion that the … plan that Congress and
the Administration recently agreed to falls short of what, in our
view, would be necessary to stabilize the government's medium-term
debt dynamics,” S&P
reasoned at the time, citing the government’s inability to put
partisan bickering aside during that year’s debt ceiling debate.
“Given
that S&P issued a historic downgrade of U.S. creditworthiness in
August 2011 and has threatened to take that rating down a further
notch, the pending suit is raising questions of whether it actually
amounts to retaliation,” Kevin
G. Hall and Greg Gordon write now for McClatchy Newspapers.
Additionally,
McClatchy reports that Moody’s was on the Justice Department’s
radar for around three years, but an investigation wrapped up in the
summer of 2011 with the conclusion that the company would be spared
charges. That decision, of course, coincided with S&P’s
downgrading of the US credit rating. One source, speaking on
condition of anonymity, tells McClatchy that Moody’s was in the
clear after S&P’s 2011 downgrade.
“Why
S&P? Because they downgraded the United States,” former
Moody’s employee Sylvain Raynes adds to the paper.
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