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Business News/ Companies / News/  US justice dept sues S&P for $5 bn over inflated ratings
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US justice dept sues S&P for $5 bn over inflated ratings

Suit cites S&P’s top-grade ratings of dozens of mortgage-based CDOs issued in 2007 that were in default within a year

S&P said the US justice department took statements from internal communications out of context. Photo: AFP (AFP)Premium
S&P said the US justice department took statements from internal communications out of context. Photo: AFP
(AFP)

New York: The US justice department said on Tuesday it is seeking at least $5 billion in civil penalties from Standard & Poor’s for losses due to inflated ratings of mortgage bonds.

Announcing a suit against S&P and its parent, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Attorney General Eric Holder said the powerful rating agency knowingly exaggerated the ratings on financial securities, misrepresenting their true credit risk.

“Put simply, this alleged conduct is egregious—and it goes to the very heart of the recent financial crisis," said Holder, flanked by justice officials from several states joining the suit.

“Today’s action is an important step forward in our ongoing efforts to investigate and punish the conduct that is believed to have contributed to the worst economic crisis in recent history," he said.

The suit cited S&P’s top-grade ratings of dozens of mortgage-based collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) issued in early 2007 that were in default within one year, some within six months.

The defaults dealt billions of dollars in losses to financial institutions insured by the US, some of which collapsed in the 2008 crisis and others, like Citigroup, forced to seek a government bailout.

“At the very least, we believe conservatively that S&P’s actions make it liable for more than $5 billion in civil penalties," said US Acting Associate Attorney General Tony West.

S&P called the lawsuit “entirely without factual or legal merit," and an S&P lawyer hinted that it was political retribution for the agency’s historic downgrade of the US credit rating from triple-A status in August 2011.

“Is it true that after the downgrade the intensity of the investigation significantly increased? Yes," Floyd Abrams, an attorney representing S&P, said on CNBC television.

“I’m sure the government would say it has nothing to do with it."

Holder, in a news conference, said there was “no connection" between the S&P downgrade and the litigation.

The suit, filed in California and backed by a number of state governments, accused the credit rater of knowingly inflating its ratings on CDOs and residential mortgage-backed securities in 2007 in order to win revenue from issuers.

S&P was specifically charged with wire fraud, mail fraud and financial institution fraud.

The suit cited internal communications in which S&P considered the need to update its analytic models to keep up with the securities in the changing market, only to continue with the weaker models that permitted higher ratings to go through.

S&P’s modus operandi was to “limit, adjust and delay those updates" to favour issuers and “maintain and grow S&P’s market share and profits," the complaint alleges.

S&P staff debated how many securities to downgrade as more of the loans came up delinquent and the housing market began to sink.

As the troubles became more widely apparent, one S&P analyst likened the situation to “Burning Down the House" in an email, satirizing the market problems with mock lyrics of the famous Talking Heads song.

“Strong market is now much weaker. Subprime is boi-ling o-ver. Bringing down the house."

But at the same time, S&P continued to rate new CDOs “without making adjustments to account for continuing deterioration" in the investments, the complaint alleges.

S&P said the justice department took statements from internal communications out of context.

“There was robust internal debate within S&P about how a rapidly deteriorating housing market might affect the CDOs—and we applied the collective judgment of our committee-based system in good faith," S&P said.

“The email excerpts cherry-picked by DOJ have been taken out of context, are contradicted by other evidence, and do not reflect our culture, integrity or how we do business," S&P continued.

S&P also argues that it was far from alone in its failure to predict the scale of the housing collapse.

But the government has not taken any action against S&P’s competitors. Moody’s remained quiet on the subject Tuesday, while Fitch told AFP that it has “no reason to believe Fitch is a target of any such action."

S&P is a unit of McGraw-Hill, whose shares fell 10.7% Tuesday after losing nearly 14% Monday. Moody’s lost 8.8%.

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Published: 06 Feb 2013, 09:42 AM IST
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