A credit rating is essentially somebody's opinion on the willingness and ability of a debtor to repay their debt. This begs the question - Who are the seemingly all powerful agencies that decide the creditworthiness of corporations and countries? Why does the financial world care about their analysis?
The agencies that decide creditworthiness are not government agencies or even government funded non-profits. Agencies like Standard and Poor’s, who recently downgraded the credit rating of the United States from AAA to AA+, are regular for-profit companies. Standard and Poor’s is an LLC; it's a subsidiary of and even larger corporation called The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. It's day to day business is centered on generating more revenue and increasing it's market share - just like any other company.
Why are Credit Agencies so Powerful?
They may not be government agencies, but their power comes directly from the United States government. In 1975 the SEC (The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) adopted the term “Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations.” or NRSROs. Only a handful of organizations have ever been recognized with the NRSRO stamp of approval. This exclusivity has helped make the few NRSROs the nearly undisputed arbiters of debt. Since 1975 regulators, including the SEC itself, have increasingly used credit ratings from the NRSROs to help monitor the risk of investments held by regulated entities, and to provide an appropriate disclosure framework for securities of differing risks.
Generally, NRSROs credit ratings distinguish between investment grade and non-investment grade. For example, a credit rating agency may assign a "Triple A" credit rating as its top "investment grade" rating for corporate bonds and a "double B" credit rating or below for "non-investment grade" or "high-yield" corporate bonds.
Who are they?
Currently there are three big NRSROs – Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. (“Moody’s”), Fitch, Inc. (“Fitch”), and the Standard and Poor’s Division of the McGraw- Hill Companies Inc. (“S&P”).
There are seven other firms registered as NRSROs:
- A.M. Best Company, Inc.
- DBRS Ltd.
- Egan-Jones Rating Company
- Japan Credit Rating Agency, Ltd.
- Kroll Bond Rating Agency, Inc. (f/k/a LACE Financial Corp.)
- Rating and Investment Information, Inc.
- Realpoint LLC
Under the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act, an NRSRO may be registered with respect to up to five classes of credit ratings: (1) financial institutions, brokers, or dealers; (2) insurance companies; (3) corporate issuers; (4) issuers of asset-backed securities; and (5) issuers of government securities, municipal securities, or securities issued by a foreign government.
What do the Ratings Mean?
The three big credit ratings agencies have nearly identical rating systems. The table below is a breakdown of each rating.
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