Source:
BloombergThe U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said it plans to use new financial laws to pursue credit-rating fraud initiated overseas after dropping a case against Moody’s Corp. amid uncertainty over its authority.
The SEC’s investigation found that a Moody’s ratings committee based in Europe refused to lower inflated grades on almost $1 billion of debt in 2007, the agency said in a report released yesterday. The committee declined to correct errors produced by a flawed ratings model out of concern for the firm’s reputation, the SEC report said.
“Uncertainty regarding a jurisdictional nexus between the U.S. and the relevant ratings conduct” led the SEC to drop the probe, the agency said in the report. That uncertainty was removed by the Dodd-Frank law, enacted in July, which clarifies the SEC’s power to sue for misconduct that has a substantial effect within the U.S., the report said.
Ratings companies Moody’s, McGraw-Hill Cos.’ Standard & Poor’s unit and Fitch faced scrutiny from Congress and state regulators after they assigned top marks to U.S. subprime- mortgage bonds before that market collapsed in 2007. The ensuing credit crisis resulted in $1.8 trillion in writedowns from financial firms worldwide, according to Bloomberg data.
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-08-31/sec-says-it-declined-to-sue-moody-s-for-fraud-over-company-s-cdo-ratings.html