[新聞] 債券評等問題 from yahoo finance
1.原文連結:
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080209/wall_main.html?.v=4
2.內容:
Investors Urged to Look Beyond Ratings
Saturday February 9, 6:17 am ET
By Joe Bel Bruno, AP Business Writer
Investors Urged to Be Wary of Risks As Credit Rating Agencies Come Under
Scrutiny
NEW YORK (AP) -- For the big three credit rating agencies, growing criticism
this past week that their ratings systems are flawed must have sounded like a
familiar refrain.
Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investors Service, and Fitch Ratings are being
criticized by government officials and some investor groups for not
identifying weakness in subprime mortgage-backed securities before they went
sour and contributed to massive loss in financial firms and, in turn, the
stock market. They're also criticized for having too cozy a relationship with
the debt issuers that pay them for their ratings.
This isn't the first time the rating agencies have found themselves under
pressure. The beleaguered industry got similar complaints after the collapse
Calif., in 1994.
In all three situations, ratings assigned to these issuers went from
near-stellar to junk almost overnight. As the agencies begin to think about
changing the way they do business, analysts say investors must become more
vigilant about what debt securities they sink money into -- and not rely
solely on what the rating agencies say.
"This happens every other year or so when something shakes up the ratings
industry and ends up on the Op-Ed pages," said Martin
Fridson, the former head of Merrill Lynch high-yield research and now
proprietor of the specialist firm FridsonVision. "You have to do extra
homework, you have to be wary about the way securities are being marketed,
and use the ratings that are out there as just a tool."
Investors are plowing more money than ever into fixed-income products, from
municipal bonds to exchange traded funds. According to The Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association, a New York-based trade group,
outstanding public and private debt underwritten by bonds was valued at about
$25 trillion.
Some 10 percent of corporate bonds are held directly by individual investors,
while institutions like pension funds hold the rest, according to the group.
These securities -- which are more conservative than stocks -- are an
integral part of retirement planning and diversifying portfolios during rocky
times in the equities market.
Fridson and others say most investors don't hold the kind of opaque
asset-backed securities that caused global banks to lose about $130 billion
since last year. However, there are certain tip-offs investors should watch
for when investing in the fixed-income markets -- no matter what ratings the
securities hold.
For instance, he said "one sure guide is to be skeptical if you see something
yielding much more than comparably rated bonds." Investors might also obtain
fixed-income holdings through investment managers -- like Vanguard or PIMCO
-- where analysts scrutinize debt issues beyond just the ratings.
"Over the last six months, a lot of people have learned the hard way that
this risk exists -- and that the rating agencies aren't fool proof," said
John Flahive, director of fixed income at BNY Mellon Wealth Management.
"We've been reminding clients for a long while of the risk, which is why you
hire a professional manager that you can use as a safeguard."
Rating agencies, which are regulated by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, have been pressured to sell subscriptions to investors for their
ratings instead of taking payment right from debt issuers; that, many
observers believe, will avoid potential conflicts of interest. Debt issuers
seek out higher ratings because that makes it easier to raise money in the
capital markets.
And, aside from that, the agencies have already taken some preliminary steps
to deflect such criticism and ease mounting regulatory and government
concerns.
This past week, S&P said it is aiming to improve governance through measures
ranging from establishing an ombudsman's office to address complaints to
hiring an external firm for better oversight. Moody's also said it was
considering changes in how it rates mortgage-related securities.
But, it has left many on Wall Street asking if this will be enough -- and
wonder if the industry itself will begin to shift to other rating models.
"There are people out there right now trying to figure out how to build a
better mousetrap," Flahive said. "If I was John Q. Public, I wouldn't feel
overly better -- it is going to take more than a few alterations to how the
rating agencies are doing things."
覺得這篇不錯 而且工作上剛好接觸到 心有戚戚焉
所已貼出來跟版友分享
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 118.169.139.66
Fund 近期熱門文章
10
22
10
19
PTT職涯區 即時熱門文章
138
258