Centre for Economic Policy Research
Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry 4.7.2
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50 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry
4.7.2 Reduce existing regulatory privileges The reduction of existing recognitions by financial regulators would be a step in the direction of increasing the operation of market discipline on the industry. Critics of the industry have often argued that the demand for ratings arises mainly because of the regulatory use to which they are put, rather than to the additional information they convey (White, 2001; Partnoy, 1999). Regulatory privileges do not in themselves create a conflict of interest, but they may increase the incentive to exploit a latent conflict of interest, as well as raising the barriers to entry in the industry. We see some justification, therefore, for reconsidering the uses to which ratings are put for regulatory purposes. Such uses have clearly expanded beyond what was intended when some rating agencies were granted recognized status as NRSROs (Securities and Exchange Commission, 2003a). It seems that those who have granted such recognitions also have reservations about the extent to which they have been used (Nazareth, 2003). The issue, however, is whether financial regulators have viable alternatives. Regulators of financial institutions have been moving increasingly in the direction of ‘risk-based supervision’. They have made financial institutions’ risk management systems subject to supervisory review and have required minimum capital levels to be related to measured risk. To the extent that measuring risk involves an assessment of the asset portfolio of the supervised institution, some means of assigning credit risk weights to individual claims will be needed. Publicly available ratings provide a convenient way of doing this, without involving the regulator in detailed, resource-intensive and controversial judgements. It is probably unrealistic to expect supervisors to abandon this tool in the short term. Still, we do not believe that this is the optimal solution for the long term. Supervised financial institutions should be encouraged to develop in-house credit assessment techniques (something that is already happening), which could then be reviewed on their own merits by the supervisor, rather than cross-checked for compatibility with published ratings. Where publicly traded securities are concerned, greater reliance on market judgements (as revealed in credit spreads, for example) could be used. Our view, therefore, is that the increasing official reliance on private ratings is problematic and reducing it would be a reasonable objective of public policy. It would allow market disciplines over rating agencies to work much more effectively. In the interim, a less far-reaching move would be to ease the barriers that existing procedures present to the recognition of new agencies, while finding alternative techniques to guard against competitive laxity in the rating industry. Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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