Here's the start:
THE spotlight is about to return to the culpability of credit ratings agencies in the global financial crisis following a decision by the biggest pension fund in the US to sue over "wildly inaccurate" ratings on the $US600 billion ($750bn) of synthetic derivatives sold to investors.
This, coupled with a court case to be heard in NSW Federal Court this week, could open the floodgates for third-party litigation against the credit rating agencies. It should also corral the regulators into finally doing something about the so-called independence and enormous power of agencies such as Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's.
From the comments below - a link to a guest lecture by Brad Walters, General Manager, Financial Analytics, Corporate Scorecard held at the Australian School of Business, UNSW:
2 comments:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEy9XJUvrgA&feature=player_embedded
Thanks! That youtube link above is a guest lecture by Brad Walters, General Manager, Financial Analytics, Corporate Scorecard held at the Australian School of Business, UNSW
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