August 24, 2007

But the regulators should have known!

Sir, Charles Calomiris and Joseph Mason are exactly right when in “We need a better way to judge risks” August 24, they say that there is no “use blaming the rating agencies, which are simply responding to incentives inherent in the regulatory use of ratings” and recommend that we just have to avoid “settings standards for permissible investments by regulated institutions”.

Now it is most important that we understand that the real reason for abandoning the regulatory enforcement of the use of the credit rating agencies is not because the credit rating agencies have been bad at what they have been doing, the subprime mortgages is a big exception of course, but the simple fact that the better they get; and therefore the more we would tend to automatically follow their opinions and the harder it would be to express contrarian views, the higher the risks that the world will encounter some systemic risks of truly catastrophic proportions. And that the regulators should have known.