Credit Rating Agency Exec Accepts Some Blame for Crisis

Friday, 23 April 2010 10:53 AM EDT ET

A former executive for a credit rating agency is preparing to tell a Senate panel that poor internal communication contributed to his industry's failure to flag risky investments ahead of the financial crisis.

Former Standard & Poor managing director Frank Raiter says in prepared testimony there was a "disconnect" between senior managers and the analytical managers responsible for assigning bond ratings. That, along with weak government regulation, led agencies into awarding high ratings to less-worthy investments.

Raiter is appearing before the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which is examining credit rating agencies' role in the financial crisis.

A committee report issued Thursday says agencies were too influenced by banks.

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Headline
A former executive for a credit rating agency is preparing to tell a Senate panel that poor internal communication contributed to his industry's failure to flag risky investments ahead of the financial crisis.Former Standard Poor managing director Frank Raiter says in...
US,Meltdown,Investigation,Credit,Raters
108
2010-53-23
Friday, 23 April 2010 10:53 AM
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