EU watchdog tightens grip over use of foreign credit
ratings
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[November 17, 2017]
By Huw Jones and Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The European Union's
markets watchdog has tightened its grip over the use of credit ratings
compiled outside the bloc in a taste of what the "Big Three" ratings
agencies in London face after Brexit.
For a credit rating compiled outside the EU to be used for regulatory
purposes in the bloc, it must be "endorsed" by a credit rating agency
authorized by EU's European Securities and Markets Authority, or ESMA.
More than two thirds of credit ratings that can be used for regulatory
purposes in the EU are introduced through the endorsement regime. Nearly
all endorsed credit ratings relate to non-EU issuers and financial
instruments, it said.
The world's "Big Three" rating agencies, Moody's, Standard & Poor's and
Fitch have their European bases in London.
On Friday, ESMA updated its rules on endorsement that will come into
force in January 2019, spelling out how it will be more intrusive in
policing the regime to ensure investor protection.
The tougher guidelines mean in practice that ESMA can obtain information
about the internal workings of ratings agencies based outside the bloc,
normally the preserve of local regulators only.
"The updated guidelines make clear that ESMA can, and will, exercise its
powers to request information from EU credit rating agencies about
endorsed credit ratings," ESMA Chair Steven Maijoor said in a statement.
The changes to the rules puts the onus on the EU-based rating agency to
"verify" and "demonstrate" that the conduct of the non-EU rating
compiler "fulfils requirements that are at least as stringent as the EU
requirements".
The watchdog can fine an EU agency that fails to do so.
"ESMA clarifies that it has the power to request periodical information
directly from the endorsing EU credit rating agency about an endorsed
credit rating and the conduct of the third-country CRA," the watchdog
said.
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"When a credit rating is endorsed there must be an objective reason for
elaborating the rating outside the EU."
Fitch said it would work with ESMA to comply and remain "best placed to serve
the needs of market participants from our dual headquarters in London".
S&P and Moody's had no immediate comment. DBRS said it would comply with
regulations that allow it to work in the EU.
When Britain leaves the EU in March 2019, these operations will be treated as
foreign agencies whose ratings would need to be endorsed by an agency inside the
bloc.
The big agencies already have operations in several EU states, but may now need
to move staff from London to them given tougher conditions for endorsement set
out by ESMA on Friday.
The watchdog also said the endorsement regime will continue to apply to
Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Hong Kong, Japan, Mexico, Singapore and
the United States when other revisions to the bloc's rating agency rules come
into force in June 2018.
Ratings agencies have questioned the need for tougher endorsement requirements
for ratings from non-EU countries whose rules ESMA has already deemed
"equivalent" to EU standards.
ESMA said the endorsement regime contains additional safeguards to ensure the
quality of the rating activities.
Critics have told ESMA the new guidelines may lead to "geographical
re-alignments" for big agencies, with the extra administrative costs passed on
to customers.
(Editing by Jason Neely and Edmund Blair)
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