Is the Rating Agency System Broken or Fine?
the Professional Risk Managers’ International Association
About This Event

The collapse of the market for subprime mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and other complex derivative securities created a panic among the global investors and short-term lenders who finance such assets, resulting in large losses for investment funds and banks around the world. Critics claim that the major rating agencies failed to promptly adjust ratings for these securities, and they question the workings of the entire credit rating system. Do these claims have merit?

Does the subprime debacle mean that the ratings process for complex structured transactions needs to be fundamentally changed? Just a year ago, Congress legislated new procedures to govern how the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) oversees the rating agencies. Will this legislative approach be effective?

Critics argue that the system of securities issuers paying rating agencies for the rating of their products creates a conflict of interest. How serious is this problem? How could investor-paid rating agencies become more significant competitors? Should rating agencies be regulated by the SEC, another entity, or not at all?

This event is cosponsored by AEI and the Professional Risk Managers’ International Association.

Agenda
1:45 p.m.
Registration
2:00
Panelists:
J. Kyle Bass, Hayman Capital Partners
Joseph R. Mason, Drexel University
Alex J. Pollock, AEI
Frank Raiter, Luminent Mortgage Capital and Clayton Holdings
Glenn Reynolds, CreditSights
Moderator:
R. Christopher Whalen, Institutional Risk Analytics
4:00
Adjournment
the Professional Risk Managers’ International Association
AEI Participants

 

Alex J.
Pollock
  • Alex Pollock joined AEI in 2004 after thirty-five years in banking. He was president and chief executive officer of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago from 1991 to 2004. He is the author of numerous articles on financial systems and the organizer of the “Deflating Bubble” series of AEI conferences. In 2007, he developed a one-page mortgage form to help borrowers understand their mortgage obligations. At AEI, he focuses on financial policy issues, including housing finance, government-sponsored enterprises, retirement finance, corporate governance, accounting standards, and the banking system. He is a director of the CME Group, the Great Lakes Higher Education Corporation, the International Union for Housing Finance, and the chairman of the board of the Great Books Foundation.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD ALEX POLLOCK'S ONE-PAGE MORTGAGE FORM
  • Phone: 2028627190
    Email: apollock@aei.org
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