[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 25 (Monday, February 9, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 6485-6508]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-2514]
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 25 / Monday, February 9, 2009 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 6485]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 240 and 243
[Release No. 34-59343; File No. S7-04-09]
RIN 3235-AK14
Re-Proposed Rules for Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating
Organizations
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'').
ACTION: Proposed rules.
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SUMMARY: In conjunction with the publication today, in a separate
release, of the Commission's final rule amendments to its existing
rules governing the conduct of nationally recognized statistical rating
organizations (``NRSROs''), the Commission is proposing amendments
which would require the public disclosure of credit rating histories
for all outstanding credit ratings issued by an NRSRO on or after June
26, 2007 paid for by the obligor being rated or by the issuer,
underwriter, or sponsor of the security being rated. The Commission
also is soliciting detailed information about the issues surrounding
the application of a disclosure requirement on subscriber-paid credit
ratings. The Commission is re-proposing for comment an amendment to its
conflict or interest rule that would prohibit an NRSRO from issuing a
rating for a structured finance product paid for by the product's
issuer, sponsor, or underwriter unless the information about the
product provided to the NRSRO to determine the rating and, thereafter,
to monitor the rating is made available to other persons. The
Commission is proposing these rules to address concerns about the
integrity of the credit rating procedures and methodologies at NRSROs.
DATES: Comments should be received on or before March 26, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml); or
Send an e-mail to [email protected]. Please include
File Number S7-04-09 on the subject line; or
Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal (http://www.regulations.gov). Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number S7-04-09. This file number
should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help us
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's
Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments
are also available for public inspection and copying in the
Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549, on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. All comments received will be posted without change; we do not
edit personal identifying information from submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish to make publicly available.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael A. Macchiaroli, Associate
Director, at (202) 551-5525; Thomas K. McGowan, Assistant Director, at
(202) 551-5521; Randall W. Roy, Branch Chief, at (202) 551-5522; Joseph
I. Levinson, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5598; Carrie A. O'Brien,
Special Counsel, at (202) 551-5640; Sheila D. Swartz, Special Counsel,
at (202) 551-5545; Rose Russo Wells, Special Counsel, at (202) 551-
5527; Division of Trading and Markets, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-6628.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On June 16, 2008, the Commission, in the first of three related
actions, proposed a series of amendments to its existing rules
governing the conduct of NRSROs under the Credit Rating Agency Reform
Act of 2006 (``Rating Agency Act'').\1\ The proposed amendments were
designed to address concerns about the integrity of the process by
which NRSROs rate structured finance products, particularly mortgage
related securities. Today, in a separate release, the Commission is
adopting, with revisions, a majority of the proposed rule
amendments.\2\ In addition, in this release, the Commission is
proposing additional amendments to paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 and re-
proposing with substantial modifications amendments to paragraphs (a)
and (b) of Rule 17g-5.
The proposed amendments to paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 would add
public disclosure requirements to those that are being adopted today.
Specifically, the amendments being adopted require an NRSRO to
disclose, in eXtensible Business Reporting Language (``XBRL'') format
and on a six-month delay, ratings action histories for a randomly
selected 10% of the ratings paid for by the obligor being rated or by
the issuer, underwriter, or sponsor being rated (``issuer-paid credit
ratings'') for each rating class for which it has issued 500 or more
issuer-paid credit ratings.\3\ In this release, the Commission is
proposing to further amend paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 to require
NRSROs to disclose ratings actions histories for all credit ratings
issued on or after June 26, 2007 at the request of the obligor being
rated or of the issuer, underwriter, or sponsor of the security being
rated. The proposed amendment would allow an NRSRO to delay for up to
12 months publicly disclosing a rating action.
The amendments to paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 17g-5 would
substantially modify the previous proposal. As originally proposed, the
amendments would have prohibited an NRSRO from issuing or maintaining a
credit rating for a structured finance product paid for by the
product's issuer, sponsor or underwriter unless the information
provided to the NRSRO by the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter to
determine the rating is disseminated to other persons. The intent
behind the proposal was to provide the opportunity
[[Page 6486]]
for other persons such as credit rating agencies and academics to
perform independent analysis on the securities or money market
instruments at the same time the hired NRSRO determines its rating. The
goal was to increase competition among NRSROs for rating structured
finance products by providing new entrants access to the information
necessary to determine credit ratings for these products.
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\1\ Exchange Act Release No. 57967 (June 16, 2008), 73 FR 36212
(June 25, 2008) (``June 16, 2008 Proposing Release''). The
Commission adopted the existing NRSRO rules in June 2007. See
Oversight of Credit Rating Agencies Registered as Nationally
Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations, Exchange Act Release
No. 55857 (June 5, 2007), 72 FR 33564 (June 18, 2007) (``June 5,
2007 Adopting Release''). The second action taken by the Commission
(also on June 16, 2008) was to propose a new rule that would require
NRSROs to distinguish their ratings for structured finance products
from other classes of credit ratings by publishing a report with the
rating or using a different rating symbol. See June 16, 2008
Proposing Release. The third action taken by the Commission was to
propose a series of amendments to rules under the Exchange Act,
Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act''), and Investment Company
Act of 1940 (``Investment Company Act'') that would end the use of
NRSRO credit ratings in the rules. See References to Ratings of
Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations, Exchange Act
Release No. 58070 (July 1, 2008), 73 FR 40088 (July 11, 2008);
Securities Ratings, Securities Act Release No. 8940 (July 1, 2008),
73 FR 40106 (July 11, 2008); References to Ratings of Nationally
Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations, Investment Company Act
Release No. 28327 (July 1, 2008), 73 FR 40124 (July 11, 2008).
\2\ See Amendments to Rules for Nationally Recognized
Statistical Rating Organizations, Exchange Act Release No. 59342
(February 2, 2009) (``Companion Adopting Release'').
\3\ See Companion Adopting Release.
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The Commission received 38 comment letters that addressed the Rule
17g-5 proposal on June 16, 2008.\4\ While some commenters expressed
support for it,\5\ the majority of commenters raised significant legal
and practical issues with the proposal.\6\ The Commission is re-
proposing the amendment, with substantial modifications, to solicit
further comment.
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\4\ Letter dated June 12, 2008 from G. Brooks Euler (``Euler
Letter''); letter dated July 14, 2008 from Robert Dobilas,
President, CEO, Realpoint LLC (``Realpoint Letter''); letter dated
July 21, 2008 from Dottie Cunningham, Chief Executive Officer,
Commercial Mortgage Securities Association (``CMSA Letter''); letter
dated July 22, 2008 from Richard Metcalf, Director, Corporate
Affairs Department, Laborers' International Union of North America
(``LIUNA Letter''); letter dated July 23, 2008 from Kent Wideman,
Group Managing Director, Policy & Rating Committee and Mary Keogh,
Managing Director, Policy & Regulatory Affairs, DBRS (``DBRS
Letter''); letter dated July 24, 2008 from Takefumi Emori, Managing
Director, Japan Credit Rating Agency, Ltd. (``JCR Letter''); letter
dated July 24, 2008 from Amy Borrus, Deputy Director, Council of
Institutional Investors (``Council Letter''); letter dated July 24,
2008 from Joseph A. Hall and Michael Kaplan, Davis Polk, and
Wardwell (``DPW Letter''); letter dated July 24, 2008 from Vickie A.
Tillman, Executive Vice President, Standard & Poor's Ratings
Services (``S&P Letter''); letter dated July 24, 2008 from Deborah
A. Cunningham and Boyce I. Greer, Co-Chairs Company, Co-Chairs,
SIFMA Credit Rating Agency Task Force (``Second SIFMA Letter'');
letter dated July 25, 2008 from Sally Scutt, Managing Director, and
Pierre de Lauzun, Chairman, Financial Markets Working Group,
International Banking Federation (``IBFED Letter''); letter dated
July 25, 2008 from Denise L. Nappier, Treasurer, State of
Connecticut (``Nappier Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from
Suzanne C. Hutchinson, Mortgage Insurance Companies of America
(``MICA Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Kieran P. Quinn,
Chairman, Mortgage Bankers Association (``MBA Letter''); letter
dated July 25, 2008 from Sean J. Egan, President, Egan-Jones Ratings
Co. (``Egan-Jones Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Charles
D. Brown, General Counsel, Fitch Ratings (``Fitch Letter''); letter
dated July 25, 2008 from Bill Lockyer, State Treasurer, California
(``Lockyer Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Jeremy
Reifsnyder and Richard Johns, Co-Chairs, American Securitization
Forum Credit Rating Agency Task Force (``ASF Letter''); letter dated
July 25, 2008 from Annemarie G. DiCola, Chief Executive Officer,
Trepp, LLC (``Trepp Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Kurt
N. Schacht, Executive Director and Linda L. Rittenhouse, Senior
Policy Analyst, CFA Institute Centre for Financial Market Integrity
(``CFA Institute Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Karrie
McMillan, General Counsel, Investment Company Institute (``ICI
Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Michael Decker, Co-Chief
Executive Officer and Mike Nicholas, Co-Chief Executive Officer,
Regional Bond Dealers Association (``RBDA Letter''); letter dated
July 25, 2008 from Richard M. Whiting, Executive Director and
General Counsel, Financial Services Roundtable (``Roundtable
Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from James H. Gellert,
Chairman and CEO and Dr. Patrick J. Caragata, Founder and Executive
Vice Chairman, Rapid Ratings International Inc. (``Rapid Ratings
Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Gregory W. Smith, General
Counsel, Colorado Public Employees' Retirement Association
(``Colorado PERA Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from Cleary
Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, (``CGSH Letter''); letter dated July
25, 2008 from Keith A. Styrcula, Chairman, Structured Products
Association (``SPA Letter''); letter dated July 25, 2008 from
Yasuhiro Harada, Chairman and Co-CEO, Rating and Investment
Information, Inc. (``R&I Letter''); letter dated July 28, 2008 from
Michel Madelain, Chief Operating Officer, Moody's Investors Service
(``Moody's Letter''); letter dated July 28, 2008 from Keith F.
Higgins, Chair, Committee on Federal Regulation of Securities and
Vicki O. Tucker, Chair, Committee on Securitization and Structured
Finance, American Bar Association (``ABA Business Law Committees
Letter''); letter dated July 29, 2008 from Glenn Reynolds, CEO and
Peter Petas, President CreditSights, Inc. (``CreditSights Letter'');
letter dated July 31, 2008 from Robert S. Khuzami Managing Director
and General Counsel, Deutsche Bank Americas (``DBA Letter''); letter
dated August 5, 2008 from John Taylor, President and CEO, National
Community Reinvestment Coalition (``NCRC Letter''); letter dated
August 8, 2008 from Jeffrey A. Perlowitz, Managing Director and Co-
Head of Global Securitized Markets, and Myongsu Kong, Director and
Counsel, Citigroup Global Markets Inc. (``Citi Letter''); letter
dated August 12, 2008 from John J. Niebuhr, Managing Director,
Lehman Brothers, Inc. (``Lehman Letter''); letter dated August 17,
2008 from Olivier Raingeard, Ph.D (``Raingeard Letter''); letter
dated August 22, 2008 from Robert Dobilas, CEO and President,
Realpoint LLC (``Second Realpoint Letter''); letter dated August 27,
2008 from Larry G. Mayewski, Executive Vice President & Chief Rating
Officer, A.M. Best Company (``A.M. Best Letter''). These comments
are available on the Commission's Internet Web site, located at
http://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-13-08/s71308.shtml, and in the
Commission's Public Reference Room in its Washington DC
headquarters.
\5\ See, e.g., LIUNA Letter; Nappier Letter; ICI Letter; RBDA
Letter; NCRC Letter.
\6\ See, e.g., ASF Letter; CFA Institute Letter; Roundtable
Letter; ABA Business Law Committees Letter; Citi Letter; Lehman
Letter; Moody's Letter; S&P Letter; DPW Letter; CGSH Letter; DBA
Letter; A.M. Best Letter; Realpoint Letter; CMSA Letter; DBRS
Letter; Second SIFMA Letter; MBA Letter; Fitch Letter; SPA Letter;
R&I Letter; JCR Letter.
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II. Proposed Amendments to Rule 17g-2
A. Rule 17g-2
The Commission adopted Rule 17g-2, in part, pursuant to authority
in Section 17(a)(1) of the Exchange Act requiring NRSROs to make and
keep such records, and make and disseminate such reports, as the
Commission prescribes by rule as necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise in furtherance
of the Exchange Act.\7\ Paragraph (a) of Rule 17g-2 requires an NRSRO
to make and retain certain records relating to its business. For
example, paragraph (a)(2) requires an NRSRO to make a number of
different records with respect to each current credit rating such as
the identity of any analyst that participated in determining the credit
rating.\8\ Paragraph (b) of Rule 17g-2 requires an NRSRO to retain
certain other business records made in the normal course of business
operations such as non-public information and work papers used to form
the basis of credit rating.\9\ Paragraph (c) of Rule 17g-2 requires
that the records identified in paragraphs (a) and (b) be retained for
three years.\10\ Paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 prescribes the manner in
which the records must be maintained by the NRSRO.\11\ For example, it
provides that the records must be maintained in a manner that makes the
records easily accessible to the main office of the NRSRO.\12\
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\7\ See Section 5 of the Rating Agency Act and 15 U.S.C
78q(a)(1).
\8\ 17 CFR 240.17g-2(a)(2)(i).
\9\ 17 CFR 240.17g-2(b).
\10\ 17 CFR 240.17g-2(c).
\11\ 17 CFR 240.17g-2(d).
\12\ Id.
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B. The Amendments to Rule 17g-2(a) and (d) Adopted Today
In the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, the Commission proposed
amendments to Rule 17g-2 which would create a new paragraph (a)(8) and
amend paragraph (d). The new paragraph (a)(8) would require an NRSRO to
make and retain a record of the ratings history of each outstanding
credit rating it maintains showing all rating actions (initial rating,
upgrades, downgrades, placements on watch for upgrade or downgrade, and
withdrawals) and the date of such actions identified by the name of the
security or obligor rated and, if applicable, the CUSIP for the rated
security or the Central Index Key (CIK) number for the rated obligor.
This full record of credit rating histories would be maintained by the
NRSRO as part of its internal records that are available to Commission
staff. In addition, the proposed amendments to paragraph (d) of Rule
17g-2 would require an NRSRO to make that record publicly available on
its corporate Web site in XBRL format six months after the date of the
current rating action.\13\ Finally, the proposed amendments also would
amend the instructions to Exhibit 1 to Form NRSRO to require the
disclosure of the Web address where the XBRL Interactive Data File
could be accessed in order to inform persons who use credit ratings
where the ratings histories can be obtained.\14\
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\13\ See June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36228-36230.
\14\ See id.
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[[Page 6487]]
The Commission noted in the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release that
the purpose of this disclosure would be to provide users of credit
ratings, investors, and other market participants and observers the raw
data with which to compare how the NRSROs initially rated an obligor or
security and, subsequently, adjusted those ratings, including the
timing of the adjustments.\15\ In order to expedite the establishment
of a pool of data sufficient to provide a useful basis of comparison,
the proposal would have applied this requirement to all outstanding
credit ratings of securities and obligors as well as to all future
credit ratings.
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\15\ See id.
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As discussed in more detail in the Companion Adopting Release,\16\
several NRSROs offered comments to the proposed amendments to paragraph
(d) of Rule 17g-2, raising two significant concerns. First, NRSROs that
issue unsolicited ratings accessible only to subscribers (``subscriber-
paid credit ratings'') and others stated that publicly disclosing all
their ratings histories, even with a time delay of six months, would
adversely impact their business and, therefore, could prove to be anti-
competitive.\17\ Second, NRSROs that issue ratings paid for by the
obligor being rated or the issuer, underwriter or sponsor of the
security being rated (``issuer-paid credit ratings'') stated that a
requirement to make all ratings actions available free of charge in a
machine readable format would cause them to lose revenues they derive
from selling downloadable packages of their credit ratings.\18\ These
commenters also questioned whether the requirement would be permitted
under the U.S. Constitution, arguing that it could be considered a
taking of private property without just compensation.\19\
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\16\ See Companion Adopting Release.
\17\ See ABA Business Law Committee Letter; Realpoint Letter;
Pollock Letter; Egan-Jones Letter; Multiple-Markets Letter; Rapid
Ratings Letter; AFP Letter; R&I Letter; Moody's Letter.
\18\ See S&P Letter; Moody's Letter.
\19\ See S&P Letter; Egan-Jones Letter; Fitch Letter; R&I
Letter;
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In the Companion Adopting Release, the Commission is adopting new
paragraph (a)(8) as proposed but significantly modifying the proposed
amendments to paragraph (d).\20\ Specifically, the amendments to
paragraph (d) as adopted will require an NRSRO to make publicly
available, in an XBRL format and on a six-month delay, ratings action
histories for 10% of the outstanding issuer-paid credit ratings
required to be retained pursuant to paragraph (a)(8) for each class of
credit rating for which it is registered and for which it has issued
500 or more issuer-paid credit ratings. Consequently, the public
disclosure requirement only will apply to issuer-paid credit ratings.
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\20\ See Companion Adopting Release.
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As explained in the Companion Adopting Release, the Commission
believes it is appropriate at this time to limit the rule's application
to issuer-paid credit ratings. NRSROs that sell subscriber-paid credit
ratings have suggested that requiring the histories of all these
ratings to be publicly disclosed could seriously impact their
businesses. This could reduce competition by causing NRSROs to withdraw
registrations or discourage credit rating agencies from seeking
registration. Accordingly, the Commission wants to gather more data on
this issue before deciding on whether the rule should apply to
subscriber-paid credit ratings. At the same time, the Commission does
not want to delay adopting a final rule, particularly if it could begin
providing meaningful information to users of credit ratings. In this
regard, the Commission notes that issuer-paid credit ratings account
for over 98% of the current credit ratings issued by NRSROs according
to information furnished by NRSROs in Form NRSRO. Moreover, seven of
the ten registered NRSROs currently maintain 500 or more credit ratings
in at least one class of credit ratings for which they are registered.
Consequently, applying this rule to issuer-paid credit ratings should
result in a substantial amount of new information for users of credit
ratings. It also will allow market observers to begin analyzing the
information and developing performance metrics based on it.
The Commission is mindful of the potential impact on NRSROs that
determine issuer-paid credit ratings and, therefore, the amendments
being adopted contain modifications discussed above. The Commission
believes that by limiting the ratings actions histories that need to be
disclosed to a random selection of 10% of outstanding credit ratings,
applying the requirement to issuer-paid credit ratings only, and
allowing for a six-month delay before a ratings action is required to
be disclosed, the amendment as adopted addresses the concerns among
commenters that the rule would cause them to lose revenue. With respect
to NRSROs that earn revenues from issuer-paid credit ratings but sell
access to packages of the ratings as well, the Commission believes that
customers that are willing to pay for full and immediate access to
downloadable information for all of an NRSRO's ratings actions are
unlikely to reconsider their purchase of that product due to the
ability to access ratings histories for 10% of the NRSRO's outstanding
issuer-paid credit ratings selected on a random basis and disclosed
with a six-month time lag. As indicated below, the Commission is
seeking detailed comment on how a ratings history public disclosure
requirement can be tailored to address concerns that disclosing this
information would adversely impact the businesses of NRSROs that
primarily determine subscriber-paid credit ratings.
In this release, the Commission is seeking comment on whether the
requirement to publicly disclose ratings action histories should be
applied to subscriber-paid credit ratings. As indicated in questions
below, the Commission is soliciting detailed information about the
potential impact of applying the rule to subscriber-paid credit
ratings. The responses to those questions will inform the Commission's
deliberations as to whether this rule ultimately should be expanded to
cover subscriber-paid credit ratings.
C. The Proposed Amendments
As discussed above, the Commission believes that the amendments to
paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 being adopted today will provide users of
credit ratings with information to begin assessing the performance of
NRSROs subject to the rule. At the same time, the Commission continues
to believe that its original proposal to require public disclosure of
ratings action histories for all current credit ratings could provide
substantial benefits to users of credit ratings. The Commission,
therefore, is proposing to amend paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2.
Specifically, the Commission would add subparagraphs (1), (2) and (3)
to paragraph (d). Paragraph (d)(1) would contain the record retention
requirements of paragraph (d) as it was originally adopted by the
Commission on June 5, 2007.\21\ Paragraph (d)(2) would contain the
ratings history disclosure requirements being adopted by the
[[Page 6488]]
Commission in the Companion Adopting Release.\22\
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\21\ See June 5, 2007 Adopting Release. As originally adopted,
paragraph (d) provided that ``[a]n original, or a true and complete
copy of the original, of each record required to be retained
pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of [Rule 17g-2] must be
maintained in a manner that, for the applicable retention period
specified in paragraph (c) of [Rule 17g-2], makes the original
record or copy easily accessible to the principal office of the
[NRSRO] and to any other office that conducted activities causing
the record to be made or received.'' See June 5, 2007 Adopting
Release, 72 FR at 33622.
\22\ See Companion Adopting Release. These amendments provide:
``[An NRSRO] must make and keep publicly available on its corporate
Internet Web site in an XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting
Language) format the ratings action information for ten percent of
the outstanding credit ratings required to be retained pursuant to
paragraph (a)(8) of [Rule 17g-2] and which were paid for by the
obligor being rated or by the issuer, underwriter, or sponsor of the
security being rated, selected on a random basis, for each class of
credit rating for which it is registered and for which it has issued
500 or more outstanding credit ratings paid for by the obligor being
rated or by the issuer, underwriter, or sponsor of the security
being rated. Any ratings action required to be disclosed pursuant to
this paragraph (d) need not be made public less than six months from
the date such ratings action is taken. If a credit rating made
public pursuant to this paragraph is withdrawn or the instrument
rated matures, the [NRSRO] must randomly select a new outstanding
credit rating from that class of credit ratings in order to maintain
the 10 percent disclosure threshold. In making the information
available on its corporate Internet Web site, the [NRSRO] shall use
the List of XBRL Tags for NRSROs as specified on the Commission's
Internet Web site.''
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Paragraph (d)(3) would contain the disclosure requirements the
Commission is proposing in this release. These proposed amendments
would require that NRSROs disclose ratings history information for 100%
of their current issuer-paid credit ratings in an XBRL format. Further,
they only would apply to issuer-paid credit ratings determined on or
after June 26, 2007 (the effective date of the Rating Agency Act).
Therefore, under new paragraph (d)(3), an NRSRO would not need to
disclose ratings action histories for issuer-paid credit ratings that
were determined prior to that date (though NRSROs would continue to be
required to publicly disclose ratings action histories provided for the
randomly selected 10% of outstanding issuer-paid credit ratings in each
registration class where there are 500 or more outstanding credit
ratings). The prospective nature of the proposed rule is designed to
ease the burden of compliance. In addition, to mitigate concerns
regarding the loss of revenues NRSROs derive from selling downloads and
data feeds to their current outstanding issuer-paid credit ratings, a
credit rating action would not need to be disclosed until 12 months
after the action is taken.
The purpose of this proposed amendment is to provide users of
credit ratings, investors, and other market participants and observers
with the maximum amount of raw data with which to compare how NRSROs
subject to the rule initially rated an obligor or security and,
subsequently, adjusted those ratings, including the timing of the
adjustments. The Commission believes that requiring the disclosure of
the ratings action history of each issuer-paid credit rating would
create the opportunity for market participants to use the information
to develop performance measurement statistics that would supplement
those required to be published by the NRSROs themselves in Exhibit 1 to
Form NRSRO. The intent is to tap into the expertise and flexibility of
credit market observers and participants to create better and more
useful means to compare issuer-paid credit ratings. In addition, the
Commission believes that the proposed amendment would foster greater
accountability for NRSROs that determine issuer-paid credit ratings as
well as competition among such NRSROs by making it easier for persons
to analyze the actual performance of credit ratings in terms of
accuracy in assessing creditworthiness. This could make NRSROs subject
to the rule more accountable for their ratings by enhancing the
transparency of the results of their rating processes for particular
securities and obligors and classes of securities and obligors and
encourage competition within the industry by making it easier for users
of credit ratings to judge the output of such NRSROs.
The Commission recognizes that releasing information on all ratings
actions could cause financial loss for some firms. For that reason, the
proposed amendment would provide that a ratings action need not be made
publicly available until twelve months after the date of the rating
action.
The Commission is proposing these amendments, in part, under
authority to require NRSROs to make and keep for prescribed periods
such records as the Commission prescribes as necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise
in furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act.\23\ The Commission
preliminarily believes the proposed new public disclosure requirements
are necessary and appropriate in the public interest and for the
protection of investors, or otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of
the Exchange Act. Specifically, the proposed amendments would allow
market participants to compare credit rating histories for issuer-paid
credit ratings on an obligor-by-obligor or instrument-by-instrument
basis. Users of credit ratings would be able to compare side-by-side
how two or more NRSROs subject to the rule initially rated a particular
obligor or security, when the NRSROs took actions to adjust the rating
upward or downward, and the degree of those adjustments. Furthermore,
users of credit ratings, academics and information venders could use
the raw data to perform analyses comparing how the NRSROs subject to
the rule differ in initially determining issuer-paid credit ratings and
in their monitoring of these ratings. This could identify an NRSRO that
is an outlier because it determines particularly high or low issuer-
paid credit ratings or is slow or quick to re-adjust outstanding
ratings. It also could help identify which NRSROs subject to the rule
tend to be more accurate in their issuer-paid credit ratings. This
information also may identify NRSROs subject to the rule whose
objectivity may be impaired because of the conflicts of interest
surrounding issuer-paid credit ratings.
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\23\ See Section 17(a)(1) of the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C.
78q(a)(1)).
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The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed amendment. In addition, the Commission requests comment on the
following questions related to the proposal.
Is the proposed application of the rule to prospective
credit ratings, i.e., credit ratings that are initially determined on
or after June 26, 2007, appropriate and do commenters believe it would
provide meaningful information if the rule was limited to credit
ratings made on or after that date? Should the Commission adopt a final
rule that uses another date such as the date the Rating Agency Act was
enacted? If June 26, 2007 is the appropriate date, how long would it
take for NRSROs to build up ratings history information to permit
meaningful comparisons between NRSROs? What are the advantages and
disadvantages of applying a disclosure rule on a prospective basis?
Should the Commission adopt a final rule that applies
retrospectively to all outstanding credit ratings? Commenters should
explain the benefits of retrospective application and how they would
justify the costs.
Is the twelve-month delay before publicly disclosing a
rating action sufficiently long to address concerns regarding the
revenues NRSROs derive from selling downloads of, and data feeds to,
their current issuer-paid credit ratings? Should the delay be for a
longer period such as 18 months, 24 months, 30 months or 36 months or
longer? Alternatively, should the Commission adopt a final rule that
has a shorter time lag such as three months or six months or no time
lag in place?
In addition to revenues derived from selling data feeds to
current issuer-paid credit ratings, do NRSROs derive revenues from
selling access to their
[[Page 6489]]
ratings histories? If so, how material are these revenues when compared
to revenues earned by NRSROs from selling downloads of, and data feeds
to, current issuer-paid credit ratings and revenues earned from fees
paid by obligors, issuers, underwriters and sponsors to determine and
monitor credit ratings? Commenters providing information should
quantify and breakout the amount of revenues earned by NRSROs issuer-
paid credit ratings in dollars and/or percentages for each of the
following categories: (1) Revenues from fees for determining and
monitoring issuer-paid credit ratings; (2) revenues from selling access
(by download, data feed or other method) to all current issuer-paid
credit ratings; and (3) revenues from selling information about ratings
actions histories of issuer-paid credit ratings.
Should the proposed amendments apply equally to issuer-
paid and subscriber-paid credit ratings? For example, in what ways and
to what extent might the objectivity of NRSROs in determining
subscriber-paid credit ratings be impaired because of conflicts of
interest? What would be the benefits for applying the rule's
requirements to subscriber-paid credit ratings? What would be the costs
of applying the rule's requirements to subscriber-paid credit ratings?
Are the goals of the rule--greater accountability of
NRSROs and promotion of competition--achievable if subscriber-paid
credit ratings are not subject to the rule's requirements? How would
these goals be enhanced if subscriber-paid credit ratings were subject
to the rule's requirements?
Do NRSROs derive revenues from selling information about
ratings action histories for subscriber-paid credit ratings? If so, are
those revenues material as compared to revenues they receive from
selling subscriptions to current subscriber-paid credit ratings?
Commenters providing information should quantify and breakout the
amount of revenues earned by NRSROs in dollars and/or percentages for
each of the following: (1) Selling subscriptions to all current
subscriber-paid credit ratings; and (2) selling information about
ratings actions histories of subscriber-paid credit ratings.
Similarly, do subscribers value ratings action histories
for subscriber-paid credit ratings? Do subscribers value the in-depth
analysis that is delivered with a rating action? How material is the
value that subscribers place on the historical rating action itself as
compared to the value they place on the in-depth analysis or materials
that are delivered along with the rating action? Do commenters believe
that the business of an NRSRO that determines subscriber-paid credit
ratings would be materially compromised if the ratings action histories
for the ratings were required to be publicly disclosed (but not the in-
depth analysis or other materials)?
Do persons who subscribe to NRSROs' subscriber-paid credit
ratings value the current ratings only? Alternatively, do they
subscribe to the ratings because subscriber-paid credit ratings
identify trends sooner than issuer-paid credit ratings as some suggest?
For example, do commenters believe the fact that the determination and
monitoring of subscriber-paid credit ratings are funded by subscribers
mean the NRSROs act more quickly to adjust the credit ratings? If so,
would disclosing a rating action one year after it occurred reveal
information that a subscriber otherwise would pay for in order to make
a credit assessment or has the rating action become sufficiently stale
that its value, if any, is limited to it being an item of historical
information. If a credit rating action with respect to a subscriber-
paid credit rating has intrinsic value beyond providing historical
perspective, would this intrinsic value still exist two years after the
rating action? If so, what length of delay would be sufficient to
address NRSROs' concerns regarding the loss of revenues from
subscribers for access to their subscriber-paid credit ratings, while
also achieving the Commission's goals, among others, of increasing
accountability and promoting competition among NRSROs? What effect
would subjecting subscriber-paid credit ratings to the rule's
requirements have on competition? Would it compromise the viability of
NRSROs that determine subscriber-paid credit ratings? For example, to
what extent, if any, would subjecting subscriber-paid credit ratings to
the rule's requirements undercut competition by erecting barriers to
entry or otherwise compromise the viability of NRSROs that determine
subscriber-paid credit ratings?
If there is a length of time greater than one year that
would better address concerns regarding the revenues NRSROs derive from
subscriber-paid credit ratings (e.g., 18 months, 24 months, 30 months,
36 months or longer), should that time lag only apply to subscriber-
paid credit ratings or should it apply to both issuer-paid and
subscriber-paid credit ratings?
As an alternative to adopting a final rule that applies to
subscriber-paid credit ratings (along with issuer-paid credit ratings),
should the Commission adopt a final rule amending paragraph (d) of Rule
17g-2 to require that an NRSRO publicly disclose credit rating actions
for a random sample of 10% of the current subscriber-paid credit
ratings for each class of credit rating for which they are registered
and have issued 500 or more ratings? If the Commission were to adopt
such an amendment, would the time lag of six months in the rule being
adopted today be sufficient to address concerns regarding the revenues
NRSROs earn from selling subscriptions to their subscriber-paid credit
ratings. If not, should the Commission adopt an amendment to paragraph
(d) of Rule 17g-2 that extends the time lag to a longer period of time
for subscriber-paid credit ratings (e.g., 12 months, 18 months, 24
months, 30 months, or 36 months or longer)? Are there other ways that
the Commission could adjust the requirements of the proposed rule to
apply a public disclosure requirement to ratings action histories of
subscriber-paid credit ratings? Commenters should provide reasons and/
or data for why a certain time lag is appropriate.
Similarly, if commenters believe that some form of public
disclosure requirement should be applied to the histories of both
issuer-paid and subscriber-paid credit ratings, what percentage of the
histories should each type of credit rating be required to be disclosed
and what time lag should be granted? For example, should both types of
credit ratings be subject to the requirement that ratings action
histories be publicly disclosed for a random sample of 10% of the
outstanding credit ratings in each class of credit ratings with a six
month time lag? Alternatively, should ratings action histories of
issuer-paid credit ratings be disclosed at a higher percentage with a
longer time lag, e.g., 20%, 50% or 100% of the outstanding credit
ratings and a 12, 16, or 24 month time lag? Should ratings action
histories for subscriber-paid credit ratings be disclosed at a
different percentage than issuer-paid credit ratings, e.g., 10%, 20%,
or 50%? Commenters should provide reasons and/or data in their
responses.
What diligence do potential subscribers to subscriber-paid
credit ratings perform in deciding whether to subscribe to such ratings
of a particular NRSRO? To what extent do NRSROs make ratings histories
of subscriber-paid credit ratings available to potential subscribers?
To what extent and in what ways are NRSROs that determine subscriber-
paid credit ratings subject to competitive pressures? To what extent
does the interest in developing a reputation for accuracy discipline
the
[[Page 6490]]
accuracy of an NRSRO that determines subscriber-paid credit ratings?
Do NRSROs issue unsolicited credit ratings that are not
paid for by selling subscriptions to access the ratings? For example,
do NRSROs that primarily determine issuer-paid credit ratings for most,
but not all, securities issued by companies in a particular industry
group determine unsolicited ratings for securities issued by the
remaining companies to round out coverage of the industry? Do NRSROs
issue such unsolicited ratings to establish a track record for rating
particular types of obligors or securities?
If NRSROs issue unsolicited (and not subscriber-paid for)
credit ratings, to what extent are these ratings issued relative
issuer-paid or subscriber-paid credit ratings? For example, what
percentage of an NRSRO's outstanding credit ratings are comprised of
unsolicited (and not subscriber paid for) credit ratings?
Do NRSROs that issue unsolicited (and not subscriber-paid
for) credit ratings make the ratings publicly available for free?
What types of conflicts arise from determining unsolicited
(and not subscriber-paid for) credit ratings? For example, is there the
potential that an NRSRO would issue a lower than warranted credit
rating in order to pressure an obligor or issuer to pay the NRSRO for
the rating? Would the public disclosure of ratings histories for
unsolicited (but not subscriber-paid for) credit ratings help to
mitigate this conflict?
Should the Commission adopt a final rule that requires the
disclosure of the ratings histories of unsolicited (and not subscriber-
paid for) credit ratings along with the issuer-paid for credit ratings?
What would be the benefits and costs of requiring the disclosure of
such credit ratings?
Should the Commission adopt a final rule that requires
unsolicited (and not subscriber-paid for) credit ratings to be included
for the purposes of determining whether an NRSRO has issued 500 or more
credit ratings in a particular class of credit rating under Rule 17g-
2(d) adopted today? What would be the benefits and costs of such a
requirement?
Should the Commission adopt a final rule that requires
unsolicited (and not subscriber paid for) credit ratings to be included
in the publicly disclosed ratings histories for a random sample of 10%
of the credit ratings in a particular class of credit ratings under
Rule 17g-2(d) adopted today? What would be the benefits and costs of
such a requirement?
Should the Commission adopt a final rule that requires a
sample of unsolicited (and not subscriber paid for) credit ratings to
be separately disclosed from issuer-paid credit ratings? If so, what
should be the number of credit ratings in a particular class of credit
ratings triggering that public disclosure? What percentage of
unsolicited rating should be disclosed? What, if any, time delay should
apply to the disclosure of a random sample of unsolicited ratings?
III. Re-Proposed Amendments to Rule 17g-5
A. Rule 17g-5
Section 15E(h)(1) of the Exchange Act requires an NRSRO to
establish, maintain, and enforce policies and procedures reasonably
designed, taking into consideration the nature of its business, to
address and manage conflicts of interest.\24\ Section 15E(h)(2) of the
Exchange Act requires the Commission to adopt rules to prohibit or
require the management and disclosure of conflicts of interest relating
to the issuance of credit ratings.\25\ The statute also identifies
certain types of conflicts relating to the issuance of credit ratings
that the Commission may include in its rules.\26\ Furthermore, it
contains a catchall provision for any other potential conflict of
interest that the Commission deems is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of investors to include in its
rules.\27\ The Commission implemented these statutory provisions
through the adoption of Rule 17g-5, which prohibits the conflicts
identified in the statute and certain additional conflicts either
outright or if the NRSRO has not disclosed them and established
policies and procedures to manage them.\28\
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\24\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(1).
\25\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(2).
\26\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(2)(A)-(D).
\27\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(2)(E).
\28\ See 17 CFR 240.17g-5.
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Paragraph (a) of Rule 17g-5 \29\ prohibits a person within an NRSRO
from having a conflict of interest relating to the issuance of a credit
rating that is identified in paragraph (b) of the rule unless the NRSRO
has disclosed the type of conflict of interest in its application for
registrations with the Commission in compliance with Rule 17g-1 (i.e.,
on Form NRSRO) and has implemented policies and procedures to address
and manage the type of conflict of interest in accordance with Section
15E(h)(1) of the Exchange Act.\30\ Paragraph (b) of Rule 17g-5
currently identifies nine types of conflicts that are subject to the
provisions of paragraph (a):
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\29\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(a).
\30\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(1).
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Being paid by issuers or underwriters to determine credit
ratings with respect to securities or money market instruments they
issue or underwrite; \31\
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\31\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(1).
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Being paid by obligors to determine credit ratings with
respect to the obligors; \32\
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\32\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(2).
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Being paid for services in addition to determining credit
ratings by issuers, underwriters, or obligors that have paid the NRSRO
to determine a credit rating; \33\
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\33\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(3).
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Being paid by persons for subscriptions to receive or
access the credit ratings of the NRSRO and/or for other services
offered by the NRSRO where such persons may use the credit ratings of
the NRSRO to comply with, and obtain benefits or relief under, statutes
and regulations using the term ``NRSRO;'' \34\
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\34\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(4).
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Being paid by persons for subscriptions to receive or
access the credit ratings of the NRSRO and/or for other services
offered by the NRSRO where such persons also may own investments or
have entered into transactions that could be favorably or adversely
impacted by a credit rating issued by the NRSRO; \35\
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\35\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(5).
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Allowing persons within the NRSRO to directly own
securities or money market instruments of, or having other direct
ownership interests in, issuers or obligors subject to a credit rating
determined by the NRSRO; \36\
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\36\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(6).
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Allowing persons within the NRSRO to have a business
relationship that is more than an arms length ordinary course of
business relationship with issuers or obligors subject to a credit
rating determined by the NRSRO; \37\
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\37\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(7).
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Having a person associated with the NRSRO that is a broker
or dealer engaged in the business of underwriting securities or money
market instruments; \38\ and
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\38\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(8).
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Any other type of conflict of interest relating to the
issuance of credit ratings by the NRSRO that is material to the NRSRO
and that is identified by the NRSRO in Exhibit 6 to Form NRSRO in
accordance with section 15E(a)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-
7(a)(1)(B)(vi)) and Rule 17g-1.\39\
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\39\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(9).
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[[Page 6491]]
Paragraph (c) of Rule 17g-5 specifically prohibits outright four
types of conflicts of interest.\40\ Consequently, an NRSRO would
violate the rule regardless of whether it had disclosed them and
established procedures reasonably designed to address them. The four
prohibited conflicts are:
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\40\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(c)(1)-(4).
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The NRSRO issues or maintains a credit rating solicited by
a person that, in the most recently ended fiscal year, provided the
NRSRO with net revenue (as reported under Rule 17g-3) equaling or
exceeding 10% of the total net revenue of the NRSRO for the fiscal
year; \41\
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\41\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(c)(1).
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The NRSRO issues or maintains a credit rating with respect
to a person (excluding a sovereign nation or an agency of a sovereign
nation) where the NRSRO, a credit analyst that participated in
determining the credit rating, or a person responsible for approving
the credit rating, directly owns securities of, or has any other direct
ownership interest in, the person that is subject to the credit rating;
\42\
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\42\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(c)(2). In the June 5, 2007 Adopting
Release, the Commission stated that the prohibition applied to
``direct'' ownership of securities and, therefore, would not apply
to indirect ownership interests, for example, through mutual funds
or blind trusts. See, June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33598.
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The NRSRO issues or maintains a credit rating with respect
to a person associated with the NRSRO; \43\ or
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\43\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(c)(3).
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The NRSRO issues or maintains a credit rating where a
credit analyst who participated in determining the credit rating, or a
person responsible for approving the credit rating is an officer or
director of the person that is subject to the credit rating.
B. The Amendments to Paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 17g-5 Proposed in
the June 16, 2008 Release
In the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, the Commission proposed to
amend paragraph (b) of Rule 17g-5 \44\ to add to the list of conflicts
that must be disclosed and managed the additional conflict of
repeatedly being paid by certain issuers, sponsors, or underwriters
(hereinafter collectively ``arrangers'') to rate structured finance
products.\45\ This conflict is a subset of the broader conflict of
interest already identified in paragraph (b)(1) of Rule 17g-5; namely,
``being paid by issuers and underwriters to determine credit ratings
with respect to securities or money market instruments they issue or
underwrite.'' \46\ Specifically, the proposed amendment would have re-
designated paragraph (b)(9) of Rule 17g-5 as paragraph (b)(10) and in
new paragraph (b)(9) identified the following conflict: Issuing or
maintaining a credit rating for a security or money market instrument
issued by an asset pool or as part of any asset-backed or mortgage-
backed securities transaction that was paid for by the issuer, sponsor,
or underwriter of the security or money market instrument.\47\
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\44\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5.
\45\ June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36219-36226,
36251.
\46\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(b)(1). As the Commission noted when
adopting Rule 17g-5, the concern with conflict identified in
paragraph (b)(1) ``is that an NRSRO may be influenced to issue a
more favorable credit rating than warranted in order to obtain or
retain the business of the issuer or underwriter.'' June 5, 2007
Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33595.
\47\ June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36251.
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Furthermore, the Commission proposed amendments to paragraph (a) of
Rule 17g-5 that would have established additional conditions--beyond
disclosing the conflict and establishing procedures to manage it--that
would need to be met for an NRSRO to issue or maintain a credit rating
subject to this conflict.\48\ Specifically, the Commission proposed a
new paragraph (a)(3) that would have required, as a condition to the
NRSRO rating a structured finance product, that the information
provided to the NRSRO and used by the NRSRO in determining an initial
credit rating and, thereafter, performing surveillance on the credit
rating be disclosed through a means designed to provide reasonably
broad dissemination of the information.\49\ The proposed amendments did
not specify which entity--the NRSRO or the arranger--would need to
disclose the information.
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\48\ June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36219-36226,
36251.
\49\ See id. This proposed requirement would have been in
addition to the current requirements of paragraph (a) that an NRSRO
disclose the type of conflict of interest in Exhibit 6 to Form
NRSRO; and establish, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures to address and manage the conflict of interest. 17 CFR
240 17g-5(a)(1) and (2).
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The proposed amendments would have required further that, for
offerings not registered under the Securities Act, the information
would need to be disclosed only to investors and credit rating agencies
on the day the offering price is set and, subsequently, publicly
disclosed on the first business day after the offering closes. These
additional conditions in new paragraph (a)(3) only would have applied
to the conflict identified in proposed new paragraph (b)(9). The
conflicts currently identified in paragraph (b) of Rule 17g-5 would
have continued to be subject only to the conditions set forth in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2).
The Commission also provided in the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release
three proposed interpretations of how the information could be
disclosed under the requirements of the proposed rule in a manner
consistent with the provisions of the Securities Act.\50\ These
interpretations addressed disclosure under the proposed amendment in
the context of public, private, and offshore securities offerings.\51\
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\50\ See June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36222-36226.
\51\ Id.
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C. The Comments on the June 16, 2008 Proposed Amendments
The Commission received 38 comment letters in response to the June
16, 2008 Proposing Release that addressed these proposed amendments to
Rule 17g-5. The majority of commenters opposed the amendment or raised
substantial practical and legal questions about how it would operate
when it became effective.\52\ Many of these commenters questioned
whether the rule would achieve its goal of increasing competition.\53\
For example, some stated that it would not provide credit rating
agencies the opportunity to determine unsolicited ratings because they
would receive the information too late to issue a timely rating or that
they would have a lesser understanding of the transaction and would,
therefore, be unable to produce an accurate rating.\54\ One commenter
stated that the surveillance information called for under the proposed
amendment is already available to the public for a fee through third
party vendors.\55\
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\52\ See id.
\53\ See A.M. Best Letter; Raingeard Letter; Citi Letter; DBA
Letter; ABA Business Law Committees Letter; SPA Letter; CHSG Letter.
\54\ See, e.g., CGSH Letter; Citi Letter; DBA Letter; Egan-Jones
Letter; LIUNA Letter; Realpoint Letter.
\55\ Trepp Letter.
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Many commenters were concerned with the disclosure of proprietary
information.\56\ These commenters were concerned that if issuers and
underwriters were forced to disclose proprietary information, they
would instead choose not to share this information with the NRSROs,
which could affect the accuracy of the rating.\57\ Commenters also were
concerned that disclosing the information could create liability issues
under Sections 11 and 12 of the Securities Act, particularly if the
disclosing party is not the issuer or
[[Page 6492]]
originator or if the information disclosed was not prepared for the
purpose of being used as offering materials.\58\ At least one commenter
was concerned that if the information was presented to investors
outside the context of a disclosure document, there would be
significant risk that investors might misinterpret the data.\59\ Other
commenters raised concerns that disclosing the information could
violate foreign law or, at the very least, put U.S. credit rating
agencies at a disadvantage to compete in foreign markets where other
credit rating agencies are not subject to the same disclosure
requirements.\60\ One NRSRO stated that if it were forced to disclose
information on offshore offerings, it would have to withdraw from
registration as an NRSRO in certain classes.\61\ Some commenters
suggested that instead of requiring the information to be disclosed to
a range of market participants, it should only be disclosed to other
NRSROs that seek to undertake an unsolicited rating.\62\ The commenters
stated that NRSROs would be subject to the same confidentiality
agreements that arrangers make with NRSROs they hire to rate structured
finance products.\63\
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\56\ See CMSA Letter; IBFED Letter; MICA Letter; MBA Letter; ASF
Letter; Roundtable Letter; SPA Letter; Citi Letter; Lehman Letter.
\57\ See, e.g. Citi Letter; DBA Letter; Lehman Letter; Moody's
Letter; ASF Letter.
\58\ See ICI Letter; R&I Letter; Moody's Letter; Fitch Letter;
S&P Letter; DBRS Letter; ASF Letter; CGSH Letter; ABA Business Law
Committees Letter; DBA Letter; Citi Letter; Lehman Letter.
\59\ See CGSH Letter.
\60\ See S&P Letter; Moody's Letter; Fitch Letter; R&I Letter.
\61\ R&I Letter.
\62\ See DBRS Letter; ASF Letter; CreditSights Letter.
\63\ See DBRS Letter; ASF Letter; CreditSights Letter.
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The Commission specifically asked for comments on which party
should be required to disclose the information given to an NRSRO. Some
commenters believed that the NRSRO was in the best position to disclose
this information.\64\ However, many of the NRSROs stated that requiring
them to disclose the information would put them at risk and they
requested that another party be required to make the disclosure or that
NRSROs be given a safe harbor if they were required to disclose the
information.\65\ Commenters also were split about the type of
information that should be disclosed. Some commenters believed that all
the information an NRSRO receives from an arranger should be required
to be disclosed,\66\ while other commenters wanted to prevent a ``data
dump'' and believed only the information the NRSRO uses to determine a
rating should be disclosed.\67\ At least one commenter wanted the
disclosure to include the methodologies and underlying assumptions used
by the NRSRO.\68\
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\64\ See Second SIFMA Letter; ICI Letter; Rapid Ratings Letter.
\65\ See A.M. Best Letter; DBRS Letter; Fitch Letter; S&P
Letter; R&I Letter; Moody's Letter. At least one commenter opposed a
safe harbor for NRSROs. See Rapid Ratings Letter.
\66\ See Fitch Letter; ICI Letter; CreditSights Letter; S&P
Letter.
\67\ See ASF Letter; CFA Institute Letter.
\68\ See Council Letter.
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Comments supporting the proposal generally argued that the
Commission should go farther to address the conflict by, for example,
considering whether it should be prohibited outright,\69\ extending its
application to other classes of ratings such as those for municipal
securities,\70\ or requiring the dissemination of more information such
as each loan pool submitted to the NRSRO regardless of whether it is
the ultimate pool used in determining the final rating.\71\
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\69\ See RBDA Letter.
\70\ See e.g., Lockyer Letter; Nappier Letter; ICI Letter.
\71\ See e.g., LIUNA Letter.
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Several commenters offered technical suggestions as to how the rule
should be modified. For example, two commenters requested that the
timing of the disclosure of information used to determine a credit
rating be made prior to the pricing date--one suggested six weeks and
the other two weeks--to provide sufficient time to determine an
unsolicited rating.\72\ Another commenter suggested that the definition
of ``security or money market instrument issued by an asset pool or as
part of any asset-backed or mortgage backed securities transaction''
was overly broad and should be clarified.\73\
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\72\ See Egan-Jones Letter and Realpoint Letter.
\73\ ICI Letter; A.M. Best Letter; S&P Letter.
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D. The Re-Proposed Amendments
After reviewing these comments, the Commission has made significant
changes to the proposed amendments and is re-proposing them, as
modified, for further comment. As discussed in more detail below, under
the re-proposed amendments: (1) NRSROs that are hired by arrangers to
perform credit ratings for structured finance products would need to
disclose to other NRSROs (and only other NRSROs) the deals for which
they were in the process of determining such credit ratings; (2) the
arrangers would need to provide the NRSROs they hire to rate structured
finance products with a representation that they will provide
information given to the hired NRSRO to other NRSROs (and only other
NRSROs); and (3) NRSROs seeking to access information maintained by the
NRSROs and the arrangers would need to furnish the Commission an annual
certification that they are accessing the information solely to
determine credit ratings and will determine a minimum number of credit
ratings using the information.
More specifically, under the re-proposed amendments, NRSROs that
are paid by arrangers to determine credit ratings for structured
finance products would be required to maintain a password protected
Internet Web site that lists each deal they have been hired to rate.
They also would be required to obtain representations from the arranger
hiring the NRSRO to determine the rating that the arranger will post
all information provided to the NRSRO to determine the rating and,
thereafter, to monitor the rating on a password protected Internet Web
site. NRSROs not hired to determine and monitor the ratings would be
able to access the NRSRO Internet Web sites to learn of new deals being
rated and then access the arranger Internet Web sites to obtain the
information being provided by the arranger to the hired NRSRO during
the entire initial rating process and, thereafter, for the purpose of
surveillance. However, the ability of NRSROs to access these NRSRO and
arranger Internet Web sites would be limited to NRSROs that certify to
the Commission on an annual basis, among other things, that they are
accessing the information solely for the purpose of determining or
monitoring credit ratings, that they will keep the information
confidential and treat it as material non-public information, and that
they will determine credit ratings for at least 10% of the deals for
which they obtain information. They also would be required to disclose
in the certification the number of deals for which they obtained
information through accessing the Internet Web sites and the number of
ratings they issued using that information during the year covered by
their most recent certification.
The Commission is re-proposing these amendments to Rule 17g-5, in
part, pursuant to the authority in Section 15E(h)(2) of the Exchange
Act.\74\ The provisions in this section of the statute provide the
Commission with authority to prohibit, or require the management and
disclosure of, any potential conflict of interest relating to the
issuance of credit ratings by an NRSRO.\75\ The Commission
preliminarily believes the re-proposed amendments are necessary and
appropriate in the public interest and for the protection of investors
because they are designed to address conflicts of interest and improve
the
[[Page 6493]]
quality of credit ratings for structured finance products by making it
possible for more NRSROs to rate structured finance products.
Generally, the information relied on by the hired NRSROs to rate
structured finance products is non-public. This makes it difficult for
other NRSROs to rate these securities and money market instruments. As
a result, the products frequently are issued with ratings from only one
or two NRSROs and only by NRSROs that are hired by the issuer, sponsor,
or underwriter (i.e., NRSROs that are subject to the conflict of being
repeatedly paid by certain arrangers to rate these securities and money
market instruments).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(2).
\75\ Id.
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The goal is to increase the number of ratings extant for a given
structured finance security or money market instrument and, in
particular, promote the issuance of ratings by NRSROs that are not
hired by the arranger. This would provide users of credit ratings with
a broader range of views on the creditworthiness of the security or
money market instrument and potentially expose an NRSRO that was unduly
influenced by the ``issuer-pay'' conflict into issuing higher than
warranted ratings. Furthermore, the proposal also is designed to make
it more difficult for arrangers to exert influence over the NRSROs they
hire to determine ratings for structured finance products.
Specifically, by opening up the rating process to more NRSROs, the
proposal could make it easier for the hired NRSRO to resist such
pressure by increasing the likelihood that any steps taken to
inappropriately favor the arranger could be exposed to the market
through the ratings issued by other NRSROs.
A paragraph-by-paragraph description of the proposed amendments
follows.
1. Proposed New Paragraph (b)(9)
As re-proposed, new paragraph (b)(9) of Rule 17g-5 would be the
same as proposed in the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release.\76\
Specifically, the amendment would add the following conflict to the
types of conflicts identified in paragraph (b) of the rule: Issuing or
maintaining a credit rating for a security or money market instrument
issued by an asset pool or as part of any asset-backed or mortgage-
backed securities transaction that was paid for by the issuer, sponsor,
or underwriter of the security or money market instrument.\77\ An NRSRO
having this conflict would be subject to the provisions in new
paragraph (a)(3) of Rule 17g-5 (as well as the existing disclosure and
management provisions in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2)).
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\76\ See June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36251.
\77\ Id.
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Under the proposed rule text, the type of security or money market
instrument subject to the conflict would be one that is ``issued by an
asset pool or as part of any asset-backed or mortgage-backed securities
transaction.'' The Commission's intent is to have the definition be
sufficiently broad to cover all structured finance products and,
therefore, not limit the rule's scope to structured finance products
that meet narrower definitions such as the one in Section
3(a)(62)(B)(iv) of the Exchange Act.\78\ Moreover, the Commission notes
that Section 15E(i)(1)(B) of the Exchange Act (adopted as part of the
Rating Agency Act) uses identical language to describe a potentially
unfair, coercive or abusive practice relating the ratings of securities
or money market instruments.\79\ The Commission adopted Rule 17g-
6(a)(4), in part, under this statutory authority.\80\ This paragraph
uses the same language--securities or money market instruments ``issued
by an asset pool or as part of any asset-backed or mortgage-backed
securities transaction''--to describe the prohibited practice. As used
in Rule 17g-6 and proposed in new paragraph (b)(9) to Rule 17g-5, the
Commission intends this definition to cover the broad range of
structured finance products, including, but not limited to, securities
collateralized by pools of loans or receivables (e.g., mortgages, auto
loans, school loans credit card receivables, leases), collateralized
debt obligations, synthetic collateralized debt obligations that
reference debt securities or indexes, and hybrid collateralized debt
obligations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(62)(B)(iv). This provision--a component of
the definition of ``NRSRO''--refers to issuers of asset-backed
securities (as that term is defined in Section 1101(c) of part 229
of Title 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as in effect on the
date of enactment of this paragraph. Id.
\79\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(i)(1)(B).
\80\ 17 CFR 240.17g-6(a)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following question related to the proposal.
Would the definition of the securities and money market
instruments covered by this conflict--namely, ones ``issued by an asset
pool or as part of any asset-backed or mortgage-backed securities
transaction''--apply to all types of structured finance products?
Should the definition be made broader or narrowed?
2. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)
As re-proposed, paragraph (a)(3) would be substantially different
than proposed in the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release.\81\ Specifically,
an NRSRO subject to the conflict identified in new paragraph (b)(9)--
issuing or maintaining a credit rating for a security or money market
instrument issued by an asset pool or as part of any asset-backed or
mortgage-backed securities transaction that was paid for by the issuer,
sponsor, or underwriter of the security or money market instrument--
would have to take a number of actions described in the following
sections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36219-36226,
36251.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(i)
Under proposed new paragraph (a)(3)(i) of Rule 17g-5, the NRSRO
would be required to maintain on a password-protected Internet Web site
a list of each structured finance security or money market instrument
for which it currently is in the process of determining an initial
credit rating in chronological order and identifying the type of
security or money market instrument, the name of the issuer, the date
the rating process was initiated, and the Internet Web site address
where the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter of the security or money
market instrument represents that the information described in
paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D) (see below discussion) can be
accessed. The NRSRO would need to post this information no later than
when the arranger first transmits information to the NRSRO that is to
be used in the rating process. Further, the list would need to be
maintained in chronological order so NRSROs accessing the Internet Web
site would be able to determine the most recently initiated rating
processes.
The text of proposed paragraph (a)(3)(i) only refers to
transactions where the NRSRO is in the process of determining an
``initial'' credit rating. The Commission does not intend that the rule
require the NRSRO to include on the Internet Web site information about
securities or money market instruments for which the NRSRO has issued a
final rating and now is monitoring the rating. The proposed amendment
is designed to alert other NRSROs about new deals and direct them to
the Internet Web site of the arranger where information to determine
initial ratings and monitor the ratings can be accessed.
[[Page 6494]]
Consequently, once a final rating is issued, the NRSRO can remove the
information about the security or money market instrument from the list
it maintains on the Internet Web site. Similarly, if the arranger
decides to terminate the rating process without having a final rating
issued, the NRSRO would be permitted to remove the information from the
list.
Finally, the Commission intends that the address for the Internet
Web site contained in the list would be the portal for accessing
information the arranger would be making available for all securities
and money market instruments subject to this proposed rule. For
example, a particular arranger might be disclosing information about
hundreds of different structured finance securities and money market
instruments on the Internet Web site it maintains for the purposes of
this proposed requirement. The NRSRO only would need to disclose the
address of this Internet Web site and not the actual link to the
information, provided an NRSRO using the arranger's Internet Web site
can navigate to the specific deal information it is seeking after
entering the site.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following questions related to the proposal.
Would the information required to be maintained on the
NRSRO's Internet site be sufficient to alert other NRSROs that the
rating process has commenced and where they can locate information to
determine an unsolicited rating? For example, should the rule require
the NRSRO to alert by e-mail all NRSROs that obtain a password to
access the site when new information is posted to the site? Would such
a requirement be feasible?
Are there specific requirements that the Commission could
put into the rule text to clarify how the information should be
presented on the NRSRO's Internet Web site?
b. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(ii)
Under proposed new paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of Rule 17g-5, the NRSRO
would be required to provide free and unlimited access to the password-
protected Internet Web site it maintains during the applicable calendar
year to any NRSRO that provides it with a copy of the certification
described in proposed new paragraph (e) of Rule 17g-5 (see below
discussion) that covers that calendar year. The Commission intends that
the only prerequisite to an NRSRO obtaining access to the Internet Web
site is that the NRSRO execute the certification described below and
furnish it to the Commission. Nonetheless, it would be appropriate for
the NRSRO maintaining the Internet Web site to require an NRSRO seeking
access to the site to represent that the copy of the certification
being submitted to obtain access was a true copy of the certification
and that it was, in fact, furnished to the Commission.
Proposed paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii) are designed to create a
mechanism to alert other NRSROs seeking to rate finance products that
an arranger has initiated the rating process and to inform the other
NRSROs where information being provided by the arranger to the hired
NRSRO to determine the credit rating may be obtained. The goal is to
provide the other NRSROs with the information being provided to the
hired NRSRO on a real-time basis so they have sufficient time to
develop initial ratings contemporaneously with the hired NRSRO. It
would be incumbent on the other NRSROs to routinely monitor the
Internet Web sites of the issuer-pay NRSROs to ascertain when new
structured finance securities or money market instruments were in the
process of being rated.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following question related to the proposal.
Should the NRSRO maintaining the Internet Web site be
permitted to charge a fee for other NRSROs to access it? For example,
should they be permitted a fee to recover some or all of their costs
for maintaining the Internet Web site?
c. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)
Under proposed paragraph (a)(3)(iii), the NRSRO would be required
to obtain from the arranger of each structured finance security or
money market instrument four representations described below. The rule
would provide that NRSRO could rely on the representations if the
reliance was reasonable. Obtaining the representations would provide
the NRSRO with a safe harbor if the arranger did not act in accordance
with a representation. However, the NRSRO would need to demonstrate
that its reliance on the representation was reasonable. For example, if
the NRSRO became aware that an arranger breached prior representations
a number of times, it would not be reasonable to rely on a future
representation.
The four representations are discussed in the sections below.
i. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(A)
Under proposed new paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(A), the arranger would
need to represent that it will maintain the information described in
proposed paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and (a)(3)(iii)(D) of Rule 17g-5
available on an identified password protected Internet Web site that
presents the information in a manner indicating which information
currently should be relied on to determine or monitor the credit
rating. Under this representation, the arranger would agree, in effect,
to make the information it provides to the hired NRSRO available to any
other NRSRO at the same time. Thus, the arranger would need to post the
information on the Internet Web site at the same time the information
is given to the hired NRSRO. Any time this information is updated or
new information is given to the hired NRSRO, the information would need
to be posted on the Internet Web site contemporaneously.
Furthermore, the arranger must tag the information in a manner that
informs NRSROs accessing the Internet Web site which information
currently is operative for the purpose of determining the credit
rating. The purpose of this ``current'' requirement is to ensure that
NRSROs accessing the Internet Web site would be using the correct
information to determine their credit ratings. For example, the
Commission understands that the composition of the pool of assets
underlying a structured finance product may change during the rating
process as some assets are removed from the pool and replaced with
other assets. The Internet Web site would need to include each asset
pool provided to the NRSRO hired to rate the security or money market
instrument. If more than one loan tape has been provided, the arranger
would need to identify which loan tape was currently being relied on to
determine the credit rating. Moreover, the arranger would need to
indicate which information is final and will be used by the NRSRO to
determine the credit rating that is published. It would be in the
interest of the arranger to ensure that the NRSROs developing credit
ratings through accessing the Internet Web site rely on up-to-date and
final information. Otherwise, their credit ratings may be based on
erroneous information, which could impact the final rating.
The Commission considered only requiring that the final information
be posted on the Internet Web site. However, this could put the NRSROs
developing ratings using the Internet Web sites at a disadvantage since
they might be getting the information shortly
[[Page 6495]]
before the hired NRSRO issues its initial rating. The Commission
preliminarily believes that the inclusion of all iterations of the
various components of information (e.g., loan tapes, legal documents)
used to determine the credit rating would allow the NRSROs accessing
the Internet Web site to more actively participate in the rating
process as they could follow the progression of changes that lead to
the final information upon which the credit rating should be based.
This could make it easier for them to more quickly issue an initial
credit rating when the loan pool, legal documentation and other
relevant information is finalized. The goal is to have them issue
credit ratings contemporaneously with the hired NRSRO so investors can
have the benefit of these ratings before purchasing the securities or
money market instruments.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following question related to the proposal.
Should the Commission only require that final information
be posted on the Internet Web site to avoid the potential that an NRSRO
would use erroneous information to determine a credit rating?
ii. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B)
Under proposed new paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B), the arranger would
need to represent that it will provide access to its password-protected
Internet Web site during the applicable calendar year to any NRSRO that
provides it with a copy of the certification described in proposed
paragraph (e) of Rule 17g-5 that covers that calendar year. The
Commission is proposing to limit the access to this information to
other NRSROs. The intent is to address concerns that disclosing this
information to a broader array of entities would implicate disclosure
requirements under the Securities Act. The Commission acknowledges that
investors and other market participants may benefit from greater
disclosure of this information. However, the Commission believes that
the more appropriate mechanism to enhance such disclosure would be to
amend rules under the Securities Act. The Commission notes in
particular that Regulation AB, which is a principles-based rule,
requires among other things, disclosure of the material characteristics
of the asset pool, the structure of the transaction and of any material
credit enhancements.\82\ When adopting Regulation AB in 2004, the
Commission noted that a determination that information would be
provided to a credit rating agency should be considered in determining
whether information is not material under Regulation AB:
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\82\ See Items 1111, 1113 and 1114 of Regulation AB.
If an issuer concludes that it need not disclose information in
response to a particular disclosure line item because the issuer
determines that the information is not material, but agrees to
provide the information to credit rating agencies, the issuer should
consider its determination regarding materiality in the context of
the decision to provide the information to rating agencies.\83\
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\83\ Securities Act Release No. 8518 (December 22, 2004).
The amendment, as proposed in the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release,
would have allowed credit rating agencies not registered with the
Commission to obtain the information about the structured finance
products necessary to determine ``unsolicited'' credit ratings.\84\ The
Commission preliminarily believes that allowing these entities to
access the information could be problematic because the Commission has
no authority to examine them and, thereby, review whether they are
using the information solely to develop credit ratings. Preliminarily,
the Commission believes that the better approach is to limit access to
NRSROs. Furthermore, this could provide an incentive for credit rating
agencies to register with the Commission, which would benefit users of
credit ratings by increasing the number of NRSROs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ June 16, 2008 Proposing Release, 73 FR at 36251.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following question related to the proposal.
Should other entities besides NRSROs be permitted to
access the arrangers' Internet Web sites? For example, should credit
rating agencies not registered with the Commission be permitted to
access the sites? If so, how could the amendment be crafted to ensure
that only entities meeting the definition of ``credit rating agency''
in Section 3(a)(61) of the Exchange Act be permitted to access the
arrangers' Internet Web sites?
iii. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(C)
Under proposed new paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(C), the arranger would
need to represent that it will post on its password-protected Internet
Web site all information the arranger provides to the NRSRO for the
purpose of determining the initial credit rating for the security or
money market instrument, including information about the
characteristics of the assets underlying or referenced by the security
or money market instrument, and the legal structure of the security or
money market instrument, at the same time such information is provided
to the NRSRO.
The Commission anticipates that the information that would be
disclosed (i.e., the information provided to the hired NRSRO to
determine the initial rating) generally would include the
characteristics of the assets in the pool underlying or referenced by
the structured finance product and the legal documentation setting
forth the capital structure of the trust, payment priorities with
respect to the tranche securities issued by the trust (the waterfall),
and all applicable covenants regarding the activities of the trust. For
example, for an initial rating for an RMBS, this information generally
would include the loan tape (frequently a spreadsheet) that identifies
each loan in the pool and its characteristics such as type of loan,
principal amount, loan-to-value ratio, borrower's FICO score, and
geographic location of the property. In addition, the disclosed
information also would include a description of the structure of the
trust, the credit enhancement levels for the tranche securities to be
issued by the trust, and the waterfall cash flow priorities.
The Commission intends that the proposed amendment only apply to
written information provided to the hired NRSRO. However, if the
amendment is adopted, the Commission would review whether arrangers
started providing information about the structured finance product
orally to avoid having to disclose it on their Internet Web sites. The
Commission believes that ultimately this would not benefit the arranger
since the NRSROs developing credit ratings through using the Internet
Web sites would be basing their ratings without the benefit of all of
the information. This could adversely impact the ratings and lead to
more frequent rating actions during the surveillance process when the
securities or money market instruments do not perform as anticipated.
Moreover, because the information would be disclosed only to other
NRSROs,
[[Page 6496]]
concerns of arrangers about releasing proprietary information should be
mitigated.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following question related to the proposal.
Should the amendment require the arranger to represent
that it will not provide any information to the hired NRSRO that is
material without also disclosing that information on the Internet Web
site?
For the purposes of this amendment, should the Commission
provide a standardized list of information that, at a minimum, should
be disclosed? If so, what information should the list include? Do any
commenters believe that this would have the effect of impermissibly
regulating the substance of credit ratings and the methodologies used
to determine credit ratings?
iv. Proposed New Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(D)
Under proposed new paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(D), the arranger would
need to represent that it will post on the password-protected Internet
Web site all information the arranger provides to the NRSRO for the
purpose of undertaking credit rating surveillance on the security or
money market instrument, including information about the
characteristics and performance of the assets underlying or referenced
by the security or money market instrument at the same time such
information is provided to the NRSRO. This would be the information, if
any, that the arranger provides to the hired NRSRO to perform any
ratings surveillance.\85\ The Commission anticipates that generally
this information would consist of reports from the trustee describing
how the assets in the pool underlying the structured finance product
are performing. For an RMBS credit rating, this information likely
would include the ``trustee report'' customarily generated to reflect
the performance of the loans constituting the collateral pool. For
example, an RMBS trustee may generate reports describing the percentage
of loans that are 30, 60, and 90 days in arrears, the percentage that
have defaulted, the recovery of principal from defaulted loans, and
information regarding any modifications to the loans in the asset pool.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ Re-proposed paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(D) of Rule 17g-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The disclosure of this information would allow NRSROs that
determined unsolicited initial ratings to monitor on a continuing basis
the creditworthiness of the tranche securities issued by the trust.
Under the representation, the arranger would need to provide this
information at the time it is provided to the NRSRO hired to perform
the rating. The Commission notes that the representation only relates
to information provided by the arranger to the hired NRSRO. If the
hired NRSRO conducts surveillance using information provided by third-
party vendors, this information would not need to be disclosed.
Instead, the NRSROs monitoring ``unsolicited'' ratings would need to
contract with the third-party vendor to obtain the information.
As with the initial rating information provided under proposed
paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(C), the Commission does not intend the rule to
require the disclosure of oral communications between the NRSRO and the
issuer, sponsor, or underwriter. The information provided on the
issuer's Web site only would need to be the written information given
to the NRSRO.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following question related to the proposal.
What type of information for monitoring ratings of
structured finance products is typically provided by arrangers to
NRSROs? What type of information is typically obtained by NRSROs
contracting with third-party vendors?
For the purposes of this amendment, should the Commission
provide a standardized list of information that, at a minimum, should
be disclosed? If so, what information should the list include? Do any
commenters believe that this would have the effect of impermissibly
regulating the substance of credit ratings and the methodologies used
to determine credit ratings?
3. Proposed New Paragraph (e)
An NRSRO, in order to access the Internet Web sites maintained by
other NRSROs and the arrangers, would need to annually execute and
furnish to the Commission the following certification:
The undersigned hereby certifies that it will access the Internet
Web sites described in Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) solely for the purpose
of determining or monitoring credit ratings. Further, the
undersigned certifies that it will keep the information it accesses
pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) confidential and treat it as
material nonpublic information subject to its written policies and
procedures established, maintained, and enforced pursuant to section
15E(g)(1) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-7(g)(1)) and Sec. 240.17g-4.
Further, the undersigned certifies that it will determine and
maintain credit ratings for at least 10% of the issued securities
and money market instruments for which it accesses information
pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3)(iii), if it accesses such
information for 10 or more issued securities or money market
instruments in the calendar year covered by the certification.
Further, the undersigned certifies one of the following as
applicable: (1) In the most recent calendar year during which it
accessed information pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3), the
undersigned accessed information for [Insert Number] issued
securities and money market instruments through Internet Web sites
described in Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) and determined and maintained
credit ratings for [Insert Number] of such securities and money
market instruments; or (2) The undersigned previously has not
accessed information pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) 10 or more
times in a calendar year.
The NRSRO would need to furnish this certification to the
Commission each calendar year that the NRSRO seeks access to the NRSRO
and arranger Internet Web sites. In addition, the NRSRO would be
required to certify that it will determine and maintain credit ratings
for at least 10% of the issued securities and money market instruments
if it accesses information pursuant to the proposed rule 10 or more
times in a calendar year. The use of the term ``issued securities and
money market instruments'' is intended to address potential deals that
are posted on the Internet Web sites but that ultimately do not result
in final ratings because the arranger decides not to issue the
securities or money market instruments. An NRSRO that accessed such
information would not need to count it among the final deals that would
be used to determine whether it met the 10% threshold.
The 10% threshold is designed to require the NRSRO to determine a
meaningful amount of credit ratings without forcing it to undertake
work that it may not have the capacity or resources to perform. For
example, the NRSRO may access information about a proposed deal that
involves a structure or a type of assets that are new and that the
NRSRO has not developed a methodology to incorporate into its ratings.
It would not be appropriate or prudent to require the NRSRO to
determine a credit rating in this case. At the same time, the
Commission believes there should be some minimum level of credit
ratings issued to demonstrate that the NRSRO is accessing the
information for the purpose of determining credit ratings.
An NRSRO that has accessed information under this program for one
calendar would be required to report in
[[Page 6497]]
its next certification the number of times it accessed the information
for issued securities and money market instruments and the number of
credit ratings determined using that information. This is designed to
provide a level of verification that the NRSRO is, in fact, accessing
the information for purposes of determining credit ratings.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following questions related to the proposal.
Should the minimum requirement for the number of credit
ratings that must be determined using the information posted on
arranger Internet Web sites be higher than 10% of the deals reviewed?
For example, should it be 15%, 20%, 50% or a larger percentage?
Alternatively, should the requirement be less than 10%? For example,
should it be 5% or 2%?
If an NRSRO accesses information 10 or more times in a
calendar year and does not determine credit ratings for 10% or more of
the deals reviewed, should the NRSRO be prohibited from accessing the
NRSRO and sponsor information in the future? If so, should the NRSRO be
prohibited from accessing the information for a prescribed period of
time (e.g., 6 months, 12 months, 18 months, 24 months or some longer
period)?
E. Proposed Amendment to Regulation FD
The Commission is proposing to amend Regulation FD \86\ to
accommodate the information disclosure program that would be
established under the re-proposed amendments to paragraphs (a) and (b)
of Rule 17g-5. Regulation FD requires that an issuer or any person
acting on an issuer's behalf publicly disclose material non-public
information if the information is disclosed to certain persons.\87\
Under Rule 100(b)(2)(iii) of Regulation FD, the issuer or person acting
on the issuer's behalf need not make the public disclosure if the
disclosure of material non-public information is made to an entity
whose primary business is the issuance of credit ratings, provided the
information is disclosed solely for the purpose of developing a credit
rating and the entity's ratings are publicly available.\88\ Thus, under
this provision, the information can be disclosed to a credit rating
agency if: (1) It is being disclosed for the purpose of developing a
credit rating; and (2) the credit rating agency makes the rating
publicly available. The Commission is proposing to amend Rule
100(b)(2)(iii) of Regulation FD to permit the disclosure of material
non-public information to NRSROs irrespective of whether they make
their ratings publicly available. This would accommodate subscriber-
based NRSROs that do not make their ratings publicly available for free
and it would accommodate NRSROs that access the information under the
proposed Rule 17g-5 disclosure program but ultimately do not issue a
credit rating using the information.
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\86\ 17 CFR 243.100, 243.101, 243.102 and 243.103.
\87\ See 17 CFR 243.100(a).
\88\ See 17 CFR 243.100(b)(2)(iii).
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Under the re-proposed amendments to paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule
17g-5, arrangers would agree to disclose information to any credit
rating agency registered with the Commission as an NRSRO. The
information disclosed likely would include material non-public
information and, consequently, the arranger would need to rely on the
exclusions to Regulation FD in order to disclose it to NRSROs without
simultaneously making a public disclosure of the information.
Currently, the exclusions in Regulation FD include disclosing material
non-public information ``to an entity whose primary business is the
issuance of credit ratings, provided the information is disclosed
solely for the purpose of developing a credit rating and the entity's
ratings are publicly available.'' \89\ NRSROs that operate under the
issuer-pays model make their ratings available to the public for free
because they typically are compensated by the issuer or arranger whose
security is being rating. Subscriber-based NRSROs are not compensated
by the issuer or arrangers but, rather, by subscribers who pay for
access to their ratings. Consequently, their credit ratings are not
disclosed to the public free of charge but, instead, only to those
persons who agree to pay them for access to the credit ratings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ 17 CFR 243.100(b)(2)(iii).
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The Commission preliminarily believes that credit rating agencies
that are registered with the Commission as NRSROs should be able to
receive material non-public information from arrangers for the purpose
of developing unsolicited credit ratings for structured finance
products. The Commission recognizes that their credit ratings are not
as broadly disseminated as the credit ratings of the issuer-pays credit
rating agencies. However, because the proposed amendment would limit
the exclusion to NRSROs, the entities receiving the material non-public
information would be subject to Section 15E(g) of the Exchange Act and
Rule 17g-4 thereunder.\90\ These statutory and regulatory provisions
require NRSROs to establish, maintain and enforce policies and
procedures reasonably designed to prevent the misuse of material non-
public information. Furthermore, the Commission has examination
authority with respect to NRSROs. Moreover, the proposed disclosure
program for Rule 17g-5 would be triggered only when an issuer-pay NRSRO
is hired to perform a credit rating. Therefore, a publicly disclosed
credit rating for the structured finance product likely would be issued
along with any unsolicited ratings from subscriber-based NRSROs. For
these reasons, the Commission preliminarily believes it would be
appropriate to eliminate the requirement in Regulation FD to make the
ratings public for credit rating agencies that are registered with the
Commission as NRSROs and who receive the information under the proposed
disclosure program under Rule 17g-5.
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\90\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(g).
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Finally, the Commission also is proposing to amend the current text
in Rule 100(b)(2)(iii) of Regulation FD that identifies credit rating
agencies as ``an entity whose primary business is the issuance of
credit ratings.'' \91\ Since the adoption of Regulation FD, Congress,
through the Rating Agency Act, enacted a statutory definition of
``credit rating agency.'' \92\ The definition is in Section 3(a)(61) of
the Exchange Act.\93\ The Commission, therefore, proposes to use the
statutory definition of ``credit rating agency'' in Rule 100(b)(2)(iii)
of Regulation FD.
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\91\ 17 CFR 243.100(b)(2)(iii).
\92\ See 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(61).
\93\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(61).
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The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
proposed new paragraph to Rule 17g-5. In addition, the Commission
requests comment on the following questions related to the proposal.
Is the proposed change to Regulation FD necessary or
appropriate? Would a different approach work better? For instance,
would it be better to revise the exception in Regulation FD to apply to
any information given to any NRSRO so long as the ratings of at least
one NRSRO are publicly available.
Should the Commission broaden the exclusion to information
that is provided to NRSROs beyond the proposed Rule 17g-5 disclosure
program (e.g., information provided to develop ratings for corporate
issuers)?
[[Page 6498]]
Does disclosure of this information to all NRSROs raise
any concerns that Regulation FD was designed to address?
Would the Commission's use of the statutory definition of
``credit rating agency'' in Section 3(a)(61) of the Exchange Act in
Rule 100(b)(2)(iii) of Regulation FD prevent entities that currently
receive information under the exclusion from continuing to receive such
information? Commenters that believe it would prevent entities from
continuing to receive the information should specifically describe how
the entities in question would not meet the statutory definition of
``credit rating agency.''
IV. General Request for Comment
The Commission invites interested persons to submit written
comments on any aspect of the proposed amendments, in addition to the
specific requests for comments. Further, the Commission invites comment
on other matters that might have an effect on the proposals contained
in the release, including any competitive impact.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of the proposed amendment to Rule 17g-2 and the
re-proposed amendment to Rule 17g-5 (collectively, the ``Proposed Rule
Amendments'') contain a ``collection of information'' within the
meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA''). The
Commission is submitting these proposed amendments to the Office of
Management and Budget (``OMB'') for review in accordance with the PRA.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
comply with, a collection of information unless it displays a currently
valid control number. The titles for the collections of information
are:
(1) Rule 17g-2, Records to be made and retained by nationally
recognized statistical rating organizations (OMB Control Number 3235-
0628); and
(2) Rule 17g-5, Conflicts of interest (a proposed new collection of
information).
A. Collections of Information Under the Proposed Rule Amendments
The Commission is proposing for comment rule amendments to
prescribe additional requirements for NRSROs. The proposed amendments
to Rule 17g-2 would require NRSROs to make publicly available ratings
action histories for certain issuer-paid credit ratings. In addition,
the re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5 would modify rules the
Commission adopted in 2007 to implement conflicts of interest
requirements under the Rating Agency Act. Both sets of amendments would
contain recordkeeping and disclosure requirements that would be subject
to the PRA. The collection of information obligations imposed by the
Proposed Rule Amendments would be mandatory. The Proposed Rule
Amendments, however, would apply only to credit rating agencies that
are registered with the Commission as NRSROs. Such registration is
voluntary.\94\
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\94\ See Section 15E of the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-7).
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In summary, the Proposed Rule Amendments would require an NRSRO to
publicly disclose certain ratings actions histories and would require
an NRSRO and an issuer to disclose to other NRSROs certain information
required to determine and monitor a credit rating for a structured
finance security or money market instrument.\95\
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\95\ See proposed Rule 17g-2(d) and re-proposed Rule 17g-
5(a)(3), (b)(9) and (e).
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B. Proposed Use of Information
The collections of information in the Proposed Rule Amendments are
designed to provide users of credit ratings with information upon which
to evaluate the performance of NRSROs and to enhance the accuracy of
credit ratings for structured finance products by increasing
competition among NRSROs who rate these products.
C. Respondents
In adopting the final rules under the Rating Agency Act, the
Commission estimated that approximately 30 credit rating agencies would
be registered as NRSROs.\96\ The Commission believes that this estimate
continues to be appropriate for identifying the number of respondents
for purposes of the amendments. Since the initial set of rules under
the Rating Agency Act became effective in June 2007, ten credit rating
agencies have registered with the Commission as NRSROs.\97\ The
registration program has been in effect for over a year; consequently,
the Commission expects additional entities will register. While 20 more
entities may not ultimately register, the Commission believes the
estimate is within reasonable bounds and appropriate given that it adds
an element of conservatism to its paperwork burden estimates as well as
cost estimates.
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\96\ See June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33607.
\97\ A.M. Best Company, Inc.; DBRS Ltd.; Fitch; Japan Credit
Rating Agency, Ltd.; Moody's; Rating and Investment Information,
Inc.; S&P; LACE Financial Corp.; Egan-Jones Rating Company; and
Realpoint LLC.
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In addition, under the re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5,
arrangers of structured finance products would need to disclose certain
information to NRSROs. For purposes of the PRA estimate, based on staff
information gained from the NRSRO examination process, the Commission
estimates that there would be approximately 200 respondents, which is
the same number of respondents the Commission originally proposed would
be affected by the amendments. The Commission received no comments on
this estimate when originally proposed.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of these
estimates for the number of respondents and the number of arrangers. In
addition, the Commission requests specific comment on the following
items related to these estimates.
Should the Commission use the number of credit rating
agencies currently registered as NRSROs rather than the estimated
number of 30 ultimate registrants? Alternatively, is there a basis to
estimate a different number of likely registrants?
Should the Commission use different estimates for the
number of NRSROs that would be subject to the proposed amendments to
Rule 17g-2 and re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5. For example,
should the Commission develop estimates based on the number of NRSROs
that determine issuer-paid credit ratings as opposed to subscriber-paid
credit ratings?
Are there sources that could provide credible information
that could be used to determine the number of issuers that would be
subject to the proposed paperwork burdens? Commenters should identify
any such sources and explain how a given source could be used to either
support the Commission's estimate or arrive at a different estimate.
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these burden estimates.
D. Total Annual Recordkeeping and Reporting Burden
As discussed in further detail below, the Commission estimates the
total recordkeeping burden resulting from the Proposed Rule Amendments
would be approximately 169,045 hours on an
[[Page 6499]]
annual basis \98\ and 69,315 hours on a one-time basis.\99\
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\98\ This total is derived from the total annual hours set forth
in the order that the totals appear in the text: 105 + 14,880 +
4,000 + 150,000 + 60 = 169,045.
\99\ This total is derived from the total one-time hours set
forth in the order that the totals appear in the text: 315 + 9,000 +
60,000 = 69,315.
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The total annual and one-time hour burden estimates described below
are averages across all types of NRSROs expected to be affected by the
Proposed Rule Amendments. The size and complexity of NRSROs range from
small entities to entities that are part of complex global
organizations employing thousands of credit analysts. Consequently, the
burden hour estimates represent the average time across all NRSROs. The
Commission further notes that, given the significant variance in size
between the largest NRSROs and the smallest NRSROs, the burden
estimates, as averages across all NRSROs, are skewed higher because the
largest firms currently predominate in the industry.
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 17g-2
Rule 17g-2 requires an NRSRO to make and keep current certain
records relating to its business and requires an NRSRO to preserve
those and other records for certain prescribed time periods.\100\ The
version of Rule 17g-2 adopted today (``New Rule 17g-2'') requires an
NRSRO to make and retain a record showing the ratings action histories
and with respect to each current credit rating.\101\ New Rule 17g-2
also requires an NRSRO to make public, in XBRL format and with a six-
month grace period, the ratings action histories required under new
paragraph (a)(8) for a random sample of 10% of the issuer-paid credit
ratings for each ratings class for which it has issued 500 or more
ratings paid for by the obligor being rated or by the issuer,
underwriter, or sponsor of the security being rated.\102\
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\100\ 17 CFR 240.17g-2.
\101\ Paragraph (a)(8) of Rule 17g-2.
\102\ Amendment to Rule 17g-2(d).
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When adopting New Rule 17g-2, the Commission determined that, on
average, an NRSRO subject to the requirements will spend approximately
30 hours to publicly disclose the rating action histories in XBRL
format and, thereafter, 10 hours per year to update this
information.\103\ Accordingly, the total aggregate one-time burden to
the industry to make the rating action histories publicly available in
XBRL format will be 210 hours,\104\ and the total aggregate annual
burden hours will be 70 hours.\105\ The Commission based the total
estimates on the fact that based on information furnished on Form
NRSRO, seven of the ten currently registered NRSROs issue 500 or more
ratings under the issuer-pay model in at least one of the classes of
ratings for which they are registered. The Commission believed that
even as the number of registered NRSROs expands to the 30 ultimately
expected to register, this number will remain constant, as new entrants
are likely to operate on a subscriber-pay basis, at least in the near
future. In addition, the Commission believed that each of the NRSROs
affected by this new requirement already has, or will have, an Internet
Web site.
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\103\ The Commission also based this estimate on the current
one-time and annual burden hours for an NRSRO to publicly disclose
its Form NRSRO. No alternatives to these estimates as proposed were
suggested by commenters and the Commission adopted these hour
burdens. See Companion Adopting Release.
\104\ 30 hours x 7 NRSROs = 210 hours.
\105\ 10 hours x 7 NRSROs = 70 hours.
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The proposed amendments to Rule 17g-2(d) would require NRSROs to
publicly disclose ratings action histories of all outstanding issuer-
paid credit ratings with up to a 12-month time lag before a new rating
action must be disclosed. The Commission estimates, based on staff
experience, that the hour burdens for an NRSRO to publicly disclose
this information would increase 50% from the current estimates for
disclosing ratings action histories for a randomly selected sample of
10% of the outstanding issuer-paid credit ratings. Therefore, the
Commission estimates that the one-time annual hour burden will increase
from 30 hours to 45 hours \106\ and the annual hour burden will
increase from 10 hours to 15 hours.\107\ Accordingly, the Commission
estimates that the total aggregate one-time burden for NRSROs to comply
with this requirement would be approximately 315 hours,\108\ and the
total aggregate annual burden hours would be approximately 105
hours.\109\
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\106\ 50% of 30 hours = 15 hours + 30 hours = 45 hours.
\107\ 50% of 10 hours = 5 hours + 10 hours = 15 hours.
\108\ 45 hours x 7 NRSROs = 315 hours.
\109\ 15 hours x 7 NRSROs = 105 hours.
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The Commission requests comment on all aspects of these burden
estimates for the proposed amendments to Rule 17g-2(d). In addition,
the Commission requests specific comment on the following items related
to these estimates:
If the Commission were to adopt a final rule that
subjected subscriber-paid credit ratings to the public disclosure
requirement, would the hour burden estimates per firm be the same as
estimated by the Commission above or would they change. Commenters
should give specific hour estimates in their comments.
If the Commission were to adopt a final rule subjecting
subscriber-paid credit ratings to the public disclosure requirements
being adopted today (the random sample of 10% of issuer-paid credit
ratings in a class of rating), would the hour burden estimates per firm
be the same as estimated by the Commission in the Adopting Release or
would they change. Commenters should give specific hour estimates in
their comments.
Are there publicly available reports or other data sources
the Commission should consider in arriving at these burden estimates?
Are the estimates of the one-time and recurring burdens of
the re-proposed additional disclosures accurate? If not, should they be
higher or lower?
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these burden estimates.
2. Re-Proposed Rule 17g-5
Rule 17g-5 requires an NRSRO to manage and disclose certain
conflicts of interest.\110\ The rule also prohibits specific types of
conflicts of interest.\111\ The re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5
would add an additional conflict to paragraph (b) of Rule 17g-5 for
NRSROs to manage. This re-proposed conflict of interest would be
issuing or maintaining a credit rating for a security or money market
instrument issued by an asset pool or as part of an asset-backed or
mortgage-backed securities transaction that was paid for by the issuer,
sponsor, or underwriter of the security or money market
instrument.\112\ Under the re-proposal, an NRSRO would be prohibited
from issuing a credit rating for a structured finance product, unless
certain information about the transaction and the assets underlying the
structured finance product are disclosed.\113\
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\110\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5.
\111\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(c).
\112\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(b)(9). The current paragraph
(b)(9) would be renumbered as (b)(10).
\113\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3).
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Specifically, an NRSRO rating such products would need to disclose
to other NRSROs the following information on a password protected
Internet Web site:
A list of each such security or money market instrument
for which it is currently in the process of determining
[[Page 6500]]
an initial credit rating in chronological order and identifying the
type of security or money market instrument, the name of the issuer,
the date the rating process was initiated, and the Internet Web site
address where the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter of the security or
money market instrument represents that the information described in
paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D) of re-proposed Rule 17g-5 can be
accessed.\114\
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\114\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(i).
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For purposes of this PRA, the Commission estimates that it would
take an NRSRO approximately 300 hours to develop a system, as well as
policies and procedures, for the disclosures required by the re-
proposed rule. This estimate is based on the Commission's experience
with, and burden estimates for, the recordkeeping requirements for
NRSROs.\115\ Accordingly, the Commission believes, based on staff
experience, an NRSRO would take approximately 300 hours on a one-time
basis to implement a disclosure system to comply with the proposal in
that a respondent would need a set of policies and procedures for
disclosing the information, as well as a system for making the
information publicly available. This would result in a total one-time
hour burden of 9,000 hours for 30 NRSROs.\116\
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\115\ See June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33609.
\116\ 300 hours x 30 NRSROs = 9,000 hours.
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In addition to the one-time hour burden, the re-proposed amendments
would result in an annual hour burden to the NRSRO arising from the
requirement to make disclosures for each deal being rated. In the June
18 Proposing Release, the Commission estimated that a large NRSRO would
have rated approximately 2,000 new RMBS and CDO transactions in a given
year. The Commission based this estimate on the number of new RMBS and
CDO deals rated in 2006 by two of the largest NRSROs which rated
structured finance transactions. The Commission adjusted this number to
4,000 transactions in order to account for other types of structured
finance products, including commercial real estate MBS and other
consumer assets. Accordingly, the Commission estimated that a large
NRSRO would rate approximately 4,000 new structured finance
transactions during a calendar year. The Commission did not receive any
comments with respect to that estimate. The Commission recognizes that
the number of new structured finance transactions has dropped
precipitously since 2006 because of the credit market turmoil.
Nonetheless, the Commission preliminarily is retaining the estimate of
4,000 new deals per year as an element of conservatism and to account
for future market developments.
Based on the number of outstanding structured finance ratings
submitted by the ten registered NRSROs on their Form NRSROs, the
Commission estimates that the three largest NRSROs account for 97% of
the market for structured finance ratings. Therefore, the Commission
estimates that each of the NRSROs in this category would be hired to
rate 97% of the 4,000 new deals per year for a total of 11,640
ratings.\117\ The Commission further estimates that the NRSROs that are
not in this category would each rate 3% of the 4,000 new deals for a
total of 3,240 ratings.\118\ Thus, the Commission estimates that the
total structured finance ratings issued by all NRSROs in a given year
would be 14,880.\119\ Based on staff experience, the Commission
estimates that it would take approximately 1 hour per transaction for
the NRSRO to update the lists maintained on the NRSROs' password
protected Internet Web sites. Therefore, the Commission estimates for
purposes of the PRA that the total annual hour burden for the industry
would be 14,880 hours.\120\
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\117\ (4,000 ratings x .97) x 3 = 11,640.
\118\ (4,000 ratings x .03) x 27 = 3,240.
\119\ (3,880 x 3) + (120 x 27) = 14,880 transactions.
\120\ 14,880 ratings x 1 hour = 14,880 hours.
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The re-proposed amendments also would require that the arranger
disclose the following information:
All information the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter
provides to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization
for the purpose of determining the initial credit rating for the
security or money market instrument, including information about the
characteristics of the assets underlying or referenced by the security
or money market instrument, and the legal structure of the security or
money market instrument, at the same time such information is provided
to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization; and
All information the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter
provides to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization
for the purpose of undertaking credit rating surveillance on the
security or money market instrument, including information about the
characteristics and performance of the assets underlying or referenced
by the security or money market instrument at the same time such
information is provided to the nationally recognized statistical rating
organization.\121\
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\121\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(iii).
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The Commission estimates that there would be approximately 200 such
respondents. For purposes of this PRA, the Commission estimates that it
would take a respondent approximately 300 hours to develop a system, as
well as policies and procedures, for the disclosures required by the
re-proposed rule. This estimate is based on the Commission's experience
with, and burden estimates for, the recordkeeping requirements for
NRSROs.\122\ Accordingly, the Commission believes, based on staff
experience, an arranger would take approximately 300 hours on a one-
time basis to implement a disclosure system to comply with the
proposal, which includes the estimate that a respondent would need a
set of policies and procedures for disclosing the information, as well
as a system for making the information publicly available. This would
result in a total one-time hour burden of 60,000 hours for 200
respondents.\123\ The Commission received no comments on an identical
burden estimate in the original proposing release.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ See June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33609.
\123\ 300 hours x 200 respondents = 60,000 hours.
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In addition to the one-time hour burden, the re-proposed amendments
would result in an annual hour burden for arrangers. Specifically, the
re-proposed amendments would require disclosure of information on a
transaction-by-transaction basis when an initial rating process is
commenced. Based on staff experience, the Commission estimates that
each respondent would disclose information for approximately 20 new
transactions per year and that it would take approximately 1 hour per
transaction to post the information to the password protected Internet
Web sites. The Commission estimates that a large NRSRO would have rated
approximately 2,000 new RMBS and CDO transactions in a given year. The
Commission is basing this estimate on the number of new RMBS and CDO
deals rated in 2006 by two of the largest NRSROs that rated structured
finance transactions. The Commission is adjusting this number to 4,000
transactions in order to include other types of structured finance
products, including commercial MBS and other consumer assets.
Therefore, the Commission estimates for purposes of the PRA that each
respondent would arrange approximately 20 new
[[Page 6501]]
transactions per year.\124\ The Commission notes that the number of new
transactions per year would vary by the size of issuer and that this
estimate would be an average across all respondents. Larger respondents
may arrange in excess of 20 new deals per year, while a smaller
arranger may only initiate one or two new deals on an annual basis.
Based on this analysis, the Commission estimates that it would take a
respondent approximately 20 hours \125\ to disclose this information
under the re-proposed rule, on an annual basis, for a total aggregate
annual hour burden of 4,000 hours.\126\ The Commission received no
comments on an identical burden estimate in the original proposing
release.
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\124\ 4,000 new transactions/200 issuers = 20 new transactions.
\125\ 20 transactions x 1 hour = 20 hours.
\126\ 20 hours x 200 respondents = 4,000 hours.
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In addition, re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(iii)(D) would require
disclosure of information provided to an NRSRO to be used for credit
rating surveillance on a security or money market instrument. Because
surveillance would cover more than just initial ratings, the
Commission, in the original proposing release, estimated based on staff
information gained from the NRSRO examination process that monthly
disclosure would be required with respect to approximately 125
transactions on an ongoing basis. Also based on staff information
gained from the NRSRO examination process, the Commission estimated
that it would take a respondent approximately 0.5 hours per transaction
to disclose the information. Therefore, the Commission estimates that
each respondent would spend approximately 750 hours \127\ on an annual
basis disclosing information under re-proposed Rule 17g-5, for a total
aggregate annual burden hours of 150,000 hours.\128\ The Commission
received no comments on an identical estimate in the original proposing
release.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\127\ 125 transactions x 30 minutes x 12 months = 45,000
minutes/60 minutes = 750 hours.
\128\ 750 hours x 200 respondents = 150,000 hours.
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Finally, an NRSRO that wishes to access information on another
NRSRO's Web site or on an arranger's Web site would need to provide the
Commission with an annual certification described in proposed new
paragraph (e) to Rule 17g-5. The Commission estimates that this annual
certification would become a matter of routine over time and should
take less time than it takes an NRSRO to submit its annual
certification under Rule 17g-1(f).\129\ The annual certification
required under Rule 17g-1(f) involves the disclosure of substantially
more information than the certification in proposed paragraph (e) of
Rule 17g-5. The Commission estimated that it would take an NRSRO
approximately 10 hours to complete the Rule 17g-1(f) annual
certification.\130\ Given that the proposed paragraph (e) certification
would require much less information, the Commission estimates, based on
staff experience, that it would take an NRSRO approximately 20% of the
time it takes to do the Rule 17g-5 annual certification. Further, for
the purposes of the estimate, the Commission is assuming that all 30
NRSROs ultimately registered with the Commission would complete the
certification. For these reasons, the Commission estimates it would
take an NRSRO approximately 2 hours \131\ to complete the proposed
paragraph (e) certification for an aggregate annual hour burden to the
industry of 60 hours.\132\
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\129\ 17 CFR 240.17g-1(f).
\130\ See June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33609.
\131\ 20% of 10 hours = 2 hours.
\132\ 2 hours x 30 NRSROs = 60 hours.
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The Commission again requests comment on all aspects of these
burden estimates for the amendments to Rule 17g-5 as re-proposed. In
addition, the Commission requests specific comment on the following
items related to these estimates:
Are there publicly available reports or other data sources
the Commission should consider in arriving at these burden estimates?
Are the estimates of the one-time and recurring burdens of
the re-proposed additional disclosures accurate? If not, should they be
higher or lower?
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these burden estimates.
E. Collection of Information Is Mandatory
The recordkeeping and notice requirements for the Proposed Rule
Amendments would be mandatory.
F. Confidentiality
The disclosures that would be required under the proposed
amendments to Rule 17g-2(d) would be public. The disclosures that would
be required under the re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5 would be
made available to other NRSROs. The NRSROs would need to provide
certifications agreeing to keep the propose Rule 17g-5 information
confidential.
G. Record Retention Period
There is no record retention period for the Proposed Rule
Amendments.
H. Request for Comment
The Commission requests comment on the proposed collections of
information in order to: (1) Evaluate whether the proposed collection
of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions
of the Commission, including whether the information would have
practical utility; (2) evaluate the accuracy of the Commission's
estimates of the burden of the proposed collections of information; (3)
determine whether there are ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected; (4) evaluate whether there
are ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on
those who respond, including through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology; and (5) evaluate
whether the Proposed Rule Amendments would have any effects on any
other collection of information not previously identified in this
section.
Persons who desire to submit comments on the collection of
information requirements should direct their comments to the OMB,
Attention: Desk Officer for the Securities and Exchange Commission,
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, and
should also send a copy of their comments to Secretary, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090, and
refer to File No. S7-04-09. OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the collections of information between 30 and 60 days after
publication of this document in the Federal Register; therefore,
comments to OMB are best assured of having full effect if OMB receives
them within 30 days of this publication. Requests for the materials
submitted to OMB by the Commission with regard to these collections of
information should be in writing, refer to File No. S7-04-09, and be
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Records Management
Office, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549.
VI. Costs and Benefits of the Re-Proposed Rules
The Commission is sensitive to the costs and benefits that result
from its rules. The Commission has identified certain costs and
benefits of the Proposed Rule Amendments and requests comment on all
aspects of this cost-benefit analysis, including
[[Page 6502]]
identification and assessment of any costs and benefits not discussed
in the analysis.\133\ The Commission seeks comment and data on the
value of the benefits identified. The Commission also welcomes comments
on the accuracy of its cost estimates in each section of this cost-
benefit analysis, and requests those commenters to provide data so the
Commission can improve the cost estimates, including identification of
statistics relied on by commenters to reach conclusions on cost
estimates. Finally, the Commission seeks estimates and views regarding
these costs and benefits for particular types of market participants,
as well as any other costs or benefits that may result from the
adoption of these Proposed Rule Amendments.
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\133\ For the purposes of this cost/benefit analysis, the
Commission is using salary data from the Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association (``SIFMA'') Report on Management and
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2007, which
provides base salary and bonus information for middle-management and
professional positions within the securities industry. The
Commission believes that the salaries for these securities industry
positions would be comparable to the salaries of similar positions
in the credit rating industry. Finally, the salary costs derived
from the report and referenced in this cost benefit section are
modified to account for an 1800-hour work year and multiplied by
5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size, employee benefits and
overhead. The Commission used comparable assumptions in adopting the
final rules implementing the Rating Agency Act in 2007, requested
comments on such assumptions, and received no comments in response
to its request. See June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33611,
note 576. Hereinafter, references to data derived from the report as
modified in the manner described above will be cited as ``SIFMA 2007
Report as Modified.''
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A. Benefits
The purposes of the Rating Agency Act, as stated in the
accompanying Senate Report, are to improve ratings quality for the
protection of investors and in the public interest by fostering
accountability, transparency, and competition in the credit rating
industry.\134\ As the Senate Report states, the Rating Agency Act
establishes ``fundamental reform and improvement of the designation
process'' with the goal that ``eliminating the artificial barrier to
entry will enhance competition and provide investors with more choices,
higher quality ratings, and lower costs.'' \135\
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\134\ Senate Report, p. 2.
\135\ Id, p. 7.
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The Proposed Rule Amendments are designed to improve the
transparency of credit ratings performance by making credit ratings
actions publicly available and the accuracy of credit ratings for
structured finance products by increasing competition among the NRSROs
that rate these securities and money market instruments.
The proposed amendment to Rule 17g-2(d) would require NRSROs to
publicly disclose all of their ratings actions histories for issuer-
paid credit ratings, in XBRL format and with a one-year grace period.
This disclosure would allow the marketplace to better compare the
performance of NRSROs determining issuer-paid credit ratings. The
Commission preliminarily believes that making this information publicly
available will provide users of credit ratings with innovative and
potentially more useful metrics with which to compare NRSROs.
In addition, under the re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5, NRSROs
that are paid by arrangers to determine credit ratings for structured
finance products would be required to maintain a password-protected
Internet Web site that lists each deal they have been hired to rate.
They also would be required to obtain representations from the arranger
hiring the NRSRO to determine the rating that the arranger will post
all information provided to the NRSRO to determine the rating and,
thereafter, to monitor the rating on a password-protected Internet Web
site. NRSROs not hired to determine and monitor the ratings would be
able to access the NRSRO Internet Web sites to learn of new deals being
rated and then access the arranger Internet Web sites to obtain the
information being provided by the arranger to the hired NRSRO during
the entire initial rating process and, thereafter, for the purpose of
surveillance. However, the ability of NRSROs to access these NRSRO and
arranger Internet Web sites would be limited to NRSROs that certify to
the Commission on an annual basis, among other things, that they are
accessing the information solely for the purpose of determining or
monitoring credit ratings, that they will keep the information
confidential and treat it as material non-public information, and that
they will determine credit ratings for at least 10% of the deals for
which they obtain information. They also would be required to disclose
in the certification the number of deals for which they obtained
information through accessing the Internet Web sites and the number of
ratings they issued using that information during the year covered by
their most recent certification.
The Commission is re-proposing these amendments to Rule 17g-5, in
part, pursuant to the authority in Section 15E(h)(2) of the Exchange
Act.\136\ The provisions in this section of the statute provide the
Commission with authority to prohibit, or require the management and
disclosure of, any potential conflict of interest relating to the
issuance of credit ratings by an NRSRO.\137\ The Commission
preliminarily believes the re-proposed amendments are necessary and
appropriate in the public interest and for the protection of investors
because they are designed to address conflicts of interest and improve
the quality of credit ratings for structured finance products by making
it possible for more NRSROs to rate structured finance products.
Generally, the information relied on by the hired NRSROs to rate
structured finance products is non-public. This makes it difficult for
other NRSROs to rate these securities and money market instruments. As
a result, the products frequently are issued with ratings from only one
or two NRSROs and only by NRSROs that are hired by the issuer, sponsor,
or underwriter (i.e., NRSROs that are subject to the conflict of being
repeatedly paid by certain arrangers to rate these securities and money
market instruments).
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\136\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-7(h)(2).
\137\ Id.
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The goal is to increase the number of ratings extant for a given
structured finance security or money market instrument and, in
particular, promote the issuance of ratings by NRSROs that are not
hired by the arranger. This would provide users of credit ratings with
a broader range of views on the creditworthiness of the security or
money market instrument and potentially expose an NRSRO that was unduly
influenced by the ``issuer-pay'' conflict into issuing higher than
warranted ratings. Furthermore, the proposal also is designed to make
it more difficult for arrangers to exert influence over the NRSROs they
hire to determine ratings for structured finance products.
Specifically, by opening up the rating process to more NRSROs, the
proposal could make it easier for the hired NRSRO to resist such
pressure by increasing the likelihood that any steps taken to
inappropriately favor the arranger could be exposed to the market
through the ratings issued by other NRSROs.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of these
Proposed Rule Amendment benefits. In addition, the Commission requests
specific comment on the following items related to these benefits.
Are there metrics available to quantify these benefits and
any other benefits the commenter may identify, including the
identification of sources
[[Page 6503]]
of empirical data that could be used for such metrics?
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these benefit estimates.
B. Costs
The cost of compliance with the Proposed Rule Amendments to a given
NRSRO would depend on its size and the complexity of its business
activities. The size and complexity of NRSROs vary significantly.
Therefore, the cost could vary significantly across NRSROs. The
Commission is providing estimates of the average cost per NRSRO taking
into consideration the variance in size and complexity of NRSROs. The
cost of compliance would also vary depending on which classes of credit
ratings an NRSRO issues and how many outstanding ratings it has in each
class. NRSROs which issue credit ratings for structured finance
products would incur higher compliance costs than those NRSROs which do
not issue such credit ratings or issue very few credit ratings in that
class. For these reasons, the cost estimates represent the average cost
across all NRSROs.
1. Proposed Amendment to Rule 17g-2
The proposed amendment to Rule 17g-2 would require NRSROs to make
100% of their ratings action histories for issuer-paid credit ratings
publicly available in an XBRL Interactive Data File, with a one year
grace period.\138\ As discussed with respect to the PRA, the Commission
estimates that, on average, an NRSRO would spend approximately 45 hours
to publicly disclose this information in an XBRL Interactive Data File
and, thereafter, 15 hours per year to update the information.\139\
Furthermore, as discussed in the PRA the Commission estimates that
although there will be 30 NRSROs, this amendment only applies to seven
NRSROs. For these reasons, the total aggregate one-time burden to the
industry to make the history of its rating actions publicly available
in an XBRL Interactive Data File would be 315 hours \140\ and the total
aggregate annual burden hours would be 105 hours.\141\ For cost
purposes, the Commission preliminarily believes that a senior
programmer would perform these functions. Accordingly, the Commission
estimates that an NRSRO would incur an average one-time cost of $13,005
and an average annual cost of $4,335, as a result of the proposed
amendment.\142\ Consequently, the total aggregate one-time cost to the
industry would be $91,035 \143\ and the total aggregate annual cost to
the industry would be $30,345.\144\
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\138\ See proposed amendment to Rule 17g-2(d).
\139\ The Commission also bases this estimate on the estimated
one time and annual burden hours it would take an NRSRO to publicly
disclose its Form NRSRO on its Web site. No comments were received
on these estimates in the final rule release. See June 5, 2007
Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33609.
\140\ 45 hours x 7 NRSROs = 315 hours.
\141\ 15 hours x 7 NRSROs = 105 hours.
\142\ The SIFMA 2007 Report as Modified indicates that the
average hourly cost for a Senior Programmer is $289. Therefore, the
average one-time cost would be $13,005 [(45 hours) x ($289 per
hour)] and the average annual cost would be $4,335 [(15 hours per
year) x ($289 per hour)].
\143\ 315 hours x $289 per hour.
\144\ 105 hours x $289 per hour.
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In addition, the proposed rules may impose other costs. For
example, making some information about ratings action histories
available to the public for free may have some impact on the business
models of NRSROs, although the proposed rules are designed to minimize
any impact. Further, the rule may affect NRSROs with different business
models differently, although the Commission seeks comment on how best
to promote competition among NRSROs. The rule also may impose costs to
purchase software to make this information publicly available.
The Commission notes that in the Companion Adopting Release the
Commission provided cost estimates for complying with all the final
amendments to Rule 17g-2 being adopted. In that release, the Commission
used a different methodology based on cost data provided by one large
NRSRO.\145\ The Commission is not relying exclusively on cost data for
the purposes of these amendments to Rule 17g-2 because the NRSRO was
discussing cost estimates for complying with all the proposed
amendments to Rule 17g-2 (not just the amendment relating to the
requirement to publicly disclose certain ratings action histories in an
XBRL format).
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\145\ See letter dated July 28, 2008 from Michel Madelain, Chief
Operating Officer, Moody's Investors Service.
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The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of these
cost estimates for the proposed amendments to Rule 17g-2. In addition,
the Commission requests specific comment on the following items related
to these cost estimates:
What costs would result from lost revenues incurred
because NRSROs subject to the rule may not be able to sell ratings
action histories if they are publicly disclosed under the proposed
rule?
If the Commission were to adopt a final rule that
subjected subscriber-paid credit ratings to the public disclosure
requirement, would the cost estimates per firm be the same as estimated
by the Commission above or would they change. Commenters should give
specific cost estimates in their comments.
If the Commission were to adopt a final rule subjecting
subscriber-paid credit ratings to the public disclosure requirements
being adopted today (the random sample of 10% of issuer-paid credit
ratings in a class of credit rating), would the cost estimates per firm
be the same as estimated by the Commission in the Adopting Release or
would they change. Commenters should give specific cost estimates in
their comments.
Would these proposals impose costs on other market
participants, including persons who use credit ratings to make
investment decisions or for regulatory purposes, and persons who
purchase services and products from NRSROs?
Would there be costs in addition to those identified
above, such as costs arising from systems changes and restructuring
business practices to account for the new reporting requirement?
Should the Commission rely more on the cost data provided
by the large NRSRO in its comments to the amendments to Rule 17g-2
proposed in the June 16, 2008 Proposing Release? If so, how should the
Commission modify that cost data to reflect that the June 16, 2008
Proposing Release proposed several different amendments to Rule 17g-2?
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these burden estimates.
2. Re-Proposed Rule 17g-5
Rule 17g-5 requires an NRSRO to manage and disclose certain
conflicts of interest.\146\ The rule also prohibits specific types of
conflicts of interest.\147\ The re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5
would add an additional conflict to paragraph (b) of Rule 17g-5 for
NRSROs to manage. This re-proposed conflict of interest would be
issuing or maintaining a credit rating for a security or money market
instrument issued by an asset pool or as part of an asset-backed or
mortgage-backed securities transaction that was paid for by the issuer,
sponsor, or underwriter of the security or money market
instrument.\148\ Under the re-proposal, an NRSRO
[[Page 6504]]
would be prohibited from issuing a credit rating for a structured
finance product, unless certain information about the transaction and
the assets underlying the structured finance product are
disclosed.\149\
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\146\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5.
\147\ 17 CFR 240.17g-5(c).
\148\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(b)(9). The current paragraph
(b)(9) would be renumbered as (b)(10).
\149\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3).
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Specifically, an NRSRO rating such products would need to disclose
to other NRSROs the following information on a password protected
Internet Web site:
A list of each such security or money market instrument
for which it is currently in the process of determining an initial
credit rating in chronological order and identifying the type of
security or money market instrument, the name of the issuer, the date
the rating process was initiated, and the Internet Web site address
where the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter of the security or money
market instrument represents that the information described in
paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D) of re-proposed Rule 17g-5 can be
accessed.\150\
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\150\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(i).
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The Commission estimates that the average one-time cost to each
NRSRO to establish the Internet Web site would be $65,850 \151\ and the
total aggregate one-time cost to all NRSROs would be $1,975,500.\152\
Further, as discussed with respect to the PRA, the Commission estimates
that it would take a large NRSRO approximately 3,880 hours \153\ and a
small NRSRO approximately 120 hours \154\ to disclose the information
under re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(i), on an annual basis, for a total
aggregate annual hour burden of 14,880 hours.\155\ For these reasons,
the Commission estimates that the average annual cost to a large NRSRO
would be $795,400, the average annual cost to NRSROs not in that
category would be $24,600 \156\ and the total annual cost to the NRSROs
would be $3,050,400.\157\
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\151\ The Commission estimates an NRSRO would have a Compliance
Manager and a Programmer Analyst perform these responsibilities, and
that each would spend 50% of the estimated hours performing these
responsibilities. The SIFMA 2007 Report as Modified indicates that
the average hourly cost for a Compliance Manager is $245 and the
average hourly cost for a Programmer Analyst is $194. Therefore, the
average one-time cost to an NRSRO would be ($150 hours x $245) +
(150 hours x $194) = $65,850.
\152\ $65,850 x 30 NRSROs = $1,975,500
\153\ 3,880 transactions x 1 hour = 3,880 hours.
\154\ 120 transactions x 1 hour = 120 hours.
\155\ (3,880 hours x 3) + (120 hours x 27) = 14,880 hours.
\156\ The Commission estimates an NRSRO would have a Webmaster
perform these responsibilities. The SIFMA 2007 Report as Modified
indicates that the average hourly cost for a Webmaster is $205.
Therefore, the average one-time cost to a large NRSRO would be 3,880
hours x $205 = $795,400 and the average one-time cost to NRSROs not
in that category would be 120 hours x $205 = $24,600.
\157\ ($795,400 x 3) + ($24,600 x 27) =$3,050,400.
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The Commission received one comment on the proposed costs in the
June 16, 2008 Proposing Release.\158\ The commenter stated that if the
amendments to Rule 17g-5(a)(3) were adopted, as proposed, it would cost
the NRSRO approximately $29,750,000 to build, test, and deploy a system
to comply with the June proposed amendments, and that the annual
ongoing costs would be approximately $8,224,700. These estimates were
based on the NRSRO being the entity that is required to disclose the
information. The commenter stated it would need to disclose information
that came to it in electronic, e-mail, paper, and voice formats, to
sort through which information was used to determine the rating, and to
then disclose this information. The re-proposed amendments do not
require the NRSRO to disclose the information provided to it to
determine initial ratings and subsequently monitor those ratings (the
arranger would need to disclose this information).
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\158\ S&P Letter.
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In addition, the proposed rule requiring NRSROs and arrangers to
share information with other NRSROs may affect the quantity and quality
of information they provide. Moreover, the requirement to disclose
ratings actions histories for a random sample of 10% of certain
outstanding credit ratings may create an incentive not to access the
information. The Commission seeks comments on the possible effects and
alternatives to mitigate them. The proposed rule also could require an
NRSRO to purchase software to implement the public disclosure of the
ratings action histories.
The re-proposed amendments also would require that the arranger to
disclose the following information:
All information the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter
provides to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization
for the purpose of determining the initial credit rating for the
security or money market instrument, including information about the
characteristics of the assets underlying or referenced by the security
or money market instrument, and the legal structure of the security or
money market instrument, at the same time such information is provided
to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization; and
All information the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter
provides to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization
for the purpose of undertaking credit rating surveillance on the
security or money market instrument, including information about the
characteristics and performance of the assets underlying or referenced
by the security or money market instrument at the same time such
information is provided to the nationally recognized statistical rating
organization.\159\
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\159\ See re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(iii).
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For purposes of the PRA, the Commission estimates that it would
take a respondent approximately 300 hours to develop a system, as well
as policies and procedures to disclose the information as required
under the re-proposed rule. This would result in a total one-time hour
burden of 60,000 hours for 200 respondents.\160\ For these reasons, the
Commission estimates that the average one-time cost to each respondent
would be $65,850 \161\ and the total aggregate one-time cost to the
industry would be $13,116,000.\162\
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\160\ 300 hours x 200 respondents = 60,000 hours.
\161\ The Commission estimates an issuer would have a Compliance
Manager and a Programmer Analyst perform these responsibilities, and
that each would spend 50% of the estimated hours performing these
responsibilities. The SIFMA 2007 Report as Modified indicates that
the average hourly cost for a Compliance Manager is $245 and the
average hourly cost for a Programmer Analyst is $194. Therefore, the
average one-time cost to an issuer would be (150 hours x $245) +
(150 hours x $194) = $65,850.
\162\ $65,580 x 200 respondents = $13,116,000.
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As discussed with respect to the PRA, in addition to the one-time
hour burden, respondents also would be required to disclose the
required information under re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3) on a
transaction by transaction basis. Based on staff information gained
from the NRSRO examination process, the Commission estimates that the
re-proposed amendments would require each respondent to disclose
information with respect to approximately 20 new transactions per year
and that it would take approximately 1 hour per transaction to make the
information publicly available.\163\ Therefore, as
[[Page 6505]]
discussed with respect to the PRA, the Commission estimates that it
would take a respondent approximately 20 hours \164\ to disclose this
information under re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(iii), on an annual
basis, for a total aggregate annual hour burden of 4,000.\165\ For
these reasons, the Commission estimates that the average annual cost to
a respondent would be $4,100 \166\ and the total annual cost to the
industry would be $820,000.\167\
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\163\ This estimate assumes the respondent has already
implemented the system and policies and procedures for disclosure.
The Commission cannot estimate the number of initial transactions
per year with certainty. The Commission believes that the number of
deals that each respondent will disclose information on will vary
widely based on the size of the entity. In addition, the Commission
preliminarily believes that the number of asset-backed or mortgage-
backed issuances being rated by NRSROs in the next few years would
be difficult to predict given the recent credit market turmoil.
\164\ 20 transactions x 1 hour = 20 hours.
\165\ 20 hours x 200 respondents = 4,000 hours.
\166\ The Commission estimates an NRSRO would have a Webmaster
perform these responsibilities. The SIFMA 2007 Report as Modified
indicates that the average hourly cost for a Webmaster is $205.
Therefore, the average one-time cost to a respondent would be 20
hours x $205 = $4,100.
\167\ $4,100 x 200 respondents = $820,000.
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Re-proposed Rule 17g-5(a)(3)(iii)(D) would require respondents to
disclose information provided to an NRSRO to undertake credit rating
surveillance on a structured product. Because surveillance would cover
more than just initial ratings, the Commission estimates that a
respondent would be required to disclose information with respect to
approximately 125 transactions on an ongoing basis and that the
information would be provided to the NRSRO on a monthly basis. As
discussed with respect to the PRA, the Commission estimates that each
respondent would spend approximately 750 hours \168\ on an annual basis
disclosing the information for a total aggregate annual burden hours of
150,000 hours.\169\ For these reasons, the Commission estimates that
the average annual cost to a respondent would be $153,750 \170\ and the
total annual cost to the industry would be $30,750,000.\171\
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\168\ 125 transactions x 30 minutes x 12 months = 45,000 minutes
/ 60 minutes = 750 hours.
\169\ 750 hours x 200 respondents = 150,000 hours.
\170\ The Commission estimates an NRSRO would have a Webmaster
perform these responsibilities. The SIFMA 2007 Report as Modified
indicates that the average hourly cost for a Webmaster is $205.
Therefore, the average one-time cost to a respondent would be 750
hours x $205 = $153,750.
\171\ $153,750 x 200 respondents = $30,750,000.
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Finally, an NRSRO that wishes to access information on another
NRSRO's Web site or on an arranger's Web site would need to provide the
Commission with an annual certification described in proposed new
paragraph (e) to Rule 17g-5. In the PRA, the Commission estimates it
would take an NRSRO approximately 2 hours \172\ to complete the
proposed paragraph (e) certification for an aggregate annual hour
burden to the industry of 60 hours.\173\ For these reasons, the
Commission estimates it would cost an NRSRO approximately $490 dollars
per year \174\ and the industry $14,700 per year to comply with the
proposed requirement.\175\
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\172\ 20% of 10 hours = 2 hours.
\173\ 2 hours x 30 NRSROs = 60 hours.
\174\ The Commission estimates that an NRSRO would have a
Compliance Manager prepare the annual certification. The 2007 SIFMA
Report as Modified indicates that the average hourly cost for a
Compliance Manager is $245. Therefore, the average annual cost to an
NRSRO would be: 2 hours x $245 = $490.
\175\ 30 NRSROs x $490 = $14,700.
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The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of these
cost estimates for the re-proposed amendments to Rule 17g-5. In
addition, the Commission requests specific comment on the following
items related to these cost estimates:
Would these proposals impose costs on other market
participants, including persons who use credit ratings to make
investment decisions or for regulatory purposes, and persons who
purchase services and products from NRSROs?
Would there be costs in addition to those identified
above, such as costs arising from systems changes and restructuring
business practices to account for the new reporting requirement?
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these burden estimates.
C. Total Estimated Costs of This Rulemaking
Based on the figures discussed above, the Commission estimates that
the total one-time costs related to this re-proposed rulemaking would
be approximately $15,182,535 \176\ and the total annual costs would be
$34,665,445.\177\
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\176\ $91,035 + $1,975,500 + $13,116,000 = $15,182,535.
\177\ $30,345 + $3,050,400 + $820,000 + $30,750,000 + $14,700 =
$34,665,445.
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VII. Consideration of Burden on Competition and Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
Under Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act,\178\ the Commission shall,
when engaging in rulemaking that requires the Commission to consider or
determine if an action is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, consider whether the action will promote efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange
Act \179\ requires the Commission to consider the anticompetitive
effects of any rules the Commission adopts under the Exchange Act.
Section 23(a)(2) prohibits the Commission from adopting any rule that
would impose a burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act. As discussed below,
the Commission's preliminary view is that the Proposed Rule Amendments
should promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation.
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\178\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\179\ 15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
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The proposed amendment to paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 is designed
to provide the marketplace with additional information for comparing
the ratings performance of NRSROs that determine issuer-paid credit
ratings and, therefore, provide users of credit ratings with more
useful metrics with which to compare these NRSROs. Increased disclosure
of ratings history for issuer-paid credit ratings could make the
performance of the NRSROs more transparent to the marketplace and,
thereby, highlight those firms that do a better job analyzing credit
risk. This could cause users of credit ratings to give greater weight
to credit ratings of NRSROs that distinguish themselves by determining
more accurate credit ratings than their peers. Moreover, to the extent
this improves the quality of the credit ratings, persons that use
credit ratings to make investment or lending decisions would have
better information upon which to base their decisions. As a
consequence, the rule could result in a more efficient allocation of
capital and loans to issuers and obligors based on the risk appetites
of the investors and lenders. The Commission believes that this
enhanced disclosure would benefit smaller NRSROs that determine issuer-
paid credit ratings to the extent they do a better job of assessing
creditworthiness.
The Commission is not proposing to require the public disclosure of
ratings action histories for subscriber-paid credit ratings at this
time out of competitive concerns. However, as indicated by the detailed
solicitations of comment above, the Commission is considering how to
make more information publicly available and accessible about the
performance of these ratings. The Commission believes that the proposed
rule would address concerns about the competitive impact of the public
disclosure requirement and at the same time foster greater
accountability of NRSROs with respect to their issuer-paid credit
ratings as well as increase competition among NRSROs by making it
easier for persons to analyze the actual performance of their credit
ratings.
The re-proposed amendments to paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 17g-5
could enhance competition among NRSROs. The goal of these proposals is
[[Page 6506]]
to provide a mechanism for NRSROs to determine unsolicited credit
ratings, which would provide users of credit ratings with more
assessments of the creditworthiness of a structured finance product.
This mechanism could expose NRSROs whose procedures and methodologies
for determining credit ratings are less conservative in order to gain
business. It also could mitigate the impact of rating shopping, since
NRSROs not hired to rate a deal could nonetheless issue a credit
rating. These potential impacts of the re-proposed amendments could
help to restore confidence in credit ratings and, thereby, promote
capital formation. They also could promote the more efficient
allocation of capital by investors to the extent the quality of credit
ratings is improved. In addition, by creating a mechanism for
determining unsolicited ratings, they could increase competition by
allowing smaller NRSROs to demonstrate proficiency in rating structured
products.
The Commission generally requests comment on all aspects of this
analysis of the burden on competition and promotion of efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. In addition, the Commission
requests specific comment on the following items related to this
analysis:
Would the Proposed Rule Amendments have an adverse effect
on efficiency, competition, and capital formation that is neither
necessary nor appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act?
Commenters should provide specific data and analysis to support any
comments they submit with respect to these burden estimates.
VIII. Consideration of Impact on the Economy
For purposes of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996, or ``SBREFA,'' \180\ the Commission must advise OMB
whether a proposed regulation constitutes a major rule. Under SBREFA, a
rule is ``major'' if it has resulted in, or is likely to result in:
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\180\ Pub. L. No. 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996)
(codified in various sections of 5 U.S.C., 15 U.S.C. and as a note
to 5 U.S.C. 601).
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An annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more;
A major increase in costs or prices for consumers or
individual industries; or
A significant adverse effect on competition, investment,
or innovation.
If a rule is ``major,'' its effectiveness will generally be delayed
for 60 days pending Congressional review. The Commission requests
comment on the potential impact of the Proposed Rule Amendments on the
economy on an annual basis. Commenters are requested to provide
empirical data and other factual support for their view to the extent
possible.
IX. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Commission has prepared the following Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (``IRFA''), in accordance with the provisions of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act,\181\ regarding the Proposed Rule
Amendments to Rules 17g-2 and 17g-5 under the Exchange Act.
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\181\ 5 U.S.C. 603.
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The Commission encourages comments with respect to any aspect of
this IRFA, including comments with respect to the number of small
entities that may be affected by the Proposed Rule Amendments. Comments
should specify the costs of compliance with the Proposed Rule
Amendments and suggest alternatives that would accomplish the goals of
the amendments. Comments will be considered in determining whether a
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is required and will be placed in
the same public file as comments on the Proposed Rule Amendments.
Comments should be submitted to the Commission at the addresses
previously indicated.
A. Reasons for the Proposed Action
The Proposed Rule Amendments would prescribe additional
requirements for NRSROs to address concerns relating to the
transparency of ratings actions and the conflicts of interest at
NRSROs.
B. Objectives
The objectives of the Rating Agency Act are ``to improve ratings
quality for the protection of investors and in the public interest by
fostering accountability, transparency, and competition in the credit
rating industry.'' \182\ The Proposed Rule Amendments are designed to
improve the transparency of credit ratings performance by making credit
ratings actions publicly available and the accuracy of credit ratings
for structured finance products by increasing competition among the
NRSROs that rate these securities and money market instruments.
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\182\ See Senate Report.
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C. Legal Basis
Pursuant to the Sections 3(b), 15E, 17(a), 23(a) and 36 of the
Exchange Act.\183\
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\183\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(b), 78o-7, 78q(a), and 78w.
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D. Small Entities Subject to the Rule
Paragraph (a) of Rule 0-10 provides that for purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, a small entity ``[w]hen used with reference
to an `issuer' or a `person' other than an investment company'' means
``an `issuer' or `person' that, on the last day of its most recent
fiscal year, had total assets of $5 million or less.'' \184\ The
Commission believes that an NRSRO with total assets of $5 million or
less would qualify as a ``small'' entity for purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
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\184\ 17 CFR 240.0-10(a).
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As noted in the Adopting Release,\185\ the Commission believes that
approximately 30 credit rating agencies ultimately would be registered
as an NRSRO. Of the approximately 30 credit rating agencies estimated
to be registered with the Commission, the Commission estimates that
approximately 20 may be ``small'' entities for purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.\186\
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\185\ June 5, 2007 Adopting Release, 72 FR at 33618.
\186\ See 17 CFR 240.0-10(a).
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E. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance Requirements
The proposed amendment would revise paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2 to
require NRSROs to publicly disclose, in XBRL format and with a one-year
delay, ratings action histories for all outstanding issuer-paid credit
ratings.\187\ The disclosure of this information could enhance the
metrics by which users of credit ratings evaluate the performance of
NRSROs determining issuer-paid credit ratings.
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\187\ Proposed amendment to paragraph (d) of Rule 17g-2.
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The re-proposal would amend paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 17g-5
and add new paragraph (e) to the rule. Under the re-proposed
amendments, NRSROs that are paid by arrangers to determine credit
ratings for structured finance products would be required to maintain a
password protected Internet Web site that lists each deal they have
been hired to rate. They also would be required to obtain
representations from the arranger hiring the NRSRO to determine the
rating that the arranger will post all information provided to the
NRSRO to determine the rating and, thereafter, to monitor the rating on
a password protected Internet Web site.
[[Page 6507]]
NRSROs not hired to determine and monitor the ratings would be able to
access the NRSRO Internet Web sites to learn of new deals being rated
and then access the arranger Internet Web sites to obtain the
information being provided by the arranger to the hired NRSRO during
the entire initial rating process and, thereafter, for the purpose of
surveillance. However, the ability of NRSROs to access these NRSRO and
arranger Internet Web sites would be limited to NRSROs that certify to
the Commission on an annual basis, among other things, that they are
accessing the information solely for the purpose of determining or
monitoring credit ratings, that they will keep the information
confidential and treat it as material non-public information, and that
they will determine credit ratings for at least 10% of the deals for
which they obtain information. They also would be required to disclose
in the certification the number of deals for which they obtained
information through accessing the Internet Web sites and the number of
ratings they issued using that information during the year covered by
their most recent certification.
F. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal Rules
The Commission believes that there are no federal rules that
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the Proposed Rule Amendments.
G. Significant Alternatives
Pursuant to Section 3(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,\188\
the Commission must consider certain types of alternatives, including:
(1) The establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements
or timetables that take into account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of
compliance and reporting requirements under the rule for small
entities; (3) the use of performance rather than design standards; and
(4) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part of the rule,
for small entities.
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\188\ 5 U.S.C. 603(c).
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The Commission is considering whether it is necessary or
appropriate to establish different compliance or reporting requirements
or timetables; or clarify, consolidate, or simplify compliance and
reporting requirements under the rule for small entities. Because the
Proposed Rule Amendments are designed to improve the overall quality of
ratings and enhance the Commission's oversight, the Commission
preliminarily believes that small entities should be covered by the
rule.
H. Request for Comments
The Commission encourages the submission of comments to any aspect
of this portion of the IRFA. Comments should specify costs of
compliance with the Proposed Rule Amendments and suggest alternatives
that would accomplish the objective of the Proposed Rule Amendments.
X. Statutory Authority
The Commission is proposing amendments to Rule 17g-5 pursuant to
the authority conferred by the Exchange Act, including Sections 3(b),
15E, 17, 23(a) and 36.\189\
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\189\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(b), 78o-7, 78q, 78w(a), and 78mm.
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List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 240 and 243
Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
Text of Re-Proposed Rules
In accordance with the foregoing, the Commission proposes to amend
Title 17, Chapter II of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows.
PART 240--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934
1. The authority citation for part 240 continues to read in part as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77z-3,
77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn, 77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i,
78j, 78j-1, 78k, 78k-1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78p, 78q, 78s, 78u5,
78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 80a-20, 80a-23, 80a-29, 80a-37, 80b-3, 80b-4,
80b-11, and 7201 et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise
noted.
* * * * *
2. Section 240.17g-2, as amended by a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, is amended by revising
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 240.17g-2 Records to be made and retained by nationally
recognized statistical rating organizations.
* * * * *
(d)(1) Manner of retention. An original, or a true and complete
copy of the original, of each record required to be retained pursuant
to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section must be maintained in a
manner that, for the applicable retention period specified in paragraph
(c) of this section, makes the original record or copy easily
accessible to the principal office of the nationally recognized
statistical rating organization and to any other office that conducted
activities causing the record to be made or received.
(2) A nationally recognized statistical rating organization must
make and keep publicly available on its corporate Internet Web site in
an XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) format the ratings
action information for ten percent of the outstanding credit ratings
required to be retained pursuant to paragraph (a)(8) of this section
and which were paid for by the obligor being rated or by the issuer,
underwriter, or sponsor of the security being rated, selected on a
random basis, for each class of credit rating for which it is
registered and for which it has issued 500 or more outstanding credit
ratings paid for by the obligor being rated or by the issuer,
underwriter, or sponsor of the security being rated. Any ratings action
required to be disclosed pursuant to this paragraph (d)(2) need not be
made public less than six months from the date such ratings action is
taken. If a credit rating made public pursuant to this paragraph (d)(2)
is withdrawn or the instrument rated matures, the nationally recognized
statistical rating organization must randomly select a new outstanding
credit rating from that class of credit ratings in order to maintain
the 10 percent disclosure threshold. In making the information
available on its corporate Internet Web site, the nationally recognized
statistical rating organization shall use the List of XBRL Tags for
NRSROs as specified on the Commission's Internet Web site.
(3) A nationally recognized statistical rating organization must
make and keep publicly available on its corporate Internet Web site in
an XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) format the ratings
action information required to be retained pursuant to paragraph (a)(8)
of this section for any rating initially rated by the nationally
recognized statistical rating organization on or after June 26, 2007
paid for by the obligor being rated or by the issuer, underwriter, or
sponsor of the security being rated. Any ratings action required to be
disclosed pursuant to this paragraph (d)(3) need not be made public
less than twelve months from the date such ratings action is taken. In
making the information available on its corporate Internet Web site,
the nationally recognized statistical rating organization shall use the
List of XBRL Tags for NRSROs as specified on the Commission's Internet
Web site.
* * * * *
3. Section 240.17g-5 is amended by:
[[Page 6508]]
a. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (a)(1);
b. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (a)(2) and in its
place adding ``; and'';
c. Adding paragraph (a)(3);
d. Redesignating paragraph (b)(9) as paragraph (b)(10); and
e. Adding new paragraph (b)(9) and paragraph (e);
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 240.17g-5 Conflicts of interest.
(a) * * *
(3) In the case of the conflict of interest identified in paragraph
(b)(9) of this section relating to issuing or maintaining a credit
rating for a security or money market instrument issued by an asset
pool or as part of any asset-backed or mortgage-backed securities
transaction, the nationally recognized statistical rating organization:
(i) Maintains on a password-protected Internet Web site a list of
each such security or money market instrument for which it is currently
in the process of determining an initial credit rating in chronological
order and identifying the type of security or money market instrument,
the name of the issuer, the date the rating process was initiated, and
the Internet Web site address where the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter
of the security or money market instrument represents that the
information described in paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D) of this
section can be accessed;
(ii) Provides free and unlimited access to such password-protected
Internet Web site during the applicable calendar year to any nationally
recognized statistical rating organization that provides it with a copy
of the certification described in paragraph (e) of this section that
covers that calendar year;
(iii) Obtains from the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter of each such
security or money market instrument a representation that can
reasonably be relied upon that the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter
will:
(A) Maintain the information described in paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C)
and (D) of this section available at an identified password-protected
Internet Web site that presents the information in a manner indicating
which information currently should be relied on to determine or monitor
the credit rating;
(B) Provide access to such password-protected Internet Web site
during the applicable calendar year to any nationally recognized
statistical rating organization that provides it with a copy of the
certification described in paragraph (e) of this section that covers
that calendar year;
(C) Post on such password-protected Internet Web site all
information the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter provides to the
nationally recognized statistical rating organization for the purpose
of determining the initial credit rating for the security or money
market instrument, including information about the characteristics of
the assets underlying or referenced by the security or money market
instrument, and the legal structure of the security or money market
instrument, at the same time such information is provided to the
nationally recognized statistical rating organization; and
(D) Post on such password-protected Internet Web site all
information the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter provides to the
nationally recognized statistical rating organization for the purpose
of undertaking credit rating surveillance on the security or money
market instrument, including information about the characteristics and
performance of the assets underlying or referenced by the security or
money market instrument at the same time such information is provided
to the nationally recognized statistical rating organization.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(9) Issuing or maintaining a credit rating for a security or money
market instrument issued by an asset pool or as part of any asset-
backed or mortgage-backed securities transaction that was paid for by
the issuer, sponsor, or underwriter of the security or money market
instrument.
* * * * *
(e) Certification. In order to access a password-protected Internet
Web site described in paragraph (a)(3) of this section, a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization must furnish to the
Commission, for each calendar year for which it is requesting a
password, the following certification, signed by a person duly
authorized by the certifying entity:
The undersigned hereby certifies that it will access the Internet
Web sites described in Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) solely for the purpose
of determining or monitoring credit ratings. Further, the
undersigned certifies that it will keep the information it accesses
pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) confidential and treat it as
material nonpublic information subject to its written policies and
procedures established, maintained, and enforced pursuant to section
15E(g)(1) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-7(g)(1)) and Sec. 240.17g-4.
Further, the undersigned certifies that it will determine and
maintain credit ratings for at least 10% of the issued securities
and money market instruments for which it accesses information
pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3)(iii), if it accesses such
information for 10 or more issued securities or money market
instruments in the calendar year covered by the certification.
Further, the undersigned certifies one of the following as
applicable: (1) In the most recent calendar year during which it
accessed information pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3), the
undersigned accessed information for [Insert Number] issued
securities and money market instruments through Internet Web sites
described in Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) and determined and maintained
credit ratings for [Insert Number] of such securities and money
market instruments; or (2) The undersigned previously has not
accessed information pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) 10 or more
times in a calendar year.
PART 243--REGULATION FD
4. The authority citation for part 243 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78c, 78i, 78j, 78m, 78o, 78w, 78mm, and
80a-29, unless otherwise noted.
5. Section Sec. 243.100 is amended by revising paragraph
(b)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.100 General rule regarding selective disclosure.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) If the information is disclosed solely for the purpose of
developing a credit rating, to:
(A) Any nationally recognized statistical rating organization, as
that term is defined in Section 3(a)(62) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(62)), pursuant to Sec. 240.17g-5(a)(3) of
this chapter; or
(B) Any credit rating agency as that term is defined in Section
3(a)(62) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(62))
that makes its credit ratings publicly available; or
* * * * *
By the Commission.
Dated: February 2, 2009.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9-2514 Filed 2-6-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P