AMF publishes 2010 report on CRAs

19 August 2011

The AMF's seventh annual report on credit rating agencies covers international regulatory developments, the European registration procedure, and credit ratings.

International regulatory developments

The European Regulation on CRAs came into force on 7 December 2009, introducing a procedure for registering agencies established in the European Union (EU). The procedure has been supplemented by a new Regulation, which transfers jurisdiction for registration from national authorities to the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) as from 1 July.

In parallel, the European Commission launched a consultation at end-2010 on new legislative initiatives to regulate CRAs' activities and the use of credit ratings. Although it does not prefigure the issues that may give rise to concrete proposals in the latter half of 2011, the consultation covers the following topics:

Regulation of CRA activities was also tightened in the United States with the Dodd-Frank Act, adopted on 21 July 2010, which introduced new legislative measures applicable to agencies.

European registration procedure

Under the Regulation that came into force on 7 December 2009, existing agencies were required to file their registration applications by 7 September 2010 and to have adopted all the measures needed to comply with the Regulation by that date. A transition period was provided so that existing agencies' ratings could continue to be used for regulatory purposes in the European Union during the registration period. A certification regime was put in place for small non-EU agencies that are not present in the EU but that publish their ratings there.

By 7 September 2010, 45 CRAs had filed a registration application. At 1 July 2011, five were registered, four by the German regulator and one by its Bulgarian counterpart. The AMF is currently taking an active part in the colleges of regulators set up for the three main CRAs, Standard & Poor's, Moody's and Fitch Ratings, as part of the registration procedure for their French subsidiaries. In addition, the AMF certified Japan Credit Rating Agency Ltd (JCRA) on 6 January 2011. As the sole member of JCRA's college of regulators, it was the only competent authority for the certification procedure.

Credit ratings

In France, and across Europe in general, perceptions of credit risk in the sovereign debt market and the corporate credit market have changed in contrasting ways since 2009.

Press release


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