This article analyzes the empowerment and disempowerment of credit rating agencies (CRAs) as private regulatory intermediaries. Until the recent financial crisis, regulators heavily relied on private credit ratings to impose risk-sensitive requirements on financial market actors (targets). Regulatory use of credit ratings was instrumental in empowering CRAs because regulatory authority was delegated to them and their own private power was bolstered by public endorsement. But regulators’ subsequent efforts to disempower the CRAs—more recently regarded as dysfunctional “runaway” intermediaries—have proven costly, complicated to do, and hardly consequential in limiting CRAs’ de facto power. This dynamic reveals a path-dependent power shift in ...
It is commonly considered that credit rating agencies (CRAs) play a central role in financial market...
This Article examines situations in which government regulation makes mandatory the use of certain d...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
This article analyzes the empowerment and disempowerment of credit rating agencies (CRAs) as private...
The lack of regulatory oversight on Credit Rating Agencies (CRAs) has for a long time been viewed as...
The article examines the role of credit rating agencies (CRAs) in the evolving financial markets, an...
Short article by Dr Harry McVea (Reader in Law, University of Bristol and an IALS Visiting Fellow in...
Credit rating agencies (CRAs) very often have been criticized for announcing inaccurate credit ratin...
As member states struggle to retain the investment grades necessary to allow them to finance their g...
Credit rating agencies such as Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s are key players in the governance of gl...
This paper presents a theoretical framework to describe the behaviour of the credit rating agencies(...
The first part of the paper describes how over time credit rating agencies ceased to play the role o...
Credit rating agencies are considered the gatekeepers to the financial markets; however, these agenc...
Since 2007 financial markets worldwide have been suffering from a confidence crisis which has emphas...
This paper develops a theoretical framework to shed light on variation in credit rating standards ov...
It is commonly considered that credit rating agencies (CRAs) play a central role in financial market...
This Article examines situations in which government regulation makes mandatory the use of certain d...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
This article analyzes the empowerment and disempowerment of credit rating agencies (CRAs) as private...
The lack of regulatory oversight on Credit Rating Agencies (CRAs) has for a long time been viewed as...
The article examines the role of credit rating agencies (CRAs) in the evolving financial markets, an...
Short article by Dr Harry McVea (Reader in Law, University of Bristol and an IALS Visiting Fellow in...
Credit rating agencies (CRAs) very often have been criticized for announcing inaccurate credit ratin...
As member states struggle to retain the investment grades necessary to allow them to finance their g...
Credit rating agencies such as Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s are key players in the governance of gl...
This paper presents a theoretical framework to describe the behaviour of the credit rating agencies(...
The first part of the paper describes how over time credit rating agencies ceased to play the role o...
Credit rating agencies are considered the gatekeepers to the financial markets; however, these agenc...
Since 2007 financial markets worldwide have been suffering from a confidence crisis which has emphas...
This paper develops a theoretical framework to shed light on variation in credit rating standards ov...
It is commonly considered that credit rating agencies (CRAs) play a central role in financial market...
This Article examines situations in which government regulation makes mandatory the use of certain d...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...