Under the reform act, credit rating agencies can be held liable if their ratings don't hold up -- so they refused to rate the bonds being offered by Ford's credit division. The proceeds of the bond sales were to be used to make car loans.
The snag is that the Securities and Exchange Commission requires credit ratings on the debt, as well as the names of the rating agencies, to be included in public documents, or the deal can't go to market.
The Securities and Exchange Commission quickly issued a six-month waiver to its rules after complaints by industry leaders that debt markets would become "fast-frozen" by the regulations.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/ford_dented_by_new_regs_nwJOIz504mfGmtSeDbLrLJ#ixzz0udbdmvl0
The snag is that the Securities and Exchange Commission requires credit ratings on the debt, as well as the names of the rating agencies, to be included in public documents, or the deal can't go to market.
The Securities and Exchange Commission quickly issued a six-month waiver to its rules after complaints by industry leaders that debt markets would become "fast-frozen" by the regulations.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/ford_dented_by_new_regs_nwJOIz504mfGmtSeDbLrLJ#ixzz0udbdmvl0
