November 24, 2024

S.&P. Error on French Credit Rating Sets Off Investigation

BRUSSELS — Just days before it was to propose sweeping regulations for credit rating agencies, the European Commission on Friday joined calls for an investigation into Standard Poor’s after the company erroneously sent out an e-mail suggesting that it had lowered the rating on France’s sovereign debt.

Michel Barnier, the commissioner responsible for financial regulation, described the episode as serious and said it strengthened his belief in the need for “strict and rigorous rules” to govern the ratings agencies and other financial actors.

The episode briefly upset markets on Thursday as it raised questions about the creditworthiness of France’s debt.

In a statement, Mr. Barnier said he did not want to discuss the case in detail but added that it showed “that in the current tense and volatile market situation, market players must exercise discipline and demonstrate a special sense of responsibility.”

He also said, “This is all the more important since we are not talking about just any market player but one of the biggest rating agencies, which, as such, has a particular responsibility.”

According to a draft of the plan scheduled to be introduced next week, European supervisory authorities would be able to temporarily prevent the issuing of ratings on countries in “a crisis situation.”

Investors would also gain a framework to take legal action against agencies “if they infringe intentionally or with gross negligence” on their obligations. A ratings agency would also have to disclose information about its rating methodologies.

To prevent conflicts of interest, the new regulations would impose limits on owners of more than 5 percent of one agency who wanted to invest in others.

On several occasions, European leaders have said the agencies worsened the debt crisis, most notably in July, when the president of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, criticized the decision to downgrade debt in his native Portugal to junk status.

As the European debt crisis starts to engulf Italy, President Nicolas Sarkozy of France has been striving to ensure that it does not spread to his country. A priority of his coming re-election campaign is ensuring that his country’s AAA rating stays intact, a challenge that has intensified as France’s share of the bill for helping to contain the crisis grows.

The loss of the top rating would also deal a serious blow to the euro zone’s rescue fund, which is seeking to increase its firepower.

After S. P. reported the mistake Thursday, France’s finance minister, François Baroin, demanded an investigation into “the causes and eventual consequences of the error.” Within half an hour, the nation’s stock market regulator said it would open an inquiry. It also notified the European financial market authority, which oversees “the professional obligations of the ratings agencies.”

S. P. attributed the message to a technical error and affirmed that the rating was unchanged. But the yield for France’s 10-year benchmark bond jumped more than a quarter point, to 3.48 percent, and the spread between French and German bonds of that duration reached 1.7 percentage points, a euro-era record, according to Bloomberg News.

The erroneous S. P. message went out just before 4 p.m. Paris time, and the correction was issued almost two hours later, after most European markets had closed.

Stephen Castle reported from Brussels and Liz Alderman from São Paolo, Brazil.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/12/business/global/europe-to-propose-restrictions-on-ratings-agencies.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Italy Approves Strict Austerity Measures

The lower house passed the measures on Saturday by a vote of 380 to 26, a day after they were approved by the Senate, trying to keep a step ahead of market pressures that sent borrowing rates on Italian bonds skyrocketing last week to levels that have required other euro zone countries to seek bailouts.

The vote, and Mr. Berlusconi’s expected resignation, come amid the biggest crisis facing the European Union in decades, in which the power of financial markets has upended traditional democratic processes.

Pressured by European leaders struggling to shore up the euro against speculative attacks, Prime Minister George A. Papandreou of Greece resigned last week to make way for a technocrat-led unity government. Mr. Berlusconi was expected to do the same, a rare about-face for a leader known for his perseverance and his refusal to bow to critics.

The end of Mr. Berlusconi’s 17-year hold on Italian politics sets off the country’s most significant political transition in 20 years.

“This is the most dramatic moment of our recent history,” Ferruccio de Bortoli, the editor of the Milan daily newspaper Corriere della Sera, said earlier on national television. Before the vote, lawmakers in Mr. Berlusconi’s coalition shouted “Silvio, Silvio!” in support of the prime minister.

President Giorgio Napolitano, who as head of state will oversee the transition, was expected to begin consultations with party leaders to nominate a prime minister immediately after Mr. Berlusconi’s resignation.

On Saturday, the president appealed to lawmakers to put the country’s interests above their own. “All political forces must act with a sense of responsibility,” Mr. Napolitano said.

The front-runner to guide a new government appears to be Mario Monti, 68, a former European commissioner and a well-respected economist with close ties to European Union officials. On Wednesday, Mr. Napolitano named Mr. Monti a senator for life, an unexpected move seen as a prelude to receiving the mandate to form a government.

In a sign of intense deal-making ahead of a delicate political transition, Mr. Monti met with Mr. Berlusconi and two of his close advisers on Saturday at the prime minister’s office.

Earlier, Mr. Monti met with Mario Draghi, the recently installed president of the European Central Bank, reinforcing the notion that financial and European institutions strongly support the appointment of the respected economist in a moment of economic and political turbulence.

The mandate of the next government will be to push through measures to help reduce Italy’s $2.6 trillion public debt and increase growth to keep the country competitive.

The austerity measures approved by Parliament include selling state assets and increasing the retirement age to 67 from 65 by 2026. They would decrease the power of professional guilds, privatize municipal services and offer tax breaks to companies that hire young workers.

Italy’s political parties were fighting to maintain their positions in a new government and to ensure their futures would not be doomed by passing the unpopular measures demanded of tough economic times.

The main obstacle to Mr. Monti’s government could come from Mr. Berlusconi’s increasingly divided center-right coalition. Many members would rather go to early elections than have a technocrat backed by the European Union foisted on them.

“I don’t believe the markets should decide governments,” the minister of infrastructure and transportation, Altero Matteoli, said Friday in an interview on Sky Tg24.

The clash over Mr. Monti raised concerns across the political spectrum about the growing influence of financial markets in democracies. In Italy and elsewhere, a dysfunctional political class has been “impotent” in the face of market dynamics and their impact on people’s lives, the commentator Luigi La Spina wrote Saturday in the Turin daily newspaper La Stampa.

But the main opposition party and other lawmakers, fearing that elections would lead to an unsustainable period of market turmoil, support a transitional government.

Those lawmakers are divided between those who would like a unity government, in which members of the right and the left would pass legislation and share the political cost, or a formation in which both coalitions would support the new government and vote on legislation, but leave the ministerial positions to nonpoliticians.

The end of the Berlusconi era has laid bare the deep divisions and unresolved questions of Italy’s political class, which has not fully recovered from the cold war.

The prospects of a Monti government have revealed the “very eccentric” nature of Italian politics, said Norma Rangeri, editor in chief of the left-wing daily newspaper Il Manifesto. Mr. Monti, she said, is a liberal conservative whose nomination is being blocked by the center-right, while the center-left, which supports him, “should be looking for the opposite of what Monti represents.”

“What is opening is the most uncertain scenario that we can imagine,” she said.

Dozens of television cameras and bystanders gathered in front of Palazzo Chigi, the prime minister’s office, on Saturday, awaiting Mr. Berlusconi’s expected resignation, and the beginning of whatever comes next.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/13/world/europe/silvio-berlusconi-resign-italy-austerity-measures.html?partner=rss&emc=rss