Mon, May 28, 2012, 11:46 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

France lashes out at S&P's 'shocking' error

France lashes out at S&P's 'shocking' error that French rating was being downgraded

PARIS (AP) -- France reacted with outrage after the Standard & Poor's ratings agency accidentally sent out a message saying it was downgrading France's prized "AAA" credit rating during a tumultuous week in Europe's protracted debt crisis.

Germany and the European Commission also bristled Friday, warning ratings agencies to act responsibly and underscoring European unease over the power they wield over governments.

The error stood for an hour and a half Thursday while the U.S. and most European markets were open before it was corrected by the agency — spooking investors by foreshadowing an event that would rock the 17-nation eurozone.

The accident came just as Greece and Italy seemed to be getting on the right track by establishing new interim governments led by financial experts who might guide them out of the continent's debt crisis. For a moment, it seemed as if the crisis was again worsening in its one step forward, two steps back way.

Despite Standard & Poor's statement saying the original message had gone out to some subscribers because of a technical error and its reaffirmation that France's credit rating remained "AAA" — the highest level — and stable, some damage could not be undone.

The yield, or interest rate that France pays to borrow money for 10 years, rose 0.21 percentage points since Thursday morning, closing at 3.37 percent Friday, the highest rate since early July.

In the midst of a crisis where fear drives the markets as much as fact, the error has reminded investors of France's financial ties to the troubled eurozone. And often the suggestion of something amiss is nearly as bad as having something amiss.

French Finance Minister Francois Baroin did his best to quell fears, calling the error a "rather shocking rumor of information that has no foundation."

"We won't let any negative message go," he said in Lyon in comments seen Friday on the La Tribune newspaper's website.

The French market regulator immediately opened an investigation into the mistake at Baroin's behest, and the minister also called for a European probe.

European governments already bristle at the idea that the big three ratings agencies have roots in the U.S. — though Fitch is partly owned by a French-based company — and the error is only likely to increase hostility toward them.

The European internal markets commissioner, Michel Barnier, who has been working on new regulation of the agencies, said Europe should reduce its reliance on the agencies and increase competition — an apparent reference to proposals to create a new European agency.

It's still not clear how a new upstart would be able to change the conversation dominated by the big three.

"This incident is serious and it shows that in the current tense and volatile market situation, market players must exercise discipline and demonstrate a special sense of responsibility," Barnier said.

In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman issued a similar warning.

"We say only this, and we have said it repeatedly in the past: All financial market actors, and that includes rating agencies, must be aware of their responsibility to society," Steffen Seibert said.

While the error may have increased the pressure on French bond yields, they were already rising — because, like many countries, France is struggling with slow growth and high debt piled up during the boom years.

The rise of such yields is at the heart of Europe's debt crisis: The increase of those interest rates in Ireland, Portugal and Greece — because investors considered them increasingly bad risks — eventually forced those countries to seek massive international bailouts.

Now Italy is coming under the same pressure. That poses a bigger problem because its economy and debts dwarf the other three and Europe doesn't have enough money to fully bail Italy out.

But a French debt downgrade would be seismic. France and Germany's "AAA" credit ratings are the bedrock of Europe's bailout fund. Because the debt of those two countries is considered so safe, the fund pays very favorable interest rates on the bonds it issues.

Just the hint that France's debt could be downgraded reveals how fragile the European bailout system is.

And some analysts said the accident may have tipped the actual thinking at the ratings agency.

"I can't remember a situation where an agency released a rating movement in error, and no doubt there will be many people who believe that there is no smoke without fire and that this cannot have happened unless S&P were preparing the ground for a downgrade," Gary Jenkins, an analyst with Evolution Securities, said Friday.

S&P, however, does not even have France on surveillance — the step that typically comes before a rating is downgraded. Moody's, on the other hand, says it is studying whether to put France's rating on notice.

A downgrade of French debt would also pose a domestic problem: President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is expected to face a re-election battle next spring, has staked his credibility on balancing France's budget by 2016.

Along the way, Sarkozy has laid out yearly targets for reducing France's deficit — each one tied to a growth projection. But those forecasts have repeatedly proved too rosy and his conservative government has already twice this year been forced to introduce extra cuts to stay on target.

It's clear the last thing Sarkozy wants to see is for French borrowing costs to rise as his government fights to clean up its deficits and keep the eurozone united.

On Thursday, the European Commission said it considered France's growth forecast for 2013 too high — and Baroin shot back that Paris has already set aside a reserve fund for that eventuality.

Cyprus, which has also come under pressure from ratings agencies this week, also had strong words Friday. Finance Minister Kikis Kazamias accused the agencies of fanning the flames of the crisis.

"Ratings agencies are part of our problem," Kazamias said. "Projections are being made in the spirit of fear-mongering, which, due to the role of the ratings agencies, are being taken seriously."

___

Associated Press writers Geir Moulson in Berlin and Menelaos Hadjicostis in Nicosia contributed to this report.

 

245 comments

  • NE  •  6 months ago
    Yes. Someone accidentally typed up this email and sent it out in error. Because we all know there there is no market mannipulation what so ever. My #$%$
    • NE 6 months ago
      People. Please dont read my post. I posted this in error. This was supposed to be an email to my mother asking if she was making pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving. Some how i posted here by mistake. Sorry for the trouble it caused
    • Chippy 6 months ago
      Stupid & Priceless. Oh that's the morons who listen to S&P in the first place.
  • NE  •  6 months ago
    Error my #$%$
  • Fedup  •  6 months ago
    The real issue is that the S&P is no longer credible. After rating the toxic mortgages AAA who really should be taking much stock in what they say? A trillion dollar calculation error in U.S. Debt? Junk bonds rated AAA? The French rating mistake? Wake up Wall Street and stop giving those folks any credence.
    • tony 6 months ago
      Gooberment pressure made them continue with top ratings for this junk.
    • Jeannie 6 months ago
      So,when the rating agencies actually try to teveal the truth,the governments step in to pressure for changes that represent the truth of the building financial debacle.Betting the same was going on with the rating on the mortgage market when those quasi(?)-governmental agents called Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae continued to back the loans with the full blessing of GWB and the rest.
      Western Europe and the USA borrowed from the future for 40 years and now,the piper wants to be paid.All the funny money games in the world won't stop the inevitable and fast-approaching financial collapse.
  • Patrick  •  6 months ago
    Who rates the ratings agencies?
    • CBD 6 months ago
      The rating agencies..duh
    • Ted Spiro 6 months ago
      No they are rated by how they rate the issue selling. Successful ratings gives them the creadentials.
  • mike hunt  •  6 months ago
    Italy’s ability to refinance is critical to French financial institutions, which held $106.8 billion of government borrowings and $309.6 billion of private debt.
    French banks hold debt in Europe’s troubled countries -- Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy.
  • Quincy Magoo  •  6 months ago
    Enron was highly rated. Until it wasn't. Ratings are mostly incentives to invest, manufactured for economic or, in the case of France, political reasons. Buyer beware.
  • AnotherAmerican  •  6 months ago
    insider trading, anyone?
  • Melvin  •  6 months ago
    First, why are we now believing what S&P has to say. I thought they had earned their fraudster moniker and were years away from being trusted again. I guess because our laws and courts make simple fraud all but impossible to prosecute, they exist in the netherworld world of technical glitches. Like so many other, too hooked into the establishment, companies they are all but untouchable. That is, until the next storming of the Bastille.
  • Patrick  •  6 months ago
    Who cares? S and P gave Lehaman a Triple A. Why do we listen to them?
    • unforgivable 6 months ago
      Learn what they do and why they do it and you will realize how stupid your comment is.
  • Patrick  •  6 months ago
    By the way, why does AP put quotations around 'shocking'? An error of this magnitude is almost incomprehensibly surprising, and the adjective shocking is eminently suitable. Putting 'shocking' in quotations will lead many readers to think that the claim is dubious--but it isn't. S & P needs to be investigated...The whole financial system stinks to high heaven; no doubt the debt is real, but the way it has been instrumentalized is highly suspicious. The ratings are being manipulated to push bond yields up and, given the enormous sums involved, interest rates moving up just a fraction of a point equates to extra billions of dollars for the bond holders. Not only this, the bonds are being used as a 'stick' to force governments to make fundamental fiscal changes--almost all of which are to the advantage of the financiers and, naturally, to the detriment of the citizens. In the end, the citizens will be paying more, much more, for less, much less. Are we in the midst of a silent global financial coup d'etat? Have sovereignty and democracy been sacrificed to Mammon?
    • Stewart 6 months ago
      It is in quotes because they are quoting France.
  • joeydee  •  6 months ago
    It wasnt accidentally sent out to me. I'm an investor, but I guess I am just so many small potatoes...All of Wall Street is nothing but an insider scam and all the little people pay the price of this failure of capitalism in which failure is rewarded and honesty is scorned.
  • Bull  •  6 months ago
    Nothing but a good old mafia style shakedown. Give us protection money or else.....
  • A Yahoo! User  •  6 months ago
    S&P .... Sloppy & Poor
    An antiquated service no longer relevant -
    Might as well let JD Powers take it over.
  • wralfnetiam  •  6 months ago
    The executives at S & P are crooks and should be behing bars. They are a financial extortion racket just like the Mafia. And Wall Street pays them the protection money, to coverup their crimes.
  • martin e  •  6 months ago
    Fools are running S&P..
  • Tony  •  6 months ago
    Why are they even around??? They're totally irrelevant! Their ratings mean NOTHING! Who understands their ratings? What does AAA mean? Anybody in debt by trillions should be rated ZZZ- - - - - -
  • Honda Accord Driver  •  6 months ago
    France had too rosy a picture of the future, and when they found out they were wrong, they cut spending. What a concept. Maybe that's why France remains a AAA rated country and the US was downgraded. Congress won't make any adjustments to the budget, except to increase spending and cut taxes for the wealthy.
  • Dusty  •  6 months ago
    S&P represents a concentration of power vulnerable to corruption. Follow the money. if this class of manipulation earns them one dime. declare war.
  • Amvet  •  6 months ago
    The market manipulation of the US owned firms is not new. First they attacked Ireland, then Portugal, then Greece, then Italy. But notice that they gave the toxic martgages that the US sold worldwide a AAA rating. Their cousins in the Justice Department will never prosecute them.
  • One Nation Underwater  •  6 months ago
    Sacré bleu
 
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