Want China Times, Xinhua 2012-10-25
Three
rating agencies from China, the United States and Russia will jointly launch a
new credit rating company to rival current industry leaders and promote
independence.
It was
announced on Wednesday that the Universal Credit Rating Group will be established
by China's Dagong Global Credit Rating, the US-based Egan-Jones Ratings
Company, and Russia's RusRating. The headquarters will be set up in Hong Kong
within six months, the companies said in a statement.
The group
will be invested by private institutions without conflicts of interests with
its credit ratings and will not represent any country or interest group, the
statement said.
Guan
Jianzhong, president of Dagong Global Credit Rating, urged an overhaul of the
current international credit rating system, which he criticized.
"As
the main providers of rating information that global capital flow relies on,
the three major rating agencies in the US failed to ring the alarm bell for the
financial crisis and even helped aggravate the crisis," said Guan.
The
US-based "Big Three" global credit rating agencies — Standard and
Poor's, Moody's, and Fitch Ratings — have come under fire for their credibility
during the global financial crisis.
Sean Egan,
president of Egan-Jones Ratings Company, said overly optimistic credit ratings
led to the financial crisis and the current international rating system can no
longer meet investors' demand.

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