Many specifics and lots of broad implications about the workings of credit rating corporations including their roles in Insurance are discussed in Roger Lowenstein, "Triple-A Failure," p. 36 (New York Times Sunday Magazine, April 27, 2008). One thing is hardly mentioned but fairly clear: While the credit rating corporations recognize that their models of evaluating subprime mortgages and collateralized debt obligations were inadequate if not counterproductive by providing a rating structure on paper or in theory, but not in reality, it does not appear that any of the credit rating companies ever declined even one opportunity to be paid large amounts of money to rate the credit of even one "asset-backed" financial product including Insurance. Not one.
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