Denmark’s
biggest banks are firing Moody’s Investors Service as they win assurances from
some of the country’s biggest investors that the opinions of ratings companies
hold limited value.
Moody's Investors Service Inc
. headquarters in New York.
Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg
|
Nykredit
A/S, Denmark’s biggest mortgage lender and Europe’s largest issuer of covered
bonds backed by home loans, terminated its contract with Moody’s on April 13,
citing its “volatile” views. Danske Bank A/S (DANSKE)’s mortgage unit
Realkredit Danmark A/S, the country’s second-largest home-loan provider,
dropped Moody’s in June. Jyske Bank A/S, Denmark’s second- biggest listed bank,
is looking into ending its dealings with Moody’s, according to Steen Nygaard,
its head of treasury.
“They have
just crossed the line for fairness,” Nygaard said in an interview. “It’s not
just that we have an opinion and if they rule against us, we are mad and walk
away. It is about the fundamentals where we simply cannot follow Moody’s
arguments.”
Moody’s in
June criticized Denmark’s $470 billion mortgage- bond industry, the world’s
third largest after the U.S. and Germany, for failing to curb refinancing risks
fueled by a mismatch in funding and lending maturities. Since then, Nykredit’s benchmark index of Denmark’s most-traded mortgage bonds has risen 6.3 percent
to a record, signaling investors are disregarding the warnings.
Commercial
Relationships
“Moody’s
does not comment on its commercial relationships,” Jessica Sibado, a Moody’s
spokeswoman, said in a phone interview yesterday. “Moody’s considers Denmark as
having one of the strongest covered bond frameworks in Europe. However, since
2009, Danish covered bonds have been impacted by the weakening issuer credit
strength” and “increasing refinancing risks,” she said.
Moody’s
generated 31 percent of its $2.3 billion in sales last year from Europe, the
Middle East and Asia combined, it said March 12. Nykredit and Jyske declined to
reveal what they paid the company for their ratings.
“It’s not
that ratings don’t matter. Of course they do,” said Inger Huus Pedersen, head
of fixed-income investments at Hellerup, Denmark-based pension fund PKA, which
oversees about $27 billion in assets. “These mortgage bonds, we feel pretty
secure about. It’s an old system that’s gone through a lot, which is why I’m
quite secure about the system. History has shown us that ratings agencies make
mistakes as well.”
Senate
Report
Investors,
companies and governments are starting to question the role of the ratings
companies following their failure to identify some of the imbalances that led
to the global financial crisis of 2008.
According
to a 2011 U.S. Senate report, both Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s adjusted
the way they graded mortgage-backed securities after Goldman Sachs Group Inc.,
UBS AG and at least six more banks pressured them. When the ratings companies
changed their assessments in July 2007, it helped trigger the financial crisis,
the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations said in April last year.
S&P’s
decision to strip the U.S. of its top credit grade in August was followed by
gains in the nation’s Treasury debt. U.S. government securities with maturities
longer than a year have returned 4.2 percent, including reinvested interest,
since S&P’s Aug. 5 downgrade. The Bank of England said March 27 there was “little
market reaction” to Moody’s decision to cut the outlook on its Aaa rating to
negative.
Tougher
Stance
In Denmark,
Moody’s has been tougher on mortgage banks than other rating companies. It
ranked adjustable-rate bonds issued by Nykredit Aa1, compared with S&P’s
AAA grade. Nykredit’s issuer rating at S&P is A+, its fifth-highest grade,
with a stable outlook. Moody’s ranks the lender A2, its sixth-highest rating,
with a negative outlook.
“Moody’s
has shown a harsh stance on banks ratings compared to the other agencies,” said
Marc Stacey, a fund manager at BlueBay Asset Management Ltd. in London, which
oversees $42 billion in credit. “If Moody’s upcoming announcements show that
they are an outlier, compared to where the other two rating agencies are, then
you may find the Moody’s rating being dropped by more and more issuers.”
Nykredit
fired Moody’s amid a review of 114 financial institutions in 16 countries.
Moody’s said it may downgrade banks as much as three levels. BRFkredit A/S,
another Danish mortgage lender, ended its dealings with Moody’s in October.
‘Follow
Suit’
“If larger
banks begin to look at the Danish banks and follow suit, this could potentially
reduce the impact of the rating cuts and simplify matters for investors,”
Prateek Datta, an analyst at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, said today in a
note to investors.
“It’s not a
matter of the rating being X or Y,” Soeren Holm, group managing director of
finance at Nykredit, said in an interview. “It’s a matter of volatility in
their methods and approaches, and it’s a matter of the value for investors.”
Denmark’s
two-century-old mortgage market has moved away from traditional, fixed-rate
30-year loans and started offering adjustable rates in 1996 and interest-only
loans in 2003 to attract more customers. The country is still struggling to
emerge from a recession triggered by a burst housing bubble in 2007. A regional
banking crisis claimed three lenders last year.
“We agree
there are risks, but they are less than when the house prices were in a bubble
phase,” Nygaard said. “We cannot see the huge risk to the Danish economy. Jyske
Bank is much stronger today that it was in 2007.”
Creditor
Losses
Moody’s,
which published its first guide to securities in 1900 after being founded by
John Moody, cut Jyske Bank and five other Danish lenders last year after the
government allowed Amagerbanken A/S to fail, passing losses on to senior
creditors. Jyske is rated A2, with a negative outlook.
Danske Bank A/S’s mortgage unit Realkredit Danmark A/S, the country’s second-largest home-loan provider, dropped Moody’s in June. Photographer: Ulrik Jantzen/Bloomberg |
Moody’s
rates Denmark’s government debt Aaa, with a stable outlook. The country is one
of only 12 in the world to enjoy the top credit grade at Moody’s, S&P and
Fitch Ratings.
While
Denmark’s government debt is half the euro-area average at 44.6 percent of
gross domestic product in 2012, the European Commission estimates, its private
debt is the world’s highest. Household debt reached 310 percent of disposable
incomes in 2010, according to Exane BNP Paribas. Danes’ savings, while high,
are mostly “locked up” in hard-to-access pension and real estate assets,
central bank Governor Nils Bernstein has said.
Adjustable-rate
loans, as well as loans that delay principle payments by as much as 10 years,
make up more than half Denmark’s outstanding homeowner debt, according to the
Association of Danish Mortgage Banks. Bernstein has urged the industry to phase
out interest-only loans, which he says erode economic stability.
Pressure
Foreclosures
jumped an annual 32 percent last month to a 17-year high, after Denmark’s
economy fell into a recession in the second half and house prices sank an
annual 8 percent in the fourth quarter.
“What
Moody’s is doing is putting pressure on the system, and that is not necessarily
a bad thing,” said Peter Lindegaard, head of investments for Danica Pension, a
unit of Danske Bank. Still, Lindegaard said Danica, which holds 20 billion
kroner in mortgage debt, won’t exit Nykredit’s bonds after the lender dropped
Moody’s.
“We think
we know as much as Moody’s about how the system works,” Lindegaard said in an
interview. “We still deem them a very secure investment.”
To contact
the reporter on this story: Frances Schwartzkopff in Copenhagen at
fschwartzko1@bloomberg.net.
To contact
the editor responsible for this story: Christian Wienberg at
cwienberg@bloomberg.net.
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