NCUA Eschews Wall Street Rating Agencies on MBS, Other Bonds

The National Credit Union Administration has proposed a new investment rule that eliminates the need to obtain top grades from Wall Street rating agencies, replacing it instead with the judgment of a credit union's management.

Processing Content

The rule was mandated by Congress after it was discovered that many Triple A-rated mortgage securities turned out to be junk and eventually caused failures at numerous financial institutions, including "wholesale" federal credit unions such as Central FCU, and WesCorp FCU.

The proposed rule, mandated under the Dodd-Frank bill, requires that CUs conduct an internal credit analysis of the counterparty in each transaction using in-house standards created by a CU's board of directors.  

The proposed rule replaces standard credit ratings, which came under attack during the financial crisis when many Triple A-rated securities failed. The new standard would create a case-by-case review, with a decision made regarding whether the counter-party has the capacity to meet its financial commitments.

Under the proposal, CUs would be required to explain how the securities it purchases or counterparties with which it does business meet the applicable standards. Credit unions would be required to develop, maintain and apply criteria for assessing the creditworthiness of securities and counterparties.

Interested parties have been given a 60-day comment period to respond.


For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Servicing Law and regulation
MORE FROM NATIONAL MORTGAGE NEWS
Load More