Maryland Goes Ratings Shopping
While this story is a few days old, it remains troubling and deserves a post. The State of Maryland recently dropped Moody’s, which had downgraded the state from Aaa to Aa1, from its rating agency roster. It then promptly dialed-up Kroll Bond Rating Agency to replace Moody’s and serve as the state’s third triple-A rating after S&P and Fitch. Not surprisingly, state officials have reportedly insisted that Moody's downgrade had nothing to do with the fact that it was dropped. While the Moody’s downgrade caused the state to temporarily lose its “triple-triple” bragging rights, the designation is a ridiculous thing for state officials to obsess about because, while it might make good copy for press releases, in reality, nobody really cares about it outside of maybe a few people at a National Association of State Treasurers conference. And it would have been more palatable if state officials had just admitted that the downgrade was the reason it pulled the plug on Moody’s. Instead, ...