It’s very unlikely anyone will forget the housing bubble, and subsequent financial crisis, anytime soon. And for good reason. There’s plenty of blame to go around. #-ad_banner-#This includes the credit rating agencies. All three of the major rating agencies in the U.S. are thought to have played a key role in helping create the housing bubble. Their key crime? Inflating ratings on mortgage-backed securities. Over half a decade later, some investors are still shunning the credit rating agencies. But not Warren Buffett. He and Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-B) are Moody’s Corp.’s (NYSE: MCO) largest shareholder, owning 12% of… Read More
It’s very unlikely anyone will forget the housing bubble, and subsequent financial crisis, anytime soon. And for good reason. There’s plenty of blame to go around. #-ad_banner-#This includes the credit rating agencies. All three of the major rating agencies in the U.S. are thought to have played a key role in helping create the housing bubble. Their key crime? Inflating ratings on mortgage-backed securities. Over half a decade later, some investors are still shunning the credit rating agencies. But not Warren Buffett. He and Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-B) are Moody’s Corp.’s (NYSE: MCO) largest shareholder, owning 12% of the company. Moody’s took one of the hardest hits following the bursting of the credit bubble. In less than two years, the company’s market cap shrank nearly 75%. One reason that Moody’s fell so hard was that three-quarters of the mortgage-backed securities it rated AAA in 2006 were rated junk by mid-2010. Still, Buffett held on through all Moody’s struggles. Buffett has been an owner of Moody’s since 2000. He sold some shares in 2009, but only to raise money for his buyout of railway company Burlington Northern Santa Fe. Shares of the company are back up… Read More