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S&P Downgrades Goldman Sachs, Bank Of America, Wells Fargo And Citigroup

Standard And Poors Downgrade

EILEEN AJ CONNELLY   11/29/11 10:39 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has lowered its credit ratings for many of the world's largest financial institutions, including the biggest banks in the U.S.

Bank of America Corp. and its main subsidiaries are among the institutions whose ratings fell at least one notch Tuesday, along with Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo & Co.

S&P said the changes in 37 financial companies' ratings reflect the firm's new criteria for banks, and they incorporate shifts in the industry and the role of governments and central banks worldwide. The agency did not release its evaluation of each company but said it plans to discuss the changes during a conference call early Wednesday.

Bank of America's issuer credit rating was cut to "A-" from "A," as were its Countrywide Financial Corp. and Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. units, along with a series of related subsidiaries

Ratings downgrades are never seen as positive, but this round may be particularly damaging for Bank of America.

Concern already was growing Tuesday about whether B of A has enough capital to withstand another downturn in the U.S. economy or further trouble in Europe, and the bank's stock fell to a two-year low before the ratings announcement.

The Charlotte, N.C.-based bank said in a recent regulatory filing that downgrades from S&P or Fitch Ratings, which also is reevaluating its ratings, "could likely have a material adverse effect on our liquidity" and cut off its access to credit markets.

It typically costs companies more to borrow when their credit ratings are cut, the same way a decline in a person's credit scores drives up the interest rates that banks and credit cards will offer him.

Downgrades could hurt parts of the bank's businesses where creditworthiness is critical, Bank of America said in a filing Nov. 3 with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

A downgrade also could trigger provisions in derivative contracts that require B of A to put up more collateral, and it could terminate the contracts, resulting in losses and hurting the bank's liquidity. The bank posted a $6.2 billion profit for the third quarter, mostly the result of accounting gains and the sale of a stake in a Chinese bank, but it was still moving toward a loss for the year as of Sept. 30.

Bank of America shares fell 17 cents, or 3.2 percent, to close Tuesday at $5.08 and lost another penny after hours.

S&P cut its rating on Citigroup Inc.'s credit to "A-" from "A"; a series of its subsidiaries also saw changes. Citigroup shares closed up 19 cents, at $25.24, and lost 14 cents aftermarket.

Goldman Sachs also was cut to "A-" from "A," which triggered some downgrades for subsidiaries. The investment bank's shares closed regular trading down $1.62, at $88.81, and lost another 12 cents in late trading.

JPMorgan Chase's rating also dropped to "A" from "A+," and its Chase Bank unit was downgraded to "A+" from "AA-" and other subsidiaries ratings also changed. JPMorgan Chase took the place of Bank of America as the nation's largest bank in recent months.

The bank's stock lost 6 cents aftermarket after closing the regular session down 60 cents, or 2 percent, at $28.56.

Morgan Stanley's rating slipped to "A-" from "A" and several of its units also got cut one notch. Shares slipped 9 cents in late trading from their close down 49 cents, or 3.6 percent, at $13.31.

Wells Fargo fell to "A+" from "AA-" which likewise triggered downgrades for several subsidiaries. Shares closed down 7 cents at $24.08, then lost 18 cents aftermarket.

In addition, Bank of New York Mellon Corp., the sixth biggest bank in the U.S., was cut to "A+" from "AA-," and some units were downgraded. Bank of New York Mellon is a custodian bank, which collects dividends on stocks and holds cash deposits, among other things, on behalf of its customers, which are mainly large pension funds and money market funds. The stock closed down a penny at $18.08, then lost 8 cents in late trading.

Top U.K. downgrades include Barclays PLC, HSBC Holdings PLC, Lloyds Banking Group PLC and The Royal Bank of Scotland.

Ratings for several big European banks, including Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, ING Groep N.V. and Societe Generale were unchanged, but in some cases they were given a "negative" outlook.

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NEW YORK — Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has lowered its credit ratings for many of the world's largest financial institutions, including the biggest banks in the U.S. Bank of America Corp...
NEW YORK — Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has lowered its credit ratings for many of the world's largest financial institutions, including the biggest banks in the U.S. Bank of America Corp...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alan Wendt
Programmer
11:59 AM on 12/20/2011
Hopefully this will screw up their derivatives contracts and require them to post more collateral.
02:05 AM on 12/05/2011
Gentle reminder of what is coming down the river with the banks:

On March 5, 1933, in the depths of the banker engineered “Great Depression,” newly elected Franklin Roosevelt declared a “bank holiday” that forced banks closed for four days. Roosevelt then rammed the Emergency Banking Act through the legislature. Passed by Congress on March 9, the act granted FDR near dictatorial control over the dealings of banks. It also allowed the Secretary of the Treasury the power to compel every person and business in the country to relinquish their gold and accept paper currency in exchange.

On March 10, Roosevelt issued Executive Order No. 6073, forbidding people from sending gold overseas and forbidding banks from paying out gold. A few weeks later, on April 5, Roosevelt issued Executive Order No. 6102 ordering Americans to deliver their gold and gold certificates to the Federal Reserve bank in exchange for paper fiat money.

In other words, FDR engaged in one of history’s greatest rip-offs — that is until now.

Remember reading about that?

Now think back and remember Obama in 2009
http://www.infowars.com/bankster-holiday-planned-for-september/

What does everyone think is about to happen next?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seer Clearly
Only truth remains when fear is denied
11:10 AM on 12/01/2011
This is the fastest way to destroy these large "banks" which don't actually do much banking anymore - that is to say, they don't grow the economy by loaning money at fair rates because they're too focused on pleasing investors. Time for us to create nonprofit state banks that do what banking is supposed to do: lubricate the flow of money in the economy.
05:28 PM on 11/30/2011
There used to be a free trade law that was broken in the late 50's in the name of competition. If you bought aspirin you paid a set price with a built in reasonable profit for the seller anywhere you bought it. When the law was set aside large discounters bought huge amounts of aspirin and sold it at the cost of what a small drug store would have to pay for it. Michelin tires was the same "retail" price everywhere until Costco made a deal and started selling tires at a dealers cost. Loyal dealers could no longer make a profit. Then Home Depot undersold hardware stores, plumbing shops, electrical suppliers etc. Then they raised the price and cut the variety and supply inferior Chinese materials. Need I mention Walmart? All in the name of competition which has now been eliminated and now is price fixed by the few big boys that remain and there is no longer any competition. You do know that the oil companies tell each gas station what to charge. This was the beginning of what we have today. One goes bankrupt and is bought/merged. Delta Air/Continental, Home Savings to Washington Mutual to Chase, BofA/CountryWide, ExxonMobil, etc. ATT, broken up in 1982 and has been reacquiring them back ever since. How many banks are left? Where did the S&L's go? Our country (and most others) has become one big monopoly. Business/government wonders why we have become "anti-trust" of them.
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TRhett
Everyone should get what they deserve
05:26 PM on 11/30/2011
In the interest of full disclosure, S&P is part of the 1%. Sort of like the robber guarding the vault. CEO Harold McGraw's compensation over the last few years has been in the $12 million range. #356 on the Forbes list.
04:55 PM on 11/30/2011
And where was the SEC when these banks should have been monitored on their loan, savings policies and performance practices ??? This smells of CONSPIRACY to financially ruin the U.S.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carolgregor
04:52 PM on 11/30/2011
Let them fail. Like everyone else has. Who wants the crooks who made this mess to be bailed out yet again as the public faces a depression.
Never too big to fail, may be to corrupt to fail, right Obama and your cronies?
03:34 PM on 11/30/2011
It is truely sad . While station in Iraq we had discussed about healthcare , medicare , welfare , housing among other issuses back home . HOUSING was the # 1 topic we agree on . I remember while in one of many battles I had my love ones in my mind about what would happen if I got hit .
We heard how many of our veterans were evicted from their homes because they couldn't find jobs . I'm back home and sad to say nothing has really change . I've seen families evicted with their as young as 2 years old .
It's interesting how INVESTORS who invested in mortgage sercurities had been BAILOUT . BANKS were bailout by CONGRESS with our TAX DOLLARS . And now congress bailing out other countries in their financial mess .
Again if these investors whom bought mortgage securities were BAILOUT then this GOVERNMENT should BAILOUT THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
05:44 PM on 11/30/2011
God bless you, welcome home and thank you for your service. A light at the end of the tunnel I hope for you is home prices are down. If you have a job, (I hope) look into GI and VA loans. No hurry as prices prob wont go up for some time. Good luck to you and all your comrades.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
01:12 PM on 12/01/2011
You are right...Wells gets our tax dollars but Congress holds up money to fix our lousy roads and retrofit buildings that would put vets to work and save money in the long run...this country is broken
03:21 PM on 11/30/2011
Bank CEO's are so greedy they take a bag to the john with them so they can even take that home!
How about those times when some big wig at a bank sells his bank to a bigger bank and the new bank pays him millions and then fires / layoff a lot of Tellers to pay for it?
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des946
Consultant
02:25 PM on 11/30/2011
So, where is the bad news in any of this? These financial institutions should have been DOWN GRADED quite some time ago, shouldn't they?

The credit rating bureaus are doing EXACTLY what their fiduciary duties require them to do; and that is to evaluate and report on the financial condition of these institutions. Meanwhile the CEOs and upper management of those corporations . . . the corporate leaders who ARE RESPONSIBLE for the mismanagement of those firms are STILL RECEING THEIR EXORBITANT SALARIES, PERKS, and BONUSES (record bonuses in 2009, 2010, and 2011). It is past time for the ratings firms to reflect the poor ratings under the mismanagement of the corporate leadership. Don't we call that "Truth in Lending/Investments?) It is good news for the investors and the customers to put the pressure on corporate management for their misfeasnces and their malfeasnaces; that pressure is part of the only ways that will prompt improvements in these institutions . . . the other part is indictment and prosecution of management for frauds, and malfeasances.
02:52 PM on 11/30/2011
seriously? Why weren't the downgraded when they had to be bailed out? To little to late. Watch as banks buy back their stocks while they are down. Always ulterior motives. S&P doing insider trading through parent Co., friends and family
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fpwillson
Fighter for justice and the truth
02:13 PM on 11/30/2011
boa (not capitalized). Are they still in business? Just over $5 a share? Old Moanihan will be sniveling, for sure. When you have intercourse with your patrons, they're going to get even.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dancenownzen
02:05 PM on 11/30/2011
They should be downgraded for very poor customer service and screwing the public
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des946
Consultant
02:28 PM on 11/30/2011
The ratings are based solely on the financial conditions of the corporations, not the quality of services to the public. To do what you suggest would undermine the value of the ratings. Keep the evaluations simple and to the point of reflecting financial conditions so that investors can meaningfully evaluate the risks of investments. For far too long our government has been in collusion to obscrue the financial conditions of the major banks; this has to cease. Where is all of the promised "full disclosures and transparencies" that were promised at the time of the TARP program?
02:55 PM on 11/30/2011
common...you didn't believe that
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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CB5
We do not want to repeat 2010 in 2014! VOTE:)
01:00 PM on 11/30/2011
Many people don't see what these banks do because the actions they do (especially when they are corrupt or they don't want the public to know) aren't usually covered or overlooked (convenient) because of their power. Many of these banks do business with our enemies. I do not understand that one. Nor how they can get away with it. Don't forget that most of the banks are in charge of huge pension funds that they then re-invest in "other communities."
01:39 PM on 11/30/2011
not to mention the money laundering they do for the drug cartels
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des946
Consultant
02:31 PM on 11/30/2011
Far too many bankers are nothing more than "legalized CRIMINALS" . . . the government, esp. Congress is culpable in all of these coverups. Now that the banking infrastructure has been stablaized, they should be breaking these "too big to fail" instittuions that have to survive on the merits (profits) from their operations. It is time to clean up the acts in banking and in Wall Street.
12:56 PM on 11/30/2011
All this matters not....these guys have all that TARP cash that WE The People - The Taxpayers are paying for it....WE The People have been F#%$ed without the courtesy of a reach around
Bob Calvin
Work hard, work smart!
03:51 PM on 11/30/2011
The TARP cash was paid back by BOA as well WF neither of which wanted the money. BOA paid $250,000,000. per quarter in interest while paying it back. Even Geithner bragged that the government made a profit on them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nhfireman
12:48 PM on 11/30/2011
I wish they would go belly up. I rather deal with a local bank that invest its money into the town and it's people.They may not be as rich but at least you can depend on them
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sprkyreed
03:22 PM on 11/30/2011
Remember that local yokels can be just as dishonest as the big shots.