Description

Book Synopsis

Sinclair offers a highly accessible account of bond rating agencies: their origins and the rating processes they use to judge creditworthiness. Illustrated with a wide range of cases, this book offers a fresh assessment of the role of an often-overlooked institution in the dynamics of modern global capitalism.



Trade Review
"Some people love them, some hate them, but no one would dispute that ratings agencies play an important role in financial markets today. Their influence is clearly evident, particularly with the recent GM and Ford revaluations. When asked the basic question 'What is a rating agency?' the names Moody's, S&P, and Fitch quickly come to mind as entities in the business of rating the investment quality of bonds. But Timothy Sinclair, a professor of international political economy at the University of Warwick, goes much further. He reviews in exhaustive detail who the ratings agencies are, where they came from, how they are regulated and operate in different countries, and how their role has shifted and been strengthened as the financial markets evolve."—Ann Cullen, HBS Working Knowledge, June 2005
"In this volume, Timothy J. Sinclair systematically and thoroughly explores a major but little-known dimension of world affairs. The extensive expansion of international capital mobility in recent years has accorded bond-rating agencies a central place in the dynamics of globalization and Sinclair does a masterful job of explicating the various ways in which these new masters of capital exercise their power and perform their roles."—James N. Rosenau, University Professor of International Affairs, The George Washington University
"In The New Masters of Capital, Timothy J. Sinclair investigates the world of bond rating agencies. These private institutions have immense power, as their judgments can profoundly affect the financial conditions faced by corporations, cities, and countries. Their ratings can determine whether or not poor countries or struggling municipalities can borrow on private markets, a consideration of profound importance to their economic success. Sinclair explores how the bond rating agencies function, and how they can malfunction, as part of the broader international political economy. The New Masters of Capital will be interesting and informative for all those concerned to understand the operation of today's global financial markets. James Carville once famously said that when he was reincarnated he wanted to come back as the bond market, because 'then you can intimidate everyone.' If Carville had read Sinclair's book, he would have chosen to come back as a bond rating agency, because then he could even intimidate the bond market!"—Jeffry A. Frieden, Stanfield Professor of International Peace, Harvard University
"Timothy J. Sinclair offers an admirably jargon-free account of bond rating agencies. This book will be widely read, as it is the first to systematically tackle this aspect of the politics of economic globalization. The New Masters of Capital makes a strong and intriguing argument about the role of power and authority in the social construction of knowledge in international market settings."—Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University

The New Masters of Capital

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    A Paperback by Timothy J. Sinclair

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      Publisher: MB - Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 7/31/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780801474910, 978-0801474910
      ISBN10: 0801474914

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Sinclair offers a highly accessible account of bond rating agencies: their origins and the rating processes they use to judge creditworthiness. Illustrated with a wide range of cases, this book offers a fresh assessment of the role of an often-overlooked institution in the dynamics of modern global capitalism.



      Trade Review
      "Some people love them, some hate them, but no one would dispute that ratings agencies play an important role in financial markets today. Their influence is clearly evident, particularly with the recent GM and Ford revaluations. When asked the basic question 'What is a rating agency?' the names Moody's, S&P, and Fitch quickly come to mind as entities in the business of rating the investment quality of bonds. But Timothy Sinclair, a professor of international political economy at the University of Warwick, goes much further. He reviews in exhaustive detail who the ratings agencies are, where they came from, how they are regulated and operate in different countries, and how their role has shifted and been strengthened as the financial markets evolve."—Ann Cullen, HBS Working Knowledge, June 2005
      "In this volume, Timothy J. Sinclair systematically and thoroughly explores a major but little-known dimension of world affairs. The extensive expansion of international capital mobility in recent years has accorded bond-rating agencies a central place in the dynamics of globalization and Sinclair does a masterful job of explicating the various ways in which these new masters of capital exercise their power and perform their roles."—James N. Rosenau, University Professor of International Affairs, The George Washington University
      "In The New Masters of Capital, Timothy J. Sinclair investigates the world of bond rating agencies. These private institutions have immense power, as their judgments can profoundly affect the financial conditions faced by corporations, cities, and countries. Their ratings can determine whether or not poor countries or struggling municipalities can borrow on private markets, a consideration of profound importance to their economic success. Sinclair explores how the bond rating agencies function, and how they can malfunction, as part of the broader international political economy. The New Masters of Capital will be interesting and informative for all those concerned to understand the operation of today's global financial markets. James Carville once famously said that when he was reincarnated he wanted to come back as the bond market, because 'then you can intimidate everyone.' If Carville had read Sinclair's book, he would have chosen to come back as a bond rating agency, because then he could even intimidate the bond market!"—Jeffry A. Frieden, Stanfield Professor of International Peace, Harvard University
      "Timothy J. Sinclair offers an admirably jargon-free account of bond rating agencies. This book will be widely read, as it is the first to systematically tackle this aspect of the politics of economic globalization. The New Masters of Capital makes a strong and intriguing argument about the role of power and authority in the social construction of knowledge in international market settings."—Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University

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