1

CARE's Ratings

#7127

Rank

$508.74M

Marketcap

IN India

Country

CARE's Ratings
Leadership team

Mr. Mehul Pandya (MD, CEO & Director)

Mr. Jinesh Shah (Chief Financial Officer)

Ms. Nehal Shah (Head of Compliance, Legal & Secretarial)

Products/ Services
Financial Services, Information Technology, Risk Management
Number of Employees
100 - 500
Headquarters
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Established
1993
Net Income
5M - 20M
Revenue
20M - 100M
Traded as
CARERATING.NS
Social Media
Overview
Location
Summary
CARE Ratings Limited, a credit rating agency, provides various rating and grading services in India, Mauritius, and Nepal. The company provides rating services for bank loan, debt instrument, bonds, non-convertible debentures, preference shares, fixed deposits, and commercial papers; principal protected market linked debentures, subordinate debt, perpetual bonds, and hybrid instruments; structured finance ratings; insurance ratings; infrastructure sector ratings; security receipts ratings; public finance rating services that cover ratings of state government entities and urban infrastructure projects; and real estate and infrastructure investment trusts ratings, as well as corporate governance ratings, project finance, and MLD valuation services. It also offers corporate advisory, project evaluation and monitoring, credit analytics, industry and company research, and due diligence and grading services, as well as research and analytics to corporates, financial institutions, banks, and institutional investors. The company was formerly known as Credit Analysis and Research Limited and changed its name to CARE Ratings Limited in June 2017. CARE Ratings Limited was incorporated in 1993 and is headquartered in Mumbai, India.
History

Early history

When the United States began to expand to the west and other parts of the country, so did the distance of businesses to their customers. When businesses were close to those who purchased goods or services from them, it was easy for the merchants to extend credit to them, due to their proximity and the fact that merchants knew their customers personally and knew whether or not they would be able to pay them back. As trading distances increased, merchants no longer personally knew their customers and became wary of extending credit to people who they did not know in fear of them not being able to pay them back. Business owners' hesitation to extend credit to new customers led to the birth of the credit reporting industry.Mercantile credit agencies—the precursors of today's rating agencies—were established in the wake of the financial crisis of 1837. These agencies rated the ability of merchants to pay their debts and consolidated these ratings in published guides. The first such agency was established in 1841 by Lewis Tappan in New York City. It was subsequently acquired by Robert Dun, who published its first ratings guide in 1859. Another early agency, John Bradstreet, formed in 1849 and published a ratings guide in 1857.Credit rating agencies originated in the United States in the early 1900s, when ratings began to be applied to securities, specifically those related to the railroad bond market. In the United States, the construction of extensive railroad systems had led to the development of corporate bond issues to finance them, and therefore a bond market several times larger than in other countries. The bond markets in the Netherlands and Britain had been established longer but tended to be small, and revolved around sovereign governments that were trusted to honor their debts. Companies were founded to provide investors with financial information on the growing railroad industry, including Henry Varnum Poor's publishing company, which produced a publication compiling financial data about the railroad and canal industries. Following the 1907 financial crisis, demand rose for such independent market information, in particular for independent analyses of bond creditworthiness. In 1909, financial analyst John Moody issued a publication focused solely on railroad bonds. His ratings became the first to be published widely in an accessible format, and his company was the first to charge subscription fees to investors.In 1913, the ratings publication by Moody's underwent two significant changes: it expanded its focus to include industrial firms and utilities, and it began to use a letter-rating system. For the first time, public securities were rated using a system borrowed from the mercantile credit rating agencies, using letters to indicate their creditworthiness. In the next few years, antecedents of the "Big Three" credit rating agencies were established. Poor's Publishing Company began issuing ratings in 1916, Standard Statistics Company in 1922, and the Fitch Publishing Company in 1924.

Post-Depression era

In the United States, the rating industry grew and consolidated rapidly following the passage of the Glass-Steagall act of 1933 and the separation of the securities business from banking. As the market grew beyond that of traditional investment banking institutions, new investors again called for increased transparency, leading to the passage of new, mandatory disclosure laws for issuers, and the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission . In 1936, regulation was introduced to prohibit banks from investing in bonds determined by "recognized rating manuals" to be "speculative investment securities" . US banks were permitted to hold only "investment grade" bonds, and it was the ratings of Fitch, Moody's, Poor's, and Standard that legally determined which bonds were which. State insurance regulators approved similar requirements in the following decades.From 1930 to 1980, the bonds and ratings of them were primarily relegated to American municipalities and American blue chip industrial firms. International "sovereign bond" rating shrivelled during the Great Depression to a handful of the most creditworthy countries, after a number of defaults of bonds issued by governments such as Germany's.In the late 1960s and 1970s, ratings were extended to commercial paper and bank deposits. Also during that time, major agencies changed their business model by beginning to charge bond issuers as well as investors. The reasons for this change included a growing free rider problem related to the increasing availability of inexpensive photocopy machines and the increased complexity of the financial markets.The rating agencies added levels of gradation to their rating systems. In 1973, Fitch added plus and minus symbols to its existing letter-rating system. The following year, Standard and Poor's did the same, and Moody's began using numbers for the same purpose in 1982.

Growth of bond market

The end of the Bretton Woods system in 1971 led to the liberalization of financial regulations and the global expansion of capital markets in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1975, SEC rules began explicitly referencing credit ratings. For example, the commission changed its minimum capital requirements for broker-dealers, allowing smaller reserves for higher-rated bonds; the rating would be done by "nationally recognized statistical ratings organizations" . This referred to the "Big Three", but in time ten agencies were identified by the SEC as NRSROs.Rating agencies also grew in size and profitability as the number of issuers accessing the debt markets grew exponentially, both in the United States and abroad. By 2009 the worldwide bond market reached an estimated $82.2 trillion, in 2009 dollars.

1980s–present

Two economic trends of the 1980s and 90s that brought significant expansion for the global capital market were

the move away from "intermediated" financing toward cheaper and longer-term "disintermediated" financing , and

the global move away from state intervention and state-led industrial adjustment toward economic liberalism based on global capital markets and arms-length relations between government and industry.More debt securities meant more business for the Big Three agencies, which many investors depended on to judge the securities of the capital market. US government regulators also depended on the rating agencies; they allowed pension funds and money market funds to purchase only securities rated above certain levels.A market for low-rated, high-yield "junk" bonds blossomed in the late 1970s, expanding securities financing to firms other than a few large, established blue chip corporations. Rating agencies also began to apply their ratings beyond bonds to counterparty risks, the performance risk of mortgage servicers, and the price volatility of mutual funds and mortgage-backed securities. Ratings were increasingly used in most developed countries' financial markets and in the "emerging markets" of the developing world. Moody's and S&P opened offices Europe, Japan, and particularly emerging markets. Non-American agencies also developed outside of the United States. Along with the largest US raters, one British, two Canadian and three Japanese firms were listed among the world's "most influential" rating agencies in the early 1990s by the Financial Times publication Credit Ratings International.Structured finance was another growth area of growth. The "financial engineering" of the new "private-label" asset-backed securities—such as subprime mortgage-backed securities , collateralized debt obligations , "CDO-Squared", and "synthetic CDOs"—made them "harder to understand and to price" and became a profit center for rating agencies. By 2006, Moody's earned $881 million in revenue from structured finance. By December 2008, there were over $11 trillion structured finance debt securities outstanding in the US bond market.The Big Three issued 97%–98% of all credit ratings in the United States and roughly 95% worldwide, giving them considerable pricing power. This and credit market expansion brought them profit margins of around 50% from 2004 through 2009.As the influence and profitability of CRAs expanded, so did scrutiny and concern about their performance and alleged illegal practices. In 1996 the US Department of Justice launched an investigation into possible improper pressuring of issuers by Moody's in order to win business. Agencies were subjected to dozens of lawsuits by investors complaining of inaccurate ratings following the collapse of Enron, and especially after the US subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent financial crisis of 2007–2008. During that debacle, 73%—over $800 billion worth—of all mortgage-backed securities that one credit rating agency had rated triple-A in 2006 were downgraded to junk status two years later. In July 2008, SIFMA formed a global task force with members drawn from a cross-section of the financial services industry, including asset managers, underwriters, and issuers, and provided industry input to lawmakers and regulators in Europe and Asia, and was designated by the U.S. President’s Working Group on Financial Markets as the private-sector group to provide the PWG with industry recommendations on credit rating matters. It published the "Recommendations of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association Credit Rating Agency Task Force", which included a dozen recommendations to change the credit rating agency process.

Downgrades of European and US sovereign debt were also criticized. In August 2011, S&P downgraded the long-held triple-A rating of US securities. Since the spring of 2010, one or more of the Big Three relegated Greece, Portugal, and Ireland to "junk" status—a move that many EU officials say has accelerated a burgeoning European sovereign-debt crisis. In January 2012, amid continued eurozone instability, S&P downgraded nine eurozone countries, stripping France and Austria of their triple-A ratings.

Mission
To provide world-class ratings, research, and risk management services by constantly striving for excellence through innovative solutions and value-added services.
Vision
To be a global leader and trusted partner in the financial markets.
Key Team

Mr. Aniruddha Sen (Chief HR Officer)

Mr. Kiran Surve (Chief Exec. Officer of CARE Risk Solution Private Limited)

Mr. Sachin Gupta (Exec. Director & Chief Ratings Officer)

Ms. Rajani Sinha (Chief Economist)

Ms. Sushmita Majumdar (Co-CEO of CARE Advisory Research & Training P Ltd.,)

Mr. Nadir Bhalwani (Chief Information & Technology Officer)

Kumari Nisha (Brand & Corp. Communication)

Recognition and Awards
CARE Ratings has been consistently recognized as the best credit rating agency in India at the Indian Merchant Chamber-RBI Dun & Bradstreet Banking Awards & Summit.
References

Dive deeper into fresh insights across Business, Industry Leaders and Influencers, Organizations, Education, and Investors for a comprehensive view.

CARE's Ratings
Leadership team

Mr. Mehul Pandya (MD, CEO & Director)

Mr. Jinesh Shah (Chief Financial Officer)

Ms. Nehal Shah (Head of Compliance, Legal & Secretarial)

Products/ Services
Financial Services, Information Technology, Risk Management
Number of Employees
100 - 500
Headquarters
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Established
1993
Net Income
5M - 20M
Revenue
20M - 100M
Traded as
CARERATING.NS
Social Media