Credit Rating
The Three Major Credit Rating Agencies
Three firms dominate the global credit rating industry. They’re recognized by the SEC as Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations (NRSROs) and their assessments drive trillions of dollars in investment decisions.
| Agency | Headquarters | Coverage Focus |
|---|---|---|
| S&P Global Ratings | New York | Broadest coverage — corporates, sovereigns, structured finance, municipals |
| Moody’s Investors Service | New York | Strong in corporate and structured finance; uses a distinct rating scale |
| Fitch Ratings | New York / London | Global coverage; often serves as the tiebreaker between S&P and Moody’s |
Most large bond issuers carry ratings from at least two of the three agencies. When ratings diverge — say, S&P rates a bond BBB+ but Moody’s rates it Baa1 — the market typically prices off the lower rating, since regulatory and index rules often use the more conservative assessment.
The Full Credit Rating Scale
Each agency has its own notation, but the tiers align closely. The critical dividing line falls at BBB- / Baa3 — everything above is investment-grade, everything below is high-yield (junk).
| Category | S&P / Fitch | Moody’s | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Investment Grade | |||
| Prime | AAA | Aaa | Highest quality. Minimal default risk. |
| High Grade | AA+, AA, AA- | Aa1, Aa2, Aa3 | Very high quality. Slight susceptibility to long-term risks. |
| Upper Medium | A+, A, A- | A1, A2, A3 | Strong capacity to pay. Some vulnerability to economic changes. |
| Lower Medium | BBB+, BBB, BBB- | Baa1, Baa2, Baa3 | Adequate capacity. Lowest investment-grade tier. |
| Below Investment Grade (Junk / High-Yield) | |||
| Speculative | BB+, BB, BB- | Ba1, Ba2, Ba3 | Less vulnerable near-term, but faces ongoing uncertainty. |
| Highly Speculative | B+, B, B- | B1, B2, B3 | More vulnerable. Adverse conditions could impair capacity to pay. |
| Substantial Risk | CCC+, CCC, CCC- | Caa1, Caa2, Caa3 | Currently vulnerable and dependent on favorable conditions. |
| Extremely Speculative | CC | Ca | Highly vulnerable. Default is a near-term possibility. |
| Default Imminent / In Default | C, D | C | Default has occurred or is virtually certain. |
Rating Outlooks and Watches
Beyond the letter grade, agencies publish outlooks and credit watches that signal where the rating might go next.
| Signal | Meaning | Time Horizon |
|---|---|---|
| Positive Outlook | Rating may be upgraded | Typically 6-24 months |
| Negative Outlook | Rating may be downgraded | Typically 6-24 months |
| Stable Outlook | Rating is unlikely to change | Typically 6-24 months |
| CreditWatch Positive | Upgrade under active review | Usually resolved within 90 days |
| CreditWatch Negative | Downgrade under active review | Usually resolved within 90 days |
A CreditWatch is more urgent than an outlook. When an agency places an issuer on negative CreditWatch, the bond’s price typically drops immediately because the market interprets it as a downgrade being imminent.
What Agencies Evaluate
Rating agencies conduct deep fundamental analysis of the issuer. The specific factors vary by issuer type, but the core assessment focuses on:
For corporate bonds: Revenue stability, profitability, debt-to-equity ratio, interest coverage, free cash flow generation, competitive position, industry dynamics, and management quality.
For sovereign bonds: GDP growth, fiscal balance, debt-to-GDP ratio, monetary policy credibility, institutional strength, and political stability.
For municipal bonds: Tax base, revenue diversity, debt burden, pension obligations, governance quality, and economic fundamentals of the region.
How Credit Ratings Affect Bond Pricing
Ratings directly influence the credit spread — the yield premium a bond pays over comparable-maturity Treasuries. Lower ratings mean wider spreads, which means higher borrowing costs for the issuer and higher yields for investors.
| Rating | Typical Spread Over Treasuries | 10-Year Cumulative Default Rate |
|---|---|---|
| AAA | 20-50 bps | ~0.5% |
| AA | 40-80 bps | ~0.7% |
| A | 70-130 bps | ~1.5% |
| BBB | 120-220 bps | ~3.5% |
| BB | 250-400 bps | ~10% |
| B | 400-600 bps | ~25% |
| CCC and below | 800+ bps | ~50%+ |
Rating changes — upgrades and downgrades — trigger immediate price movements. A downgrade from investment-grade to junk is the most impactful because it forces institutional selling and removes the bond from major indices.
Issuer Rating vs. Issue Rating
There’s an important distinction between rating an issuer and rating a specific bond issue.
Issuer rating: Reflects the overall creditworthiness of the entity. Think of it as the company’s general ability to repay debt.
Issue rating: Reflects the credit risk of a specific bond, factoring in seniority, collateral, and structural protections. A secured bond from a BBB-rated company might be rated A- because the collateral provides extra protection. Conversely, a subordinated bond from the same company might be rated BB+ because it ranks lower in the repayment hierarchy.
Limitations of Credit Ratings
Credit ratings are useful but not infallible. Understanding their limitations is essential.
Lagging indicators: Agencies are often slow to adjust ratings. By the time a downgrade hits, the market has usually already repriced the bond. The 2008 financial crisis exposed this flaw dramatically when mortgage-backed securities carrying AAA ratings defaulted.
Issuer-pays model: The rated entity pays the agency for the rating, creating a potential conflict of interest. Critics argue this incentivizes agencies to assign favorable ratings to win business.
Point-in-time snapshots: Ratings reflect current conditions and expectations. They don’t guarantee future performance. A stable AA-rated company can deteriorate rapidly if its industry shifts or management makes poor decisions.
Not a buy/sell recommendation: Ratings assess credit risk only — they say nothing about whether a bond is attractively priced, whether the yield adequately compensates for the risk, or how the bond fits into your portfolio.
Key Takeaways
- Credit ratings assess an issuer’s ability to repay debt, ranging from AAA/Aaa (lowest risk) to D/C (default).
- S&P Global, Moody’s, and Fitch are the three dominant rating agencies.
- The investment-grade/junk boundary at BBB- / Baa3 is the most consequential threshold — it determines institutional eligibility, index inclusion, and borrowing costs.
- Ratings directly influence credit spreads: lower ratings mean higher yields (and higher borrowing costs).
- Outlooks and CreditWatches signal potential direction; a negative watch typically triggers immediate market reaction.
- Ratings are useful but lag the market, carry conflicts of interest, and should be one input — not the sole basis — of your credit analysis.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a credit rating and a credit score?
A credit score applies to individuals and is a numerical score (like FICO, ranging 300-850) used by lenders to assess personal creditworthiness. A credit rating applies to institutions — corporations, governments, municipalities — and their debt securities. Both measure the ability to repay, but they use entirely different scales and methodologies.
Who pays for credit ratings?
The issuer pays the rating agency — this is called the “issuer-pays” model. The issuing company or government requests and pays for the rating, which the agency then makes publicly available. This creates a potential conflict of interest, though agencies argue their reputation depends on accuracy and independence.
How often are credit ratings updated?
Agencies conduct formal annual reviews for most issuers, but ratings can change at any time in response to material events — earnings deterioration, mergers, debt issuance, industry disruption, or macroeconomic shifts. CreditWatch placements typically resolve within 90 days.
Can a company have different ratings from different agencies?
Yes — and it happens frequently. This is called a “split rating.” For example, an issuer might be rated BBB+ by S&P but Baa1 (equivalent to BBB+) by Moody’s, or the two agencies may differ by a notch or more. When ratings are split across the investment-grade/junk boundary, it’s particularly significant for index and mandate purposes.
Do sovereign credit ratings work the same way?
The scale is the same, but the analysis is different. Sovereign ratings evaluate a country’s economic fundamentals, fiscal position, institutional strength, and political stability rather than corporate financials. The U.S. has been downgraded from AAA by some agencies, though U.S. Treasury securities are still treated as the global safe-haven benchmark.