Standard & Poor's - S&P

  

Categories: Marketing, Credit

S&P is a ratings agency (owned by a publishing company) that has opinions on the creditworthiness of debt and sometimes other instruments. Opinions that it shares, of course.

S&P also manages an index fund series called the S&P 500, which tracks the top 500 U.S. companies by market value across nine industries.

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Finance: What are the Differences in S&P...27 Views

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finance a la shmoop what are the differences in S&P's, and Moody's

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ratings? capital letters. really that's about it the assessment of the rating

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itself is about the same. the people work at both companies all came from about [grinning men walk in front of a school]

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the same schools the same semi diversified backgrounds and well they

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all eat the same white bread. note the nomenclature differences here though.

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Moody's does in fact look kind of moody with a big fat capital letter in the

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beginning followed by small letters and slightly different notations. the S&P is

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all in caps all shouting all the time. the metrics behind say a quote highly [chart shown]

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speculative bond unquote down here are about the same for both companies but

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the slight differences are worth noting so that when you see a rating well you

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know just by the way in which it's written who wrote it.

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now as for actually understanding bond ratings well that's a different story. to [document shown]

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most people they might as well be hieroglyphics. [confused woman reads paper]

Up Next

Finance: What is the S&P 500?
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What is the S&P 500? It's Standard & Poor's 500 generally largest companies, with a U.S. domestic bias. The S&P 500 is usually what investors think...

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