By Felix Salmon
Iβd never heard of Australian federal judge Jayne Jagot before today, but sheβs my new favorite jurist, thanks to her decision in a recent court case which was brought against ABN Amro and Standard & Poors.
The coverage of the decision (Quartz, FT, WSJ, Bloomberg, Reuters) concentrates, as it should, on the hugely important precedent being set here: that a ratings agency β in this case, S&P β is being found liable for losses that an investor suffered after trusting that agency.
S&P is appealing the decision, which runs to an astonishing 635,500 words, or almost 1,500 pages: itβs literally longer than War and Peace. At this point, itβs fair to assume that Jagot is one of the worldβs foremost experts on structuring and rating CPDOs β crazy derivative instruments which had a brief moment of glory at the end of 2006 before imploding spectacularly during the financial crisis. And helpfully, her decision begins with a 56-paragraph summary of her findings, which lays out exactly how culpable and incompetent S&P really was.