"The Securities and Exchange Commission is examining Standard & Poor's Ratings Services' 11th-hour decision to pull its ratings on a high-profile deal backed by commercial- real-estate loan," The Wall Street Journal reported citing a source.
SEC's inquiry is part of its annual review of S&P and other credit-rating firms, although in S&P's case the regulator is examining whether the rating agency used more lenient standards to rate new CMBS deals than on other outstanding deals, the daily said.
S&P hasn't been accused of any wrongdoing, it added.
The scrutiny relates to S&P's decision in July 2011 to pull its ratings on a new USD 1.5 billion CMBS (commercial- mortgage-backed security), issued by Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Citigroup Inc.
"The unusual step sent the commercial mortgage securities market into turmoil and scuttled the deal for weeks, angering investors and issuers," the daily said.
According to the publication, SEC declined to comment on the issue, while S&P spokesperson said, "like all rating agencies, is subject to annual examinations by the SEC," and "fully cooperates with such oversight".