New Rule Would Allow Banks To Choose Values Of Their Assets

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March 26, 2009 at 12:10 PM

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The Financial Accounting Standards Board quietly buckled to banking-industry pressure last week and proposed new accounting practices that would allow banks to value assets at a higher price than they could currently be sold for.

Banks have long demanded the "mark-to-market" accounting rule change, arguing that it's unfair to require them to mark toxic assets down to current market prices because the very market for those assets is frozen.

The move marks a shift for Robert Herz, head of the FASB, who recently told a panel of lawmakers that the harshest critics of mark-to-market accounting practices have been the very same banks that have gone under when regulators would not let them adjust their accounting. Herz and other regulators have been under intense congressional pressure to reform the rules.

"I will tell you that I get calls and visits from some of those institutions that are now in government hands, about two weeks before they get taken over, trying to get the accounting changed," he said. "Clearly some of the most vocal opponents of fair value and mark-to-market have been some of those institutions that ultimately failed and have had to have billions of taxpayer dollars put into them."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said that she's been consulting with former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker regarding the reform.

"I've talked to Mr. Volcker about this, who knows a great deal about it. And I think caution is important in it, but I think attention is necessary," said Pelosi in a brief interview with the Huffington Post.

She said that she's following the issue closely. "I think it has to be done with care. But we have to pay some attention to it because the current system is not working," she said. "It's the whole thing: If you mark it too low, what's the price?"

Volcker chaired a financial reform study that reported its findings in January (PDF). It came down on the side of reforming mark-to-market rules. "Fair value accounting principles and standards should be reevaluated with a view to developing more realistic guidelines for dealing with less liquid instruments and distressed markets," it recommends. "The tension between the business purpose served by regulated financial institutions that intermediate credit and liquidity risk and the interests of investors and creditors should be resolved by development of principles-based standards that better reflect the business models of these institutions."

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Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fl.), who quizzed Herz on the accounting rule, said that the demand to change the rules is "representative of exactly the kind of thing that's put us in this position in general...We have people who break every rule in the book and then they think that the answer to their problems is to break more rules. It's given us some real insight into the human nature and the pathology of the people who have created these problems for America."

If banks are allowed to determine the value of their assets without regard to current prices, investors have less trust and confidence in the integrity of their books and their assets, which could further freeze markets and further drive down prices.

The proposed FASB rule, according to a release from the agency, "provides a framework for measuring fair value and a definition of fair value that contemplates an orderly transaction between market participants, not a forced or distressed sale."

It goes on: "In the current economic crisis, many constituents have requested additional authoritative guidance to assist them in determining whether a market is active or inactive, and whether a transaction is distressed. Proposed FSP FAS 157-e would provide this application guidance."

In other words, if a bank asserts that the market for a certain asset is "inactive," then it need not write the value of it down to market prices. Critics such as Grayson insist this change would allow banks to continue a fiction of viability when in fact they may be insolvent.

"I think the real reason this has come up now is because a lot of the institutions are genuinely insolvent and don't want to admit it," Grayson said.

Treasury Secretary Timothy, testifying before Congress on Tuesday, expressed some support for the rule change, calling it a "constructive set of changes" that struck a balance "between preserving confidence in the quality of public disclosure, which is very important to getting through this, [and addressing] some of the complications of applying those standards in a market like we're experiencing today."

The public is entitled to comment on the rule change until April first. Comments can be e-mailed to director@fasb.org -- File Reference: Proposed FSP FAS 157-e. Or send snail-mailed Technical Director, FASB, 401 Merritt 7, PO Box 5116, Norwalk, CT 06856-5116, File Reference: Proposed FSP FAS 157-e.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board quietly buckled to banking-industry pressure last week and proposed new accounting practices that would allow banks to value assets at a higher price than they...
The Financial Accounting Standards Board quietly buckled to banking-industry pressure last week and proposed new accounting practices that would allow banks to value assets at a higher price than they...
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- mlaiuppa I'm a Fan of mlaiuppa 41 fans permalink
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This is just stupid piled on top of stupid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 03/26/2009

Dear MoveOn member,
These days, most Americans cringe when it's time to check the value of their retirement accounts. But not these guys.

The New York Times is reporting that the top 25 hedge fund managers made $11.6 billion in 2008.1

And here's the kicker: Because of a tax loophole, they'll only pay 15% in taxes on their $11.6 billion in earnings.2 That's a lower tax rate than a secretary or police officer making $40,000 a year pays.

That's just wrong. Especially because unregulated hedge funds are partially responsible for our current economic crisis.


President Obama's budget closes this outrageous loophole and many others. And it uses that money to make the investments we need—in health care for all and a new energy economy. But the people who get special treatment under the current system aren't giving up their privileges without a huge fight. If we don't fight back now, some of the biggest, most ambitiously progressive parts of the budget may be gone within two weeks.

So we're launching a huge new ad campaign to make sure these hedge fund managers and Wall Street CEOs pay their fair share. We'll remind the key members of Congress that we expect them to stand with working families and vote for the budget. Can you chip in $25 to get our ads on the air?

http://pol.moveon.org/donate/budget10_ads.html?id=15815-9193653-dueGFzx&t=3

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 03/26/2009

But isn't it true that Obama's budget doesn't close that loophole for another two years? By then the hedge funders will have moved on to easier pickings. Probably getting assets that have been marked down to pennies on the dollar and milking them for a few bucks profit on each.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 03/26/2009
- liecatcher I'm a Fan of liecatcher 5 fans permalink
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Ultimately what WALL STREET wants, it gets so the rhetoric doesn't mater.

However,House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) consulting with former Federal Reserve Chairman

Paul Volcker regarding the reform is like asking Michael Jackson if it's okay for pedophiles

to live near schools or work for the BOY SCOUTS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 03/26/2009

Imagine our president walking in to some thing like Gordon Brown did at this meeting. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94lW6Y4tBXs

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 03/26/2009
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Can I try this?

I bought my car in 2005; if the Kelly Blue Book says its worth $14,000 as of 2009, can I say, "I know the true value of the car and its worth $50,000. That's the value i place on it, and that will stand!"

The banks couldn't even figure out how much crap assets they have on their balance sheets, and the government wants them to give them the power to do something that we can't? Just who in this economic climate thinks they are capable of doing it fairly?

I'm e-mailing my congressman, this is a rotten policy!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 03/26/2009

It is a rotten policy ... and yet on this and other blogs of record apologist put on their "let's be reasonable voice " and try to talk down those of us who oppose it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 03/26/2009

I support temporary changes to mark to market in order to get out of this mess but long term things like Gramm-Leach-Blighly and the Comodity Futures Modernization acts need to be changed/eliminated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 PM on 03/26/2009

Isn't this what kept the zombie banks in Japan standing for so long?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:06 PM on 03/26/2009

Oh, mark-to-market is back.

I'm suddenly reminded of an article in The Onion, "People Demand New Bubble to Invest In."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 03/26/2009
- Ozarks I'm a Fan of Ozarks 49 fans permalink
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Fine, it the banks want to go "Fair value accounting principles and standards should be reevaluated with a view to developing more realistic guidelines for dealing with less liquid instruments and distressed markets," then under Gietner's proposal of a private bidder attempting buy a distressed mortgage at a certain price tshould be the FASBE reflection of the "mark to market" "value" on a Bank's balance sheet. The most realistic guideline will be what the private market is willing to pay , with Government as partner for any toxic asset.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 03/26/2009
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

This argument is moot. It is only for assets where there is no market. Geithner's plan creates a market and discovers a price for these assets. The banks(Kenneth Lewis) can no longer hide behind Mark to market and will have to enhance their cash position after taking the write down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 03/26/2009
- Francis99 I'm a Fan of Francis99 16 fans permalink
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This is simply brilliant. I know we are all saved now. Praise the glorious wisdom of the financial sector.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 03/26/2009
- marinade I'm a Fan of marinade 49 fans permalink

Sounds like the old game of speculation....

The banks want to put a value on their assets based on what they think the assets will be worth in the future.

The American Financial System, the great institution that it is (ahem...), still wants to reside in the world of fantasy instead of reality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 PM on 03/26/2009

No ...this is not speculation this is out and out a continuation of the plan...we will now sell the taxpayers our overleverged toxic securities and buy them back for pennies on the dollar. Not only that.... the TAXPAYERS will now be responsible for evicting americans from their homes as we foreclose upon them. This will add to the continuing devaluation of your home...We need more of a bottoms up effort to give any plan a sense of fairness.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 03/26/2009
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