Accountants, Washington Helping Banks Fluff Profits

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First Posted: 05-28-09 12:20 PM   |   Updated: 06-28-09 05:12 AM

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Look for another rosy round of profits when banks turn in their numbers for the second quarter ending in June when it will be legal for them to improve their balance sheets by shifting losses into the future, thanks to new accounting rules passed by a one-vote margin by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).

It's just one in a series of changes made to accounting rules that allow banks to shift or ignore losses or pretend that liabilities aren't liabilities. The struggle for control of the financial recovery -- where the money goes, how it's counted and who survives -- is nothing short of war. Truth has been the first casualty.

The latest rule change allows banks to split losses into ones that they recognize immediately and others that are pushed down the road and may pop up on the books later. It passed in April with barely any notice from the press. The accounting tricks allow banks, which may otherwise be deemed insolvent, to continue to operate. It's a hell of a time to be an accountant.

"It's more fascinating than it's ever been before," says Rick Martin, head of technical accounting at Pluris Valuation Advisors LLC, who specializes in derivatives and securitized assets, the type of products that brought down the economy. "Accounting used to be kind of dry. The last year or two it's just been unbelievably exciting, as I've seen auditors and companies and accounting standards setters go head to head."

Even the FASB, a quasi-public board with authority to establishes financial accounting standards, has consistently split three to two -- three board members with corporate backgrounds standing with banks and an academic and a former investor objecting to loosening the rules.

Making banks' books less transparent is a Bizarro-World response to a global financial collapse that began when markets froze in reaction to concerns about the solvency of banks and the true value of their assets.

Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) says the push to change accounting rules is a logical result of allowing insolvent banks to stay open. The short-term motivation is to stay in business as long as they can, but it'll backfire in the not-too-long run.

"When we talked about the credit system freezing up, what we were really talking about is the fact that banks stopped believing in each others' credit worthiness. Playing games with accounting rules is certainly not going to make people feel any differently about that," he says. "It's happening because insolvent banks are pressuring people in Washington to give them relief."

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It's the kind of financial gimmick that works until it doesn't. Subprime loans bundled and sold as AAA securities rose in value as long as people believed they were worth something. Then reality intervened.

"These companies are trying to kill the messenger...What they don't seem to realize is that changing accounting rules does not make them solvent," says Grayson. "Frankly, it doesn't make any difference whether FASB blesses those games or not. People who invest sums in the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars are sophisticated enough to be able to understand when the rules are being bent."

The games with accounting rules began last fall when the first serious signs emerged that the economy was about to crater. When the government decided to bail out the financial sector, it had a Catch-22 on its hands: It didn't want to just give the money away, so the government needed collateral from the banks.

The collateral took the form of warrants, which represent a future claim on earnings. The problem was that normal accounting rules require warrants to be listed on balance sheets as liabilities. Doing so would have further weighed down the already-struggling banking sector.

So the Bush administration's Treasury Department asked the SEC and FASB -- pronounced FAZ-bee in the number-crunching world -- if banks could just go ahead and ignore that rule.

"When you issue warrants it's a liability to you because the guy that's holding the warrants is going to exercise it at some point. But in this case, with the government warrants, the FASB and the SEC didn't even put in a new rule, all they did was issue a letter to the government," says Martin. "The paraphrase of the letter is, we'll turn the other way."

The exact wording of the October 24th letter says, "...we would not object if the Warrants, as defined in the documents provided, were to be classified as permanent equity."

The accountants suggested that the banks should get shareholder approval before fudging the balance sheet, but added that if they couldn't, it was still okay.

"If an issuer does not have required shareholder approval, including shareholder approval for sufficient authorized but unissued shares of the class of stock that may be required for settlement, we would also not object to classification of such Warrants as permanent equity provided that the issuer takes the necessary action to secure sufficient approvals prior to the end of the fiscal quarter in which such Warrants are issued," wrote Russell Golden, technical director for FASB; and James Kroeker, deputy chief accountant at SEC.

The Treasury Department proudly displayed the letter on its website in November, inviting banks to kick their liabilities off their balance sheets.

The simple issuance of the letter doesn't allow skeptical board members to dissent,which two of the five have been doing with a regularity unusual to the consensus-driven atmosphere accounting usually lives in.

When the accounting board decided earlier this year to reform mark-to-market accounting rules, two board members dissented. Robert Herz, the board chairman, joined with two other industry representatives and cas the deciding vote in favor of the change. The holdouts were Thomas Linsmeier and Marc Siegel. They tried to stop the board again in April when it pushed through the rule allowing banks to split losses off and push them into the future. Board meeting minutes indicate an intense debate, with Linsmeier and Siegel repeatedly casting two no votes and being overridden by the other three.

"Messrs. Linsmeier and Siegel believe that accounting standards should be focused on serving the needs of investors, who did not request this urgent change," read the minutes of the meeting. The two also objected that the rule was passed "on an expedited basis with limited due process."

The caving came after an intense round of lobbying from Wall Street banks and Washington. In March, a House financial services subcommittee held a public browbeating of FASB chair Robert Herz and other regulators, giving the board three weeks to change accounting rules or have Congress do it instead.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner publicly called for reform of the mark-to-market rule, placing himself on the side of banks.

Three weeks after the hearing, just as Congress had demanded, the mark-to-market rule was changed; Herz told reporters not to question the board's motivation, always a good reason to start questioning motivations. (Especially considering Herz' own remarks at the hearing.)

Congressional Republicans have long called for accounting rule changes, but the behind-the-scenes support has been bipartisan. Bank lobbyists meet with members of Congress and those members pressure FASB and other regulators to go easy.

"The pressure from these insolvent institutions is entirely bipartisan. Both Democrats and Republicans get the same sort of entreaties from people whining about their own enormous mistakes and the consequences thereof," says Grayson.

Martin sees the latest rule, allowing losses to be pushed into the future, as doing particular violence to accounting transparency.

"A loss is a loss is a loss is a loss," he says. "In accounting theory you match your losses with the period in which they occur. And what we're doing here is saying, you know what, some of these losses, they might turn around, they might not really be losses, we're just going to hang them up on the balance sheet until the dust settles from this economic storm. If good things happen later on down the road, we'll report those good things happening on our books at that time."

What, after all, is the point of reporting quarterly profits if the losses in that quarter aren't counted?

There's a practical problem, too. By allowing banks to classify some losses as present losses and others as some future something-or-other, the rule becomes difficult to police.

"It's going to be impossible. It's not going to be practicable to audit. It's going to be a nightmare to put this into practice consistently," says Martin.

The mark-to-market and the latest rule change generated nearly a thousand letters, many from investors and community banks arguing that the change would make balance sheets less believable, according to meeting minutes. Investors form a powerful political bloc against the banks. Most pensions fund the retirement of union workers and government employees, teachers, cops and firefighters. They want honest accounting.

Martin says that the Big Four accounting firms are allied with investors and have backed up Linsmeier and Siegel's efforts to stand firm. Calls to the Big Four yielded no comment.

Linsmeier and Siegel, through FASB's communication's shop, declined to comment, saying they'd let their dissents in the meeting minutes stand for themselves.

Allowing struggling banks to kick losses to the future requires investors to believe that those banks will exist in the future. And the new FASB rules don't give investors confidence, especially with banks collapsing all around, the rules dissenters said.

"[T]he rapid disappearance of certain financial institutions that appeared able to hold such instruments to recovery has reduced investors' confidence in whether impairments are not being recognized in earnings based on questionable assertions that the entity can withstand market conditions for a sufficient time period to recover the estimated cash flows," they warned.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's list of "problem" institutions is up to 305, the most since 1994. In the first quarter of the year, it took over 21 banks and another 15 in the second quarter.

Banks that attack auditors and accountants are only hurting themselves in the long run. "The system that we have is meant to inform people on an objective basis who is solvent who is not so they can, among other things, raise capital," says Grayson. "And so fiddling with accounting rules and pressuring people in Washington who administer those rules, what they're really doing in the end is impairing their own ability to raise capital. Nobody -- and I mean nobody -- is going to be willing to invest in banks that play games with their books."

If you're an accountant with expertise in this area, write me at ryan@huffingtonpost.com.

Ryan Grim is the author of the forthcoming book This Is Your Country On Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America

Look for another rosy round of profits when banks turn in their numbers for the second quarter ending in June when it will be legal for them to improve their balance sheets by shifting losses into the...
Look for another rosy round of profits when banks turn in their numbers for the second quarter ending in June when it will be legal for them to improve their balance sheets by shifting losses into the...
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- Melanie226 I'm a Fan of Melanie226 7 fans permalink

Can't we just nationalize the banks and get it over with. As long as they remain capitalist institutions they will lie, cheat, steal, buy off politicians, and exploit the general populace through usury tactics, all on the public dime. Nationalization would cure a lot of the banking industry ills, and we would still have a democracy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 05/28/2009
- SamKnause I'm a Fan of SamKnause 76 fans permalink

This is just great. Another legal way to cheat, rob, steal, and cover up. It's all done within the law. I just don't understand how any one in this country can be expected to follow our laws when people are breaking them right and left in broad daylight. This is just sickening and wrong on all levels. When the economy explodes, and I fear that it will, it is not going to be pretty. It sounds like everyone in the financial district and running large corporations needs to be audited by outsiders who have no reason to lie and cover up anything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 05/28/2009

this is so unfair... so they're allowed to lie to us an tell us incomplete truths about the money we give them for investments? This is so corrupt! When are they going to do the right thing and show the books as they really are, no matter the truth?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 05/28/2009
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Oh Good. I am so happy now to know that the banks did NOT make those kind of huge profits after getting the ginormous bail out!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 05/28/2009
- ntmessage I'm a Fan of ntmessage 38 fans permalink

Seems like this post refers to two different issues. One Capitalizing Liabilities – meaning cramming down loans in exchange for capital is a legitimate accounting method. This is what we are doing with the automakers for example and this is what we are trying to do with mortgage debt holders if people are underwater.

Mark to market is the rule that FASB voted on and that was good policy because when something is thinly traded there is no market at all, thus no credible price discovery. You cannot have a legitimate accounting rule that says a performing asset is worth zero today, because the owner of that asset does not have to sell it.

Mark to market was put in place because of Enron trading assets that actually were wroth nothing in fact, like futures on broadband. Not homes.

These rules are good policy and many vulture investors do not like them because the banks were not forced to sell something worth eighty cents on the dollar for two cents on the dollar in a faux forced sale.

Indeed the way Mark to Market was enforced; it created worthless companies on paper alone, not the other way around. We need to get past this issue it is old news.

Let us get onto real Health Care Reform already.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 05/28/2009
- Jond0 I'm a Fan of Jond0 11 fans permalink
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Worthless companies on paper are still worthless companies. No matter how hard one wishes, reality always trumps fantasy.

Why can't I value my Pokémon collection as to how I thought it be valued 30 years from now and borrow against it? Because it's NOT REAL!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 05/28/2009
- ntmessage I'm a Fan of ntmessage 38 fans permalink

Miss the point? The definition of a performing asset is that it is making money. Some turned worthless due to the interpretation of a flawed accounting rule alone. The one they are properly changed. Homes were valued at zero because there was no market for proper price discovery so these performing assets are definitely worth something. Otherwise, why is accounting even used?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 PM on 05/28/2009
- research I'm a Fan of research 298 fans permalink

Why do you think FDR called them "Banksters"?

They CANNOT BE TRUSTED.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 05/28/2009
- Glowcy I'm a Fan of Glowcy 10 fans permalink

.
The situation in our financial sector is such that it's going to implode and take the country with it. No amount of financial manipulation is going to stop this country from becoming a banana republic.

.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 05/28/2009

I made a similar comment a few months back, when I think it was BofA, came out showing a profit for the 1st quarter of this year. I mentioned that someone needed to look at the accounting because it looked very much like Enron accounting.
All they are doing is moving the numbers around until they can make it 'look like' they are doing ok.

Next time around let them fail. They are still playing by the old rules.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 05/28/2009
- DLBSR I'm a Fan of DLBSR 13 fans permalink

"These companies are trying to kill the messenger...What they don't seem to realize is that changing accounting rules does not make them solvent," says Grayson. "Frankly, it doesn't make any difference whether FASB blesses those games or not. People who invest sums in the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars are sophisticated enough to be able to understand when the rules are being bent."
_____________________________________________________________________
That may be true for the large institutional investors, but what abut the small and individual investors who are not sophisticated enough to understand the are being s-c-r-e-w-e-d? As usual, no protection for Main Street.

This is a excerpt from some comments I made on this topic earlier this month.

Get out of the big banks now and put your money into credit unions and community banks where it is much safer. The government and the banks are painting a a rosy picture for the big banks, with respect to the stress test reports, in an effort to attract investor money, hoping to limit future taxpayer infusions into these "too big to fail entities".

posted May 12, 2009 at 00:09:39

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 05/28/2009
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Does this mean that credit card holders can pretend that bills aren't bills and shift or ignore their obligations because of low wages and job losses?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 05/28/2009
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I am so for that!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 05/28/2009
- Jond0 I'm a Fan of Jond0 11 fans permalink
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Just value something you bought as way higher than you can sell it for and send a note stating that to the bank.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 PM on 05/28/2009

If they're currently multi-millionaires and/or have friends on Wall Street and in Congress.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 05/28/2009
- forty8r I'm a Fan of forty8r 24 fans permalink
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There is an old saying "liars figure and figures lie"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 05/28/2009

Coincidence? Stunning irony - yes. When I read the last post I noticed an advert selling liability insurance for accountants! The AICPA, FASB, FAS etc are shells of integrity. Milken, Boesky, Rivas, Monus, Lay, Madoff, Citi, BofA and countless others ALL use accountants who ALL look the other way. CPA's/The Big 8/6/4 are no different than Rating Agencies - their fees are paid by their clients - can you say conflict of interest? A CPA firm is very very very reluctant and in fact squeezed (preservation of next years engagement (read:fees)) in the name of self-interest NOT the public's interest - mamma needs a new dress and baby needs new shoes! These individuals and firms are complicit - NO DOUBT! Thanks Grim as this needs, requires, deserves more coverage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 05/28/2009

Accountants don't need to act as regulators - they call those people "Auditors". Accountants themselves probably need to be regulated as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 05/28/2009
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"People who invest sums in the hundreds of millions ... are sophisticated enough to understand when the rules are being bent."

...sounds reasonable.

"Nobody -- and I mean nobody -- is going to be willing to invest in banks that play games with their books."

...doesn't seem to be the case.

It frustrates me that neither posters nor commenters want to think a couple of steps ahead. Mark-to-market leads to insolvency, which leads to FDIC receivership - nationalization. When a bank near me was nationalized, it took dozens of officers a couple of weeks of constant work to pull it off. Bank of America is thousands of times as large and has connections millions of times more complex. Also, if one money center bank is nationalized, all such banks need to be nationalized at the same time in order to prevent bank runs and other bad consequences. Nobody knows how to do that at that scale.

It's just not that scandalous that banks are allowed to project the value of some assets during a credit freeze. Many people don't agree with mark-to-market but the idea has its pros and cons - it is a reasonable way to get around running a huge nationalization experiment but it forces balance sheets to include statistical forecasting, which is not ideal. Calling it a 'Bizarro World response" is not accurate, though. Is it crazy to think that many upside down mortgages caused by unemployment will make it into 2010 when employment will rebound?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 05/28/2009
- jerrydenim I'm a Fan of jerrydenim 2 fans permalink

BO,

You say: "It frustrates me that neither posters nor commenters want to think a couple of steps ahead. Mark-to-market leads to insolvency, which leads to FDIC receivership - nationalization."

But let me ask you to think a few steps ahead for a moment. You seem willing to recognize that without accounting rule changes and other shady government intervention on behalf of the banking industry the US government would be forced to admit that most of our large financial institutions are insolvent and the next step would be recievership/nationalization. My question to you is why is flushing several trillion dollars of tax payer money down a rat hole to prop up a bankrupt system that is rotten to the core and is going to implode anyway in 2 or 3 years preferable to spending a still huge but lesser sum of money to genuinely fix the system and restore public faith?

All of the factors that lead to the financial crisis are still in place, back in place thanks to the government, or still in place and even worse than before. (Cheap easy money/excess liquidity, bad accounting practices, debt securitization, huge credit derivatives bubble, too-big-to-fail over leveraged banks gambling it all with a government guarantee, corrupt/incompetent management.) What do you think the outcome is going to be this time, and how long before it all collapses again but in an even more spectacular fashion?

Think ahead a few steps yourself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 05/28/2009
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Why are accepted accounting practices for all but a few years this decade shady? Do you think housing prices are peaking right now? I think marking down our investment to current home prices is 'flushing our money down a rat hole.' Wouldn't it be better to mark them to what people will pay over the course of the year?

And how would you nationalize? It would take tens of thousands of financial professionals and months to do it. I've heard and read that many places but most recently on NPR on a This American LIfe show about putting a bank into receivership.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 05/28/2009
- TXfemmom I'm a Fan of TXfemmom 214 fans permalink

I don't believe anything the banks or financial institutions say. They are better liars than the CIA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 05/28/2009
- SCG I'm a Fan of SCG 110 fans permalink
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Sure, real reform is on it's way.

Right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 05/28/2009
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