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MF Global Collapse Proves Enron-Style Accounting Lives On

Mf Global Collapse

First Posted: 12/01/11 06:50 PM ET Updated: 12/01/11 06:50 PM ET

The off-balance-sheet accounting methods that Enron and Lehman Brothers made famous in their epic failures years ago have a modern-day poster child: MF Global.

Like its predecessors, the bankrupt brokerage formerly run by Jon Corzine took advantage of an accounting maneuver to keep certain financial obligations off its books, making the firm look less indebted and thus less a risk than it really was.

On Thursday, Mary Schapiro, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, told a committee of Congress the SEC was investigating the accounting treatment that helped mask MF Global's exposure to risky foreign sovereign debt.

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For a graphic on MF Global's balance sheet, click on link.reuters.com/wyk84s

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The fact that MF Global was able to use the technique highlights how off-balance-sheet moves are evolving as quickly as new regulations intended to stop them. Earlier this year, the Federal Accounting Standards Board changed its rules to bar an off-balance-sheet loophole that had helped Lehman Brothers get into trouble in 2008.

The fixes of FASB regulators often are too specific to keep firms from trying new tacks, said several analysts, academics and former regulators. "They keep trying to put a Band-Aid on this thing, but you've got this problem that is huge and requires major surgery," said Penn State University accounting professor Ed Ketz.

WITHIN THE RULES

MF Global's version complies with current accounting rules. Other Wall Street firms use it too, though generally for ultra-safe U.S. Treasuries, which the government promises to repurchase at face value.

In MF Global's case, the off-balance-sheet accounting itself didn't cause the firm's downfall, but it allowed MF Global to use borrowed money to make billions of dollars in ultimately catastrophic bets on European sovereign debt - and obscured the risk those bets posed to the company.

Nothing was done to force MF Global to respond until the U.S. Financial Industry Regulatory Authority demanded that MF Global's broker dealer business put aside more cash and liquid assets to absorb any losses in its European bets. Moody's downgraded the firm, setting off a rapid drop in confidence that ended with the firm's October 31 bankruptcy.

Moody's senior analyst Al Bush told the Wall Street Journal last month his firm was surprised to learn that MF Global's large off-balance-sheet position was not being held for clients, but was the firm's own bet.

Law-enforcement officials, regulators and the bankruptcy trustee are still searching for as much as $1.2 billion in missing investor money believed to have been unlawfully mingled with the firm's own funds. The firm has said it is cooperating fully with the investigation. Corzine has been quiet on the matter since his November 4 resignation, though at that time he pledged to help the firm respond to inquiries.

REPO

MF Global's off-balance-sheet maneuver involved what's called a repo, or repurchase agreement. In repo deals, a firm borrows money, but puts up assets as collateral, assets it agrees to repurchase later. Repo deals are common, and typically don't move assets off the balance sheet.

Lehman got in trouble for doing deals in late 2007 and in 2008 using a slightly different move, what it called the "Repo 105,", which used to get assets off its balance sheet, often just days prior to its reporting deadlines.

Lehman's repo created "a materially misleading picture of the firm's financial condition," according to a 2010 report by Anton R. Valukas, the now-defunct firm's Bankruptcy Court examiner and chairman of Jenner & Block law firm.. It has been closed by a new FASB rule being implemented this quarter. (link.reuters.com/cuc45s)

MF Global used a version of the off-balance-sheet move called "repo-to-maturity." The firm offered billions of dollars in sovereign debt as collateral on a series of loans designed to expire at the same time as the collateral itself. With the collateral and the loans coming due simultaneously, MF Global might never take possession of that debt again. That entitled the firm to count those as sales, and moved $16.5 billion off its balance sheet, most of it debt from Italy, Spain, Belgium, Portugal and Ireland.

It did disclose a $6.3 billion exposure to European debt, a figure that eventually became a concern for regulators and others doing business with the firm.

To top it all off, the accounting for these deals added $124 million in financing payments to the firm's revenue over the last four quarters, according to SEC filings, firm documents and people close to the firm.

HARD TO TRACK

It's hard to track the intricacies of repo-to-maturity deals. A few other financial firms including Oppenheimer, Nomura Holdings and Merrill Lynch have disclosed that they use the structure. Much like MF Global, Nomura used the deals to help build a bet on European debt that was as high as $3.6 billion at the end of September, but which has now been cut by the Japanese firm to $884 million. A New York spokesman for Nomura could not immediately be reached for comment.

Accounting and financial experts are starting to call for a re-examination of the repo structure that MF Global used. "We are talking to FASB about whether that is a policy that ought to be changed," Schapiro said on Thursday, referring to the Financial Accounting Standards Board. In response, a FASB spokesman declined immediate comment.

Last month, Leslie Seidman, FASB chairman, told Reuters in an interview that the U.S. accounting rule maker relies on regular contact with regulators, investors, accounting experts, companies and accounting firms to know what accounting concerns are out there and no one had raised questions about repo-to-maturity transactions.

Accounting rules since Enron have forced many deals onto the balance sheet and disclosure of important details on other deals. Hundreds of billions of dollars of investments in credit card debt, for example, moved onto balance sheets after accounting changes in 2010, though similar bets on real estate loans remain largely off bank balance sheets. Hundreds of billions of dollars in obligations of all types sit off balance sheets.

In the banking industry, the bigger off-balance-sheet categories are unused credit, investments backed by pools of loans and derivatives. Excluding derivatives, which are largely offset by other investments aimed at limiting their risk, U.S. bank holding companies' off-balance-sheet obligations totaled over $9 trillion in September, according to an analysis of Federal Reserve Board data by Montanus Group.

More than half of that came from unused lending commitments, 70 percent of which were promised by the 10 largest banks.

That's down almost $700 billion in the last two years, in part because of changes in accounting rules that required banks to bring some of their off-balance-sheet deals onto the books.

For MF Global, repo-to-maturity deals pushed assets and liabilities off their balance sheet while providing a source of income for a company that had a drop in other sources, especially interest income.

MF Global earned $286.8 million in its last full fiscal year from interest income after expenses. Three years earlier, that figure was $502.1 million.

"In this type of environment, when it's tough to generate high returns on anything, institutions may try to get a little cute in the way they take positions," said Montanus Group managing partner Nathan Powell. "That's the lesson I take from MF Global."

(Reporting by Nanette Byrnes in Chapel Hill, N.C.; Editing by Amy Stevens, Howard Goller, Gary Hill)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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The off-balance-sheet accounting methods that Enron and Lehman Brothers made famous in their epic failures years ago have a modern-day poster child: MF Global. Like its predecessors, the bankru...
The off-balance-sheet accounting methods that Enron and Lehman Brothers made famous in their epic failures years ago have a modern-day poster child: MF Global. Like its predecessors, the bankru...
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SeenItBefore
Ya want to super size that?
12:59 PM on 12/02/2011
If the government regulatory agencies weren't cooking the books themselves, there might be less of this activity in the financial world.

Having said that, double entry bookkeeping is designed to provide falsified books.
08:28 AM on 12/02/2011
Where is the DOJ; and where are the indictments?
06:21 AM on 12/02/2011
Biden will speak highly about anyone the Dem party tells him to
12:59 AM on 12/02/2011
You can't get a bigger Democratic insider than Jon Corzine. He received a tremendous amount of preferential treatment from regulators. Now the question is, where is the missing $750,000,000 client money, and where is Jon Corzine?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mario59
So many books and so little time...
08:22 AM on 12/02/2011
Corzine is a true believer of the free market philosophy and is a graduate of the Chicago School of business who developed the idea of "let the markets decide" with little or no government oversight. Need I say more?
11:59 PM on 12/01/2011
What should be extremely disturbing to everybody is our VP wildly gushing about Corzine to a group of potential voters just last year. Again, it is obvious from this video that Biden very much would have endorsed Corzine as the next Sec of Treasury had Timmy resigned as expected this year. Imagine that mess. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=xm3VMrKqJSA#!
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dennygboehm
09:00 PM on 12/01/2011
I agree that congress and government agencies could do much better. But it still does not absolve the bank mangers/CEOs or accountants who did commit crimes. That is like blaming the police for the actions of a murderer. Just because nobody is watching doesn’t mean it is ok to do something illegal or unethical. I hate when people blame the person who leaves their keys in their car if it is stolen. The thief bares 100% blame. This is a problem in today’s society. We assign some blame to victims, which is BS.
11:54 PM on 12/01/2011
Where in this article did it say what was done was a crime? That has not been determined yet. Therefore if a crime has not been committed, but the laws on the books allow accounting meant to deceive, the fault lies entirely with those writing the laws. But worse than that we have NO enforcers of our present laws which then encourages those enraged to add more layers of regulations that will be poorly written with lots of loopholes and will then be exploited until the next disaster. It is a vicious cycle. The government writes poorly enforced laws because frankly they don't understand the industry well enough to know what the next step will be. So they are reactionary not pro-active. They plug one hole while two more gush.
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CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
08:29 PM on 12/01/2011
And the GOP is still against FinReg. Go figure.

^ ^
09:05 PM on 12/01/2011
GO figure. Wasn't jon corzine the governor of new jersey who ran the state into the ground also.
Play it sam, if you can play it for her you can play it for me.
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CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
04:20 PM on 12/02/2011
Yep, he sure was and he sure did, and is a Dem.

All the same, I don't think that greed has a party affiliation. Those who traffic in it just happen to align more often with the GOP, but that's mainly because they favor the monied interests and have for a long time.

Sam is on break, I'm just escorting folks around until he comes back to tickle the ivories.

^ ^
08:11 PM on 12/01/2011
Wasnt Martha Stewart the only one actually tried and sentenced during this whole 2002-2008 financial crises run up after the tech crash in 2000 when enron was called on the carpet, bu, before madoff which occurred after the crash, but wasn't she? That should tell you the caliber of our regulatory apparatus. She was convicted of insider trading on I think just $32,000 worth of shares with a biotech. Yes, she was convicted on a pittance and all those big wigs got away with tens, even hundreds of millions for dubious practices that if investigated, some would probably be prosecutable which would put them on the docket.
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Realist2011
beware false profits....
08:09 PM on 12/01/2011
Oh get real. Enron "style" of accounting was around before Enron, and will never go away. At least not without real, enforced regulation and that will never happen. There's far too much money to be made in the current "style" of doing business.

The banks and Wall Street firms have just taken "accounting" to a new level. How do you take down an entire industry? The answer is, you can't. Enron was a cupcake compared to the expertise of the banks and Wall Street.
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J T K
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
10:08 PM on 12/01/2011
Even with enforced regulation it's difficult to stop unless the government is willing to pay enough to get down and dirty and actually audit all these companies, otherwise these companies will just going back to having two sets of books and especially with the collusion of a respectable accounting firm to back them up (Like with Enron) and good lawyers they'll get away with it indefinitely.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
08:08 PM on 12/01/2011
I'm getting tired of rehashing Enron. ITs like they expect us to think that because everyone, and I do mean everyone from CNN to Bloomberg and the WJS mentions Enron now, they think we will believe that someone is going to get the same justice that Enron , Tyco and World Com faced.
Believe me, the super rich have worked hard and spent a lot on their puppets in the Gov to make sure that kind of justice never ever happens again.