Privacy Policy


Posts Tagged ‘mortgage writedowns’

The return of Mark to Myth

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Want to know the real reason financial stocks rose so much today?  The SEC loosened the accounting rule called “Mark to Market” today.  This accounting rule is blamed for the financial problems of banks and other financial institutions, because it requires companies to value assets on their books at the price they could actually bring if they were sold.

This is what has caused the massive writedowns you’ve seen banks taking over the past year - and it’s a good thing!

In essense, it requires companies to realistically value the real estate assets they show as assets, and to realistically value those assets when using them for collateral on loans.  What’s wrong with that?

Nothing - but the banks are vehemently opposed to the rule, and they want the old way of valuing these assets restored.  The old way was called “Mark to Model” or as I like to call it, Mark to Myth.  I call it that because it allowed companies to claim almost any value for their assets - even if no one would touch them with a 10 foot pole.

The mark to model requirement was part of Sarbannes Oxley which was passed after all the accounting problems uncovered in the wake of the Enron and Worldcom fiasco’s in 2000 and 2001.  The old way (mark to model) meant you couldn’t tell what a company was worth, because their assets were really just made up numbers.

Anyway, Marketwatch said:

“The SEC staff and the FASB staff will continue to consult with capital market participants on issues encountered in the application of fair value measurements,” the SEC said in a statement. FASB said it will issue additional “interpretative guidance” later this week.
Statement 157 went into effect for financial institutions starting in November 2007. The accounting treatment is applied to certain assets, such as mortgage-backed securities. Using the method, asset values are determined by what sales-price those assets would fetch in the current marketplace from a buyer, not necessarily the price a seller would hope to get.
In other words, get ready for some huge “write-ups” as companies get to claim whatever the hell they want for a value of their toxic assets.  That’s not good, because investors have no way of knowing what a company is actually worth.
And guess who supports this change?  Here’s what McCain said about it:
“John McCain is pleased to see that the SEC has finally decided to permit alternative accounting methods to mark-to-market accounting for securities where no active market exists. There is serious concern that these accounting rules are worsening the credit crunch, making it difficult for small businesses to stay afloat and squeezing family budgets. In March, John McCain called for a meeting of accounting professionals to discuss whether mark-to-market accounting was magnifying problems in the financial markets.”
This settles it - McCain is an idiot.  “Alternative accounting methods”?  Here’s an idea - tell the truth and value your assets at what they’re actually worth!
gk
[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

Economy of Bush

Monday, July 28th, 2008

Here are the current top three stories in the NY Times Business Section as of 9:30pm ET, July 28th:

Record Deficit of $482 Billion Forecast

The White House predicted on Monday that the Bush administration would bequeath a record deficit of $482 billion to the next president.

Merrill Plans $5.7 Billion Write-Down

Merrill Lynch said it expected to take a $5.7 billion write-down because of losses on its mortgage assets and plans to raise at least $8.5 billion by selling new shares.

Stock Indexes Continue to Slip

Wall Street stocks headed steadily downward as shares of investment and commercial banks fell again, giving back some of their gains from last week.

At first glance they’re unrelated, but if you think about it a bit, you’ll realize that all three deal with the same subject - the fiscal disaster that President Bush has been to this country.

Stocks are sliding because earnings are dropping.  Earnings are dropping in large part because the financial institutions have leveraged cheap money from the government (the Federal Reserve) 20 to 40 times, and now they are in the painful “deleveraging” process.  Cheap money (expanding the supply of money) causes inflation, which leads to higher government spending - and deficits.

Please go away George - you’ve done enough.

gk

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]