Tuesday, July 1, 2008

07/01/2008: Are Bean Counters to Blame?

Excerpts from Are Bean Counters to Blame
by Andrew Ross Sorkin

[Stephen A. Schwarzman], the co-founder of the private equity giant Blackstone Group, has been espousing this view for weeks over lunches and at cocktail parties around the globe. It’s a controversial hypothesis, which others have put forward before, and it has sparked plenty of debate within the industry. But Mr. Schwarzman is convinced that the rule — known as FAS 157 — is forcing bookkeepers to overstate the problems at the nation’s largest banks. ... The president of Blackstone, Hamilton E. James, goes even further. FAS 157, he said, is not just misleading: “It’s dangerous.”
...
FAS 157 represents the so-called fair value rule put into effect by the Federal Accounting Standards Board, the bookkeeping rule makers. It requires that certain assets held by financial companies, including tricky investments linked to mortgages and other kinds of debt, be marked to market. In other words, you have to value the assets at the price you could get for them if you sold them right now on the open market.

The idea seems noble enough. The rule forces banks to mark to market, rather [than] to some theoretical price calculated by a computer — a system often derided as “mark to make-believe.” (Occasionally, for certain types of assets, the rule allows for using a model — and yes, the potential for manipulation too.)

But here’s the problem: Sometimes, there is no market — not for toxic investments like collateralized debt obligations, or C.D.O.’s, filled with subprime mortgages. No one will touch this stuff. And if there is no market, FAS 157 says, a bank must mark the investment’s value down, possibly all the way to zero.
...
Some analysts, even insiders, say banks like Citigroup and Lehman Brothers marked down some of their C.D.O. exposure by more than 50 percent when the underlying mortgages wrapped inside the C.D.O.’s may have only fallen 15 percent.

Bob Traficanti, head of accounting policy and deputy comptroller at Citigroup, said at a conference last month that the bank had “securities with little or no credit deterioration, and we’re being forced to mark these down to values that we think are unrealistically low.”

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