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Home Front Economy
Top banks call for relaxed writedown rules
2008-05-22
The world’s leading banks have stepped up pressure to relax controversial accounting rules with a new plan aimed at breaking the “downward spiral” of huge writedowns, emergency fundraisings and fire-sales of assets.

The proposals on “fair value” accounting by the Institute of International Finance, an alliance of 300-plus companies chaired by Josef Ackermann, Deutsche Bank’s chairman, would enable financial companies to cushion the blow of financial crises by valuing illiquid assets using historical, rather than market, prices.

Under the plan, which has been obtained by the Financial Times, banks that decided to keep assets on their balance sheet would also be freed from the requirement to hold them to maturity and would be able to sell them after two years.

The IIFÂ’s proposals, which were sent to US and European central banks, governments and accounting watchdogs, underline financial groupsÂ’ view that the credit crunch will inflict long-lasting damage on their business.

The IIF’s paper says: “The writedowns required under current interpretations may be substantially in excess of any actual or reasonably probable loss on many instruments”.

Financial companies around the world have been hit by more than $300bn in writedowns and been forced to raise more than $260bn from outside investors since last year, according to Bank of America analysts.

Senior bankers have long sought a change to the accounting rules, arguing that the requirement to mark the value of assets to the market price even when markets are illiquid or frozen creates a vicious circle of excessive losses, capital depletion and forced asset sales.

“Often dramatic writedowns of sound investments required under the current implementation of fair-value accounting adversely affect market sentiment, in turn leading to further writedowns...in a downward spiral that may lead to large-scale fire sales of assets,” the IIF’s paper argues.

However, accounting standard-setters in the US and Europe so far resisted pressure to relax fair value rules. Other regulators have also criticised financial companies for proposing rule changes that would reduce the impact of a crisis triggered in large part by their aggressive lending and underwriting practices. The IIF declined to comment.
Posted by:gorb

#8  I think it was Bank Of America that first started making home loans to illegals.

I think they are getting their just rewards.
I want this to go on (for them) for a long time.
Till nobody will buy a share of their stock for $.01
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-05-22 23:40  

#7  They f**ked up AGAIN bigtime as they periodically do. About once per decade. Because they are not being held responsible. Put the hurt on these fools so this is stopped for a time. The Depression repercussions stopped the greedy f**ks for about 50 years. That group has now departed and the new crowd needs a thrashing because they haven't the computational power to learn from their own mistakes.
Posted by: Woozle Elmeter 2700   2008-05-22 12:07  

#6  From the institutions and leaders who pushed the The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 to get tougher on those individuals out there abusing the credit market. So all the little people get punished for the actions of a few. Now its turn around and these same groups want lesser constraints. YJCMTU. If we lived principle, we'd tell them to stick where daylight never shines. Rest assured, its about POWER.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-05-22 11:30  

#5  What the banks are calling for is reasonable. Either accept that or allow the banks to take the writedowns as tax deductions, which I assure you the IRS will not allow.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-05-22 09:57  

#4  For a number of years real estate prices were rising exponentially, linked to speculative investment and fueled by ever-softer lending policies. That bubble burst. Where was the money behind all that lending (both the high risk and conventional loans) coming from? Investment funds - pension funds, trusts, rich Arabs, etc. That investment money is still out there but has been scared away from both the risky and the good mortgage market. Where is it going? Oil speculation? There are reports that about $60 per barrel of the current price is due to such 'investment'. The oil market is now acting a lot like the real estate bubble a couple of years ago.

It seems to me that relaxing writedown rules will just free up more 'investment' money to chase the 'bubble du jour' - oil.

Bubbles always burst, eventually.
Posted by: Menhadden Snogum6713   2008-05-22 09:02  

#3  Fair is fair about the downward spiral, and protecting the economy as a whole. But it works both ways. Future asset valuation must also be based on historical, not speculative value, when the market is volatile.

That is, if a building was worth $100k real value when it was built, but in the current market, it is speculatively worth $1M, the banks could only loan based on $100k collateral.

"But the market says it is worth $1M!"

"Sorry, dude. $100k is the maximum legal loan on that hog."
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-05-22 08:37  

#2  financial companies for proposing rule changes that would reduce the impact of a crisis triggered in large part by their aggressive lending and underwriting practices.

What he said. If they don't feel the pain from their incredibly poor and illegal tactics, then they'll just do it again, and next time will be worse.
Posted by: gromky   2008-05-22 08:25  

#1  Â“The writedowns required under current interpretations may be substantially in excess of any actual or reasonably probable loss on many instruments”.

An Australian expression comes to mind,

She'll be right.

Which translates to, we might get lucky here.
Posted by: phil_b   2008-05-22 07:30  

00:00