Monday, March 16, 2009

More on mark-to-market

Here's an excellent explanation of the problems with mark-to-market accounting from William Isaac, in recent testimony to a House financial services committee. Isaac knows of what he speaks, being the former chairman of the FDIC. HT: Bob McTeer's blog. Amidst all the gnashing of teeth and wringing of hands, we tend to forget that the maximum losses from subprime loans could have been easily absorbed by the global financial system. Because of MTM, the write-downs and capital losses have been orders of magnitude more than they should have been.

At the outset of the current crisis in the financial and credit markets, we had no serious economic problems. Inflation was under control, economic growth was good, unemployment was low, and there were no major credit problems in the banking system.

The dark cloud on the horizon was about $1.2 trillion of subprime mortgages (most had been securitized), about $200 billion to $300 billion of which were believed to be held by FDIC-insured banks and thrifts. The rest were spread throughout the world.

The likely losses on these assets were estimated by regulators to be roughly 20%. Losses of this magnitude would have caused pain for banks that held the assets, but would have been quite manageable, particularly for an industry that had after-tax earnings of roughly $150 billion in 2006 and had capital of $1.4 trillion.

He makes one good point I haven't seen elsewhere, which is that MTM focuses only on the asset side of the balance sheet, ignoring potential offsets on the liability side. He also includes an actual example of an anonymous bank that makes the point quite clearly:

Below is an example of the distortion that occurs when using mark to market (MTM) accounting. This example involves an actual case study from an anonymous bank that made loans and securitized them as a mortgage backed security (MBS). Expected losses and expected cash flows for the MBS differ dramatically from MTM write downs. The Bank is required to record MTM losses of $913 million as opposed to the maximum expected lifetime losses of $100 million, resulting in a significant overstatement of losses and having a negative impact on tangible common equity.

2 comments:

  1. Scott,
    This is my exact feeling. If MTM is in fact defanged in a serious way we could see a melt-up in financial stock prices which would give confidence to the market and more importantly to the economy. The people with cash who correctly stopped spending, will find solice in a more secure banking industry, and a probable bottom in their portfolio, will once again begin to spend in a more normal manner. Companies who have laid off every employee possible, will have to rehire with any pick-up in the ecomony and growth will return. At least there would be light at the end of this long, dark, needlessly destructive tunnel. Next we will have to asses the impact of the liberal cirection of DC.

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  2. Relaxing MTM rules would certainly help the banks, but I think the direction of fiscal policy is probably the more important issue at this point. There seems to be some progress on MTM, and that is already being reflected in the prices of bank stocks.

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