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FASB Votes To Remove QSPE Concept From FAS 140, FIN 46R (Death to bank SIVs)
AccountingWEB.com ^ | April 2nd, 2008 | FASB

Posted on 04/05/2008 8:12:57 AM PDT by 2banana

FASB Votes To Remove QSPE Concept From FAS 140, FIN 46R

Yesterday (April 2, 2008), FASB voted to remove the Qualified Special Purpose Entity (QSPE) concept (used for some securitizations) from FAS 140, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities, and to remove the related scope exception from FIN 46R, Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities (VIEs). In addition to removing the QSPE concept, the board also approved amendments to the derecognition criteria in paragraph 9 of FAS 140 (changes shown in redline form on pages 1-2 of the board handout), and agreed to provide guidance on the ‘unit of account’ as relates to when a ‘portion’ of an asset can be derecognized - by requiring essentially the same characteristics as proposed in FASB’s 2005 Exposure Draft of proposed amendments to FAS 140 with respect to the definition of ‘participating interest,’ (definition appears on pages 3-4 of the board handout). FASB's project page currently states an amended Exposure Draft (ED) is expected to be released in the second quarter of 2008; in my estimation, the proposed changes decided yesterday are likely to be included in that ED or in a separate proposal document. Read more about these and related developments here. Posted by Edith Orenstein, FEI Financial Reporting Blog, April 3, 2008.

AccountingWEB.com 3rd April 2008


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: accounting; banks; fasb; sivs
From http://market-ticker.denninger.net:

It appears that the FASB has removed the concept of QSPEs, which is the enabling "piece" to make off-balance-sheet securitizations possible, from the FASB set of regulations, specifically, FAS 140.

This appears to have happened TODAY.

As such it appears that all financial institutions will have to reclaim all SIVs back onto their balance sheets no later than the start of 2009.

This is a watershed event, in that these vehicles, when they are reclaimed onto bank balance sheets, is likely to lead to the P/Es of these firms skyrocketing north, and consequently, a far more realistic view of both share price AND capitalization.

In short Investment Banks have ~6 months to get their act together and their capital up, and then they are going to have to start integrating these vehicles back onto their consolidated financial statements.

----

For those of you who invest - SKF may be a way to take advantage of this...

1 posted on 04/05/2008 8:12:57 AM PDT by 2banana
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To: 2banana

SIVs FASPE QRKPQZ PHFFFTTTTTT....blah blah.

How about a little frickin’ English in our society? I guess all that means something, but it don’t mean $hit to me...is this how they’re really stealing my money?


2 posted on 04/05/2008 8:24:58 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Gaffer
is this how they’re really stealing my money?

The Federal Accounting Standards Board is tightening a loophole that allowed investment banks to keep mortgage-backed securities off their balance sheets. Now they have to account for those instruments according to their market value, and report them to investors and the government.

In the long run this is a good thing. In the short term it will cause pain for these banks and their investors.

If you want to prosper from their misery, there are funds like the one suggested that sell bank stocks short and profit if they go down.

3 posted on 04/05/2008 8:38:52 AM PDT by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
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To: 2banana

Is skyrocketing north a good thing, or a bad thing?

Generally, “going south” is a term indicating a problem. But “going north” isn’t a term I recognize as being a good thing either.

Yes, I’m ignoring the fact that the rest of the piece was a string of acronyms with no explanations. I thought I’d focus on the part that looks like it is actual english.


4 posted on 04/05/2008 8:40:07 AM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: 2banana

Debits by the window, credits by the door. Anything else is smoke and mirrors.


5 posted on 04/05/2008 8:58:12 AM PDT by catpuppy
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To: 2banana
This is a watershed event, in that these vehicles, when they are reclaimed onto bank balance sheets, is likely to lead to the P/Es of these firms skyrocketing north, and consequently, a far more realistic view of both share price AND capitalization.
 
 
But It's only a ledger entry!  LOL.
 
The mirrors have shattered, the smoke is all blowing away... and the sheeple are no longer shocked, awed, and mesmerized by the droning of the siren.  
 
What to do?/s

6 posted on 04/05/2008 9:02:18 AM PDT by LomanBill (A bird flies because the right wing opposes the left.)
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To: 2banana

Thanks for Denninger’s link. It was too obvious for me to remember.


7 posted on 04/05/2008 9:19:17 AM PDT by steve86 (Acerbic by nature, not nurtureā„¢)
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To: CharlesWayneCT

P/E “skyrocketing north” is another way of saying “E heading south,” and P eventually following them there.


8 posted on 04/05/2008 9:54:01 AM PDT by Erasmus (It takes branes to make an alternate universe.)
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To: 2banana

Chas Bowsher, FHLB, resigned last week, having no confidence in the ‘easing’ of mark to market standards...*

Thursday, April 2, 2009
Guest Post: FHLB Chairman Disgusted With FDIC Accounting Alchemy, Quits
Listen to this article. Powered by Odiogo.com

Submitted by Tyler Durden, publisher of Zero Hedge

When the man in charge of the second largest borrower in the U.S. is willing to lose his job due to his discomfort with the FASB’s shift in accounting rules, you can bet that the tragic fallout of all the “market buoying” recent events is only a matter of time.

Somehow this noteworthy event, which happened over a week ago, passed substantially unnoticed until Zero Hedge friend Jonathan Weil at Bloomberg dug it up. Charles Bowsher, who was most recently Chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank System’s Office of Finance and previously served as U.S. comptroller general may be the only truly honorable man in the socialist nexus of politics and finance. The reason for his departure from this critical post - his discomfort in vouching for the banks’ combined financial statements. And as Weil puts it succinctly: “Now the question for taxpayers is this: If Charles Bowsher can’t get comfortable with these banks’ financial statements, why should anybody else be?” Why indeed.

If Bowsher was merely involved with some marginal organization, this could be perceived as a hypocritical attempt to score populist brownie points. However, the FHLB is among the governmental entities at the heart of the current problem. Zero Hedge has written previously about the FHLB and its critical role in the ongoing housing crisis, but in a nutshell “The Office of Finance issues and services all the debt for the 12 regional Federal Home Loan Banks. That’s a lot of debt — $1.26 trillion as of Dec. 31, making the FHLBank System the largest U.S. borrower after the federal government. The government-chartered banks, which operate independently, in turn supply low-cost loans to their 8,100 member banks and finance companies. If any of the FHLBanks were to fail, taxpayers could be on the hook.”

Ah, the poor taxpayer about to get duped one last time. And the immediate reason for Bowsher’s decisions: his concern with the methods used for determining when losses on hard-to-value securities should be included in banks’ earnings and regulatory capital. And it gets much worse:

For the fourth quarter of 2008, the FHLBanks said their total preliminary net loss was $672 million. It would have been many times larger, had they included all their red ink.

The year-end balance sheet at the FHLBank of Seattle, for example, showed $5.6 billion of non-government mortgage-backed securities that it says it will hold until maturity. Yet the estimated value of those securities was just $3.6 billion. The bank, which reported a $199.4 million net loss for 2008, said the declines were only temporary. They’ve been anything but fleeting, though. Most of those securities have been worth less than they cost for more than a year.

The FASB’s rules on this subject, which have never been well defined, are now in flux. Today, after caving in to pressure by the banking industry and members of
Congress, the Financial Accounting Standards Board is set to vote on a plan to relax its rules on mark-to-market accounting, so that companies can disregard market prices and ignore losses on their securities indefinitely.

Bowsher is not new to taking hard political stands:

As comptroller general, he was in charge of the General Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress. At his direction, the GAO was among the first to warn the public about the brewing savings-and- loan crisis during the 1980s. He testified before Congress in 1994 that there was an “immediate need” for “federal regulation of the safety and soundness” of all major U.S. derivatives dealers. (How’s that for prescient?)

Most recently, in 2007, he led an independent committee that issued a blistering report on financial missteps at the Smithsonian Institution, whose board of regents included U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts.

And how does the FHLB spin this event?

“Mr. Bowsher has expressed his concerns to me around the complexity of valuing mortgage-backed securities and the process of producing combined financial statements from the 12 home loan banks. I don’t think it’s appropriate for us to speak for Mr. Bowsher.”

So: to paraphrase - one of the men who knows the ins and outs of the financials of banks involved in the mortgage crisis more intimately than even Bernanke and Geithner, let alone Obama, is saying that the newly implemented changes by the FASB will throw the whole system into tailspin and he want none of it.

If this isn’t the most damning condemnation of the Kool Aid the administration, the Treasury, the Fed, the FASB, the FDIC, and all the other alphabet soups are trying to make the common U.S. citizen drink and have seconds, then nothing else possibly could be.... of course until Bowsher is proven right and everything collapses into the smoldering heap of defaulted MBS still marked at par on various liquidating banks’ balance sheets...

Oh and yes, let’s hold a moment of silence for Lehman which held billions of mortgage backed securities that it too was “holding until maturity.” Well, Lehman is no more, and all these securities now trade, in the form of the company’s general unsecured claims, at the generous price of 12 cents on the dollar... Furthermore, one can’t say the market is illiquid - the bid-ask spread is only 1 cent. And as there are over $150 billion of these claims floating around, one can’t say the market is in any way limited from a price discovery standpoint.

Maybe if more honest leaders follow in Bowsher’s unique example, the general population will finally start seeing though the everyday lies and misinformation coming out of D.C.


9 posted on 04/02/2009 9:40:57 PM PDT by givemELL (Does Taiwan Meet the Criteria to Qualify as an "Overseas Territory of the United States"? by Richar)
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