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xperts seem to disagree how much fair-value accounting may or may not have played a role in Bear Stearns’ downfall. While some argue that the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s new fair-value standard—Financial Accounting Standard No. 157, Fair Value Measurement—caused a write-down spiral that is still descending rapidly, others argue that the financial firm’s valuations of instruments were too opaque for the investment community to understand and digest.
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Financial institutions largely adopted FAS 157 as soon as it was available to them at the beginning of 2007. Among other provisions, the standard establishes three hierarchies for measuring instruments at “fair value.” At level 1, assets and liabilities are measured at easily observable market prices. At level 2, values are established using less direct market data, meaning figures that are closely related, but not exactly. At level 3, companies are using their own data and modeling techniques to say what assets and liabilities are worth.
That issue of level 3 valuations and transparency is the cause of the disagreement.
Increasingly, companies that have struggled with how to value troubled securities where the market has dried up for them have turned to internal modeling to establish values for those troubled investments. Industry watchers like James Kaplan, chairman and founder of research firm Audit Integrity, wonder whether investors got a good view of just how risky Bear’s level 3 holdings were.
![]() Kaplan |
Even under FAS 157, says Kaplan, the degree of disclosure is not such that investors can tell what the company is holding and how the company reached its conclusions about value. “It’s considered proprietary information to the firm,” he says. “When a company keeps a secret, that’s often an indication of a problem. Bear Stearns never overtly recognized there was a problem. The market did it for them.”
Blaine Frantz, senior vice president of the finance and securities team for rating agency Moody’s, followed Bear Stearns closely as its liquidity evaporated. He doesn’t believe there’s a great deal of gaming going on with level 3 valuations.
“Bear saw confidence in its funding wither away very quickly as a result of rumors,” he says. “I know what Bear’s exposure was ahead of the crisis. I know where they had assets, how they were marked, and where they had hedges on. They were not in terrible position. Once market rumors started to spike and confidence waned, they did not have sufficient unencumbered collateral to fund the outflows that occurred.”
![]() Mard |
“The fair-value issue overall is one of disclosure, thus leading to transparency,” he says. Critics of the three-level hierarchy likely don’t understand how it works, he says. “The various levels are not classes of assets,” he says, emphasizing his views are his own. “The level addresses the amount of disclosure required in the financial statements. When you get to level 3, because you don’t have a clear market or market participant, that’s where the most disclosure is required and transparency is maximized.”
Mard also points out that companies can’t simply toss in flimsy estimates or inflated views about value because the figures and assumptions still have to pass muster with appraisers, auditors, and the Securities and Exchange Commission. “Level 3 doesn’t mean weak estimates,” he says.
SEC Wants ‘Flavor and Color’
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“Everywhere you looked in Bear Stearn’s 2007 10-K filing, you saw evidence of risk and deterioration, and bad news.”
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To drive home that point, the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance recently published a sample letter, identifying a number of disclosure issues it will expect companies to address in the Management’s Discussion and Analysis section of their periodic reports (including their next 10-Qs). The staff sent the letter to roughly 30 companies—primarily in the financial services sector—that reported in their most recent 10-K annual filing significant levels of asset-backed securities, loans carried at fair value or the lower of cost or market, and derivative assets and liabilities.
SEC spokesman John Nester said there’s nothing in the new guidance that in any way expands or alters the requirements of FAS 157.
While FAS 157 maps out disclosure requirements for the financial statements and footnotes, the SEC’s letter outlines some disclosures companies “may wish to consider” for MD&A related to their FAS 157 measurements.
![]() Harms |
Nestor also notes that the guidance was in development well before Bear Stearns crumbled and was not issued as a response to the collapse.
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Harms agrees that the overall market condition and not a single event likely drove the SEC to issue such guidance. “Every day you open the newspapers and there’s another multibillion-dollar write-down being announced,” he says. “I’m sure that’s increasing the focus at the Commission on this.”
Risks Abound
![]() Ford |
The 10-K provides a tabular summary of how much of the firm’s assets and liabilities fell into each of the valuation hierarchy levels. At the end of fiscal 2007, the firm valued $29.5 billion of its securities at level 1, or using direct market data; $227.1 billion at level 2, based on market evidence but less directly available; $28 billion at level 3, or based on no market evidence.
The 10-K points out significant asset transfers into level 3 as a result of “a significant reduction in observable trading activity for these instruments during the latter part of fiscal 2007.” Bear Stearns said assets transferred into level 3 included primarily mortgage and mortgage-related securities, including commercial loans, residential loans, and investment-grade collateralized debt obligations.
Ford said the level 3 valuation methodology may be taking some heat because so many companies are forced to move inactive securities into that category. “It was never FASB’s intent to have level 3 investment disclosures be associated with bad investments,” she says. “The market didn’t really understand complex CDOs and mortgage-backed securities and it was caught off-guard with the losses.”
Frantz says companies are taking hits to earnings reflective of what’s happening in the market, suggesting there’s no lack of transparency or gaming going on in the level 3 valuation process. “They look for every possible indicator of value in the marketplace,” he says. “To the degree there are no cash trades getting done, the Street is looking to ABX and other indices to get indications. To the degree market prices and index values have been pushed down low, these firms are using these in their valuations. My sense is the level 3 valuation is not being misused by the major firms.”
Kaplan says there’s still good cause for vigilance and caution on the part of investors. “At the end of the day, this valuation issue is the critical issue,” he says. “It comes to the marketplace in a dramatic way when other institutional investors refuse to invest in a company when they know the values reflected on the books are not fair. … As long as entities have latitude to value these things, it’s unfair accounting.”