Sunday, October 26, 2008

"combined with regulatory forebearance as regards the actions banks would have to take as a result of the strict application of mark-to-market "

Willem Buiter on mark-to-market in a crisis:

"It is worrying as regards future transparency, that regulators appear to have agreed on a weakening of mark-to-market accounting and reporting. The right way to deal with the pro-cyclical effects of mark-to-market accounting and reporting would have been continued application of strict mark-to-market principles combined with regulatory forebearance as regards the actions banks would have to take as a result of the strict application of mark-to-market principles when there is systemic market illiquidity. Once again, the road chosen grants greater discretion to banks to abuse private information in the pursuit of management interests, and at the expense of systemic stability."

Here's my view, which is essentially Buiters:

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Even More On Mark-To-Market

Early on, I said this about suspending mark-to-market:

"So, now you have both sides. I see both sides, but have to agree with bonddad in this case because I hate this back and forth of rules and legislation brought on by a crisis. If we're going to have the rule, keep it. On the other hand, I don't see suspending it for a short time as the end of the republic either."

I then quoted Meghan McArdle:

"Instead, we're flailing. Mark-to-market is causing problems? Suspend it! What about Enron? WHY ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT ENRON?! WE'RE HAVING A CRISIS!Yes, we sure are. Maybe that's because every time we have a crisis, we have that same damn conversation."

Now we have this from Avinash Persaud:

"Crises are a time when rumours are rife and uncertainty quickly turns to panic. It is not the time to increase uncertainty by changing accounting standards. Moreover, this would work against future crisis avoidance. Financial crashes are not random. They follow booms. Offering forbearance from mark-to-market accounting rules during a crisis, yet using these rules during the preceding boom, would promote excessive lending and leverage in the good times. This asymmetry in the application of rules could contribute to more frequent and severe crashes. There is room for a principled revision to the application of mark-to-market rules, not a revision based on relying on the messenger’s every last word in good times and shooting him when things turn bad. "

This still seems right to me. I did, along with Hilzoy, advocate the rules be kept but certain exemptions be granted on a case-by-case basis, using both accounting methods as yardsticks, but either that's impossible or no one liked it.

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