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To: papasmurf

The SEC made an adjustment to mark to market rules but evidently did not do enough...so call, email and jack up the SEC to get more changes done now is the best thing...as the Dems may still be celebrating for months after the inaugeral and nothing will get accomplished right away. It is important, and tell them to reinstate the uptick rule as well.


13 posted on 12/26/2008 3:38:18 PM PST by Kackikat (.It's NOT over until it's over and it's NOT over yet....The Trumpet will sound....)
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To: Kackikat

If I had to summarize the issue, I would describe it thus:

Investors want something more trustworthy than just management estimates of the value of complex securities — so they would like an outside market-based reference point — but the very complexity that makes these contracts hard to value as an outsider also tends to make their markets illiquid and volatile, making it difficult to get a good market value.

Top accountant Tom Selling addresses the problem of accounting for the value of credit default swaps. He makes what seems to me to be a common sense suggestion:

Requiring the asset and liability sides of derivatives to be separately measured and reported seems like an amazingly simple fix that could simplify regulation of the financial and insurance industries, reduce the need for the disclosures in financial statements written so as to
discourage one from reading them, and help investors more easily assess risk.

This certainly seems reasonable to me. When one buys a revenue producing asset with debt financing, the two are listed separately as an asset and a liability, rather than as one “net” asset, even though they may be inextricably linked (say if the asset is collateral for the loan and the loan has high pre-payment penalties).


15 posted on 12/26/2008 3:50:30 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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