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新会计标准11月15日实施,第3级资产被迫重新评估将带来新的金融风暴

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发表于 2007-11-14 17:00:50 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a5qWBy1C9ploBanks Face $100 Billion of Writedowns on Level 3 Rule
By John Glover
Bloomberg.com
Nov. 7 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. banks and brokers face as much as $100 billion of writedowns because of Level 3 accounting rules, in addition to the losses caused by the subprime credit slump, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.
Morgan Stanley, the second-largest U.S. securities firm, fell for a fifth-straight day, dropping 6 percent to $51.19 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos., the No. 1 and No. 2 underwriters of U.S. mortgage bonds, each declined more than 5 percent. All three firms are based in New York.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board's rule 157 makes it more difficult for companies to avoid putting market prices on their hardest-to-value securities, known as Level 3 assets, Royal Bank chief credit strategist Bob Janjuah wrote in a note today. While the rule hasn't gone into effect yet, the biggest U.S. lenders and brokerages have already begun reporting their Level 3 holdings.
``This credit crisis, when all is out, will see $250 billion to $500 billion of losses,'' said Janjuah, who's based in London. ``The heat is on and it is inevitable that more players will have to revalue at least a decent portion'' of assets they currently value using ``mark-to-make believe.''
Wall Street's biggest firms have written down at least $40 billion as prices of mortgage-related assets dwindle because of record foreclosures. Morgan Stanley has 251 percent of its equity in Level 3 assets, making it the most vulnerable to writedowns, followed by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. at 185 percent, according to Janjuah. Goldman, the biggest U.S. securities firm, fell 4 percent in New York trading today.
Citigroup, Merrill
Morgan Stanley may write down $6 billion of assets, David Trone, an analyst at Fox-Pitt Kelton Cochran Caronia Waller, said yesterday.
Citigroup Inc., which this week said losses from subprime assets may be $11 billion, has 105 percent of its equity in Level 3 assets, Janjuah wrote. The New York-based bank fell 4.8 percent to $33.41, a four-and-a-half year low.
Merrill Lynch & Co., which wrote down $8.4 billion of subprime mortgage debt and other debt securities, has Level 3 assets equal to 38 percent of its equity ``and may well come out of all of this in the best health,'' Janjuah said. Merrill, the world's largest brokerage, fell 4.2 percent to $53.99.
``If you look at the writedowns just at Citi and Merrill already it's about $20 billion, so $100 billion may be on the conservative side globally,'' said Sajiv Vaid, who manages the equivalent of about $10.5 billion of corporate debt at Royal London Asset Management in London, a unit of the U.K.'s biggest customer-owned insurer.
`Unobservable' Inputs
The losses are likely to hurt shareholders more than bondholders because the banks may be forced to sell stock to raise additional capital, Vaid said.
Banks may be forced to write down as much as $64 billion on collateralized debt obligations of securities backed by subprime assets, from about $15 billion so far, Citigroup analysts led by Matt King in London wrote in a report e-mailed today. The data exclude Citigroup's own projected writedowns.
Under FASB terminology, Level 1 means mark-to-market, where an asset's worth is based on a real price. Level 2 is mark-to- model, an estimate based on observable inputs which is used when no quoted prices are available. Level 3 values are based on ``unobservable'' inputs reflecting companies' ``own assumptions'' about the way assets would be priced.
ABX indexes, which investors use to track the subprime-bond market, are showing ``observable levels'' that would wipe out institutions' capital if the benchmark's prices were used to value their Level 3 assets, according to Janjuah.
The indexes have tumbled this year because investors expected rising numbers of borrowers to default on home loans, cutting the cash flowing to the bonds that package the mortgages.
Lehman has the equivalent of 159 percent of its equity in Level 3 assets, and Bear Stearns has 154 percent, according to Janjuah's note, titled ``Bob's World: Feast and Famine.''
发表于 2007-11-14 18:29:03 | 显示全部楼层
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