Friday, September 21, 2007

Creative Accounting on Wall Street

Do you this need by Wall Street firms to cook the books will lead to a general mistrust of Wall Street in the future?
clipped from www.google.com

Wall Street firms are teaching investors another lesson in alchemy by turning distrust of their creditworthiness into a little gold.

Thanks to a relatively new accounting rule, firms like Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers and Goldman Sachs last quarter booked hundreds of millions of dollars in gains based on worsening perceptions of their own creditworthiness.

How does that work? If the market decides a company is a bigger credit risk and starts demanding fatter risk premiums to buy its debt, the value of its existing debt falls. Under a rule being phased in throughout corporate America known as Financial Accounting Statement No. 159, that same logic applies to a company’s own debt. Companies that mark their liabilities to a market price, as Wall Street usually does, thus record as revenue a drop in the value of their own debt obligations.

In essence, they make money because they owe less.

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