create your own

Mark to Market Vigilantes

70
rate or flag this page

By bgamall


The Conundrum of Mark to Market.

Mark to Market was imposed upon the United States banking system in the midst of the credit crisis. That was bad timing. While the investor needs transparency, it appears that M2M could have been and was set up to be applied as early as 2004. I view with scepticism the plan by the Bank of International Settlements to wait until the bubble was raging and the subprime market was crashing to apply the standards. It is not that I am against the standards, I am just against the timing of the standards. Why didn't they stop the bubble in its tracks in 2004? Why didn't they make FASB implement these standards at the appropriate time which would have limited the upside to house values and all commodity values.

I am concerned now again, that FASB is about to impose M2M again! And this will likely make the inflation play irrelevant as we will again be facing a banking and lending crisis just when commercial real estate is tanking and just when Alt A and Option Arm mortgages are set to hit bigtime. For more on this coming even please look at my Basel 2 Website.

Note that while the timetable for implementation of higher capital requirements and a revamping of how capital is valued has been postponed, this does not change the deflationary aspect of this change coming between 2012 and 2019.

The Mark To Market Vigilantes are right!

There are new vigilantes in town. Last summer, gold and oil rose as answers to those who believed that inflation was increasing. Now gold rises when there is a thought of deflation, as a hedge against uncertainty.

But the new vigilantes have a different idea. They are voting with their investment decisions on the fate of General Electric Corporation. GE is a company that does not mark the value of their real estate to market. They figure that the real estate is a long term investment and the value will bounce back. However, if the world was in a giant bubble that could pop for years and years, we may not get back to that valuation for years and years. This is the thinking of the GE vigilantes.

We can see that if someone thought that the Nasdaq would have eventually gone back to its peak of over 5000, reached in the dot com bubble, it certainly didn't. It went up to around 2400 in the real estate bubble but is down around 1300 now. So there is a rational reason for the bubble vigilantes to be active in discounting stock of companies that refuse to mark to market. While it is possible that the prices for GE's real estate could eventually bounce back, there is no guarantee of this.

The fact that these vigilantes are protesting lack of transparancy by GE is a bad omen for those who want to stop banks from marketing their untradable bonds to market. These pollyannas want to sweep the values under the rug and mark to estimate, which is ludicrous. Japan tried that with their banks and they lost a decade. The communists in the old Soviet Union tried to mark to model the value of consumer goods!

Indeed, the international banker types have proven themselves to be communistic, and they certainly have tried to take over the world with their off balance sheet accounting and toxic loans. These people are mark to model communists but are private fascists in practice as they continue to raid the taxpayer for bailouts!

If they ever succeed in outlawing the vigilantes we are going to be in a situation where no investment makes any sense at all!

The GE vigilantes will likely behave in the same way as they have done with GE with regard to banks that hide their untradeable assets under the mattress of mark to model, or mark to estimate. The government will be making a major mistake if it moves away from mark to market, especially in these deflationary times of massive deleverage.


The Fix for the Banks is Based on a Flawed Premise!

The premise considered for fixing the bank asset issue for assets that no longer have a market because investors have abandoned them, is a false premise. The concept of having the government purchase the assets from the banks assumes stabilization of the value of those assets down the road. Yet, as we have seen in other bubbles, stabilization at some wished for price may not be a realistic goal. This is why the banks are in so much trouble. No one knows how big a hole we are facing in the future.

Buying the assets by the government at unreasonably high prices could cause a need for inflationary printing of money by the fed. This borrowing from the fed comes with the need to issue bonds. Today the bonds issued in Europe went badly, especially for 30 year bonds. The huge potential increase in bond offerings by the United States government could face diminished demand in the face of continued deterioration in the economy.

And remember those real estate vigilantes that are pestering GE? Well, these guys are not about to ignore the increasing risk of credit rating decline of the United States national debt as that debt becomes greater and greater.

These are bad times. Bubble economies are painful to unwind. They will not unwind overnight unless there are new industries on the horizon to motivate demand. And the killing of the middle class golden goose is a risk to that demand in the aggregate.

Lesson on Mark to Market and Mark to Model


Mark to Market Vigilantes in the News

  • Tana Ramsay steps on to the iceGuardian Unlimited14 hours ago

    Forget Gary Lucy and Sinitta, the celebrity chef's hitherto unknown spouse may prove to be the hungriest of them all Jon-a-than! Jon-a-than! Jon-a-than! Once again we must salute ITV's insistence that modern life is essentially an endless, ineffably meaningless competition between an only slightly varying repertory company of minor celebrities - yet curse them for failing to make it the death ...

  • MPs call for free access to consumer credit reportsGuardian Unlimited14 hours ago

    • OFT should stop stigmatising those who shop around • Borrowers are put off from seeking the best deal, MPs found The Office of Fair Trading should consider making consumer access to credit reports free and allow individuals to shop around more easily for personal loans, according to a report published today by the influential Treasury select committee. Currently the major credit agencies, such ...

  • OFT likely to examine Project Canvas video-on-demand plansGuardian Unlimited14 hours ago

    Office of Fair Trading almost certain to 'take a look' at BBC joint venture over competition issues The Office of Fair Trading is likely to examine Project Canvas, the BBC's forthcoming digital TV video-on-demand joint venture, to see whether it raises competition issues. The BBC Trust this week gave the service provisional clearance to launch in spring, but none of the partners in Project ...

  • Lower priced services help drive growth of affordable mobile phones in the marketManila Bulletin20 hours ago

    Affordability of mobile phones for low-income consumers has been driven by lower service prices resulting from highly competitive market places. China, India and Indonesia are the top three markets offering the most affordable handsets in Asia.

  • Teenage striker Scott Robinson relishing the chance to make his mark at HeartsEdinburgh Evening News14 hours ago

    WHILE Csaba Laszlo may have preferred to have had some cash to splash in the transfer market, Scott Robinson reckons that the tightening of the purse strings at Tynecastle can

  • HARD WORK AS CAPTAIN THREATENS TO CONQUER EUROPESporting Life7 hours ago

    Sizing Europe maintained his unbeaten record over fences in the Grade One Board na Mona - With Nature Novice Chase at Leopardstown - but not without a scare.

  • First Night Newtown to explode with fireworks, entertainment and much moreThe Advance7 hours ago

    First Night Newtown will explode with fireworks, entertainment, good food and plenty of family fun on Thursday evening, Dec. 31.

  • Futures Movers: Oil rises above $78 mark; natural gas turns lowerMarket Watch2 days ago

    In pre-holiday trading, crude futures reclaim the $78-a-barrel mark, although market concerns remain that petroleum demand will stay weak. Data showing natural gas in greater abundance than had been anticipated turn the fuel's benchmark contract lower.

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

No comments yet.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working