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FT: Accountancy rules broken 'irretrievably'



Papadillos
4/10/2008 10:09:38 AM


Accountancy rules broken 'irretrievably'
By Jennifer Hughes in London
Financial Times
Published: April 9 2008 22:30
Rules regarding how banks account for off-balance sheet interests are
"irretrievably broken", a senior group of international rulemakers has
warned.
The rules, which have allowed trillions in assets to escape close scrutiny,
have come under attack in the wake of the credit crisis as banks have been
forced to disclose huge losses on these holdings.
But a report by a high-level group of accountants has warned that completion
of the current overhaul of the rules would not be possible in the near
future.
"Completing a final standard by mid-2011 will be extremely difficult,
perhaps impossible," says the report seen by the Financial Times and
prepared by board members of the US-based Financial Accounting Standards
Board and the International Accounting Standards Board.
While the report does not yet represent the official view of the accounting
bodies, it is a sign of the turmoil within the industry in grappling with
the off-balance sheet issue.
Accounting standard setters are already under pressure for their support of
marking assets to current market prices a practice that has resulted in
billions in writedowns and affected banks profitability seriously.
The Financial Stability Forum, a global body of regulators and central
bankers, has asked the IASB and its US counterpart to consider the issue as
a matter of urgency. Accounting standard setters are in the throes of
discussing how to respond.
However, the report by the high-level group of accountants says the project
to overhaul current rules on off-balance sheet interests has lost momentum
because of staff turnover and relative inexperience.
It also urgently recommends that some senior figure be put in charge of the
project, warning: "We cannot afford the luxury of waiting for the newly
assigned staff to get up to speed."
The report authors include Jim Liesenring and Tom Linsmeier, board members
of the IASB and FASB, respectively, and Sue Bielstein and Wayne Upton,
senior technical directors on each body.
Unusually candid for the accounting world, the paper was prepared for a
joint board meeting of the two groups this month.
Last week, the FASB took steps towards a short-term remedy in the form of a
plan to eliminate a particular off-balance sheet treatment that is used by
many banks for mortgage loans.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/eec2cf76-0678-11dd-802c-0000779fd2ac.html
 
 
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