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发表于 2008-9-11 14:14:54
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In stark contrast to most other accounting concepts, fair value has already achieved the improbable feat of making front-page news, thanks to its alleged role in the subprime-mortgage crisis. Mired in the real estate mess, such financial-services giants as Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, and UBS suffered staggering losses in the first half of 2008. At the same time, new fair-value measurement requirements were taking hold, forcing the banks to determine how to value securities based on the prices they would fetch in markets that had all but dried up. The question has been: Has fair-value accounting played a role in the economic meltdown? As bankers claimed that the new standards prompted them to dump the securities at fire-sale prices, large investors contended that mark-to-market accounting reflected an economic volatility that was already there.
Fair value's tipping point lies in the innocuously titled Fair Value Measurements, a standard issued in September 2006 by the Financial Accounting Standards Board. Better known as FAS 157 and effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007, the standard spells out how companies should determine the valuations of the assets and liabilities they mark to market. But it is far more than a how-to guide. Because it affects abroad array of core activities, including contingent liabilities, mergers and acquisitions, intangible assets, pensions, hedges, environmental-cleanup obligations, and loans, its effect will be profound. Indeed, FAS 157, which already includes a three-page list of opinions and statements that are affected by fair-value accounting, seems likely to influence standard-setting far into the future. "Assuming it stays where it is right now," says Gary Kabureck, chief accounting officer at Xerox Corp., the rule "is going to be, over time, one of the most important standards" that FASB has ever written.
What's more, if, as is widely expected, the generally accepted accounting principles that have long governed U.S. companies give way to adoption of international financial reporting standards, fair value may get a further boost. That's because IFRS appears to favor even greater use of it. |
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