Quote from ByLoSellHi:
I agree 100%.
The suspension of M2M for banks and financial institutions represented a massive fraud on U.S. taxpayers, particularly at a time when hundreds of billions (trillions?) of taxpayer dollars were being funneled to these very same institutions, to help them recapitalize their balance sheets.
Doing so only delays the pain of recognizing losses, amplifies those losses, and puts those taxpayer rescue dollars at even greater risk.
The U.S. Taxpayer has become the true lender of last resort, by force.
Suspending M2M was complete bullshit for sure. They basically are saying M2M is a great idea when values are increasing, but if they plummet, suddenly M2M doesn't work...
The valuation needs to be consistent, one way or the other, for comparison purposes. How do you compare this year to last when the accounting policies have completely altered earnings?
I just feel sorry for those who don't understand the whole M2M concept and thought nothing of the FASB suspending the policy.
is some markets are too thin to properly value some structures. If BAC has some weird thing and they are the only ones who have it, how can it be M2Med?