The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010

Over the Past two and a half years banks have failed at the fastest pace since the Great Depression. These rapidly mounting bank failures have rekindled a debate surrounding the use of fair value accounting, with many arguing that fair value has exacerbated the severity of the recent financial crisi...

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Main Author: Spring, Jacob Edward Eugene
Format: Others
Published: Scholarship @ Claremont 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/28
http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1028&context=cmc_theses
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spelling ndltd-CLAREMONT-oai-scholarship.claremont.edu-cmc_theses-10282013-04-19T14:35:33Z The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010 Spring, Jacob Edward Eugene Over the Past two and a half years banks have failed at the fastest pace since the Great Depression. These rapidly mounting bank failures have rekindled a debate surrounding the use of fair value accounting, with many arguing that fair value has exacerbated the severity of the recent financial crisis through asset devaluation and the forced sale of assets in an effort to meet capital requirements. This paper seeks to test if an entity’s exposure to fair value which includes assets available-for-sale, trading assets, and loans held-for-sale as a percent of total assets increases the probability of bank failure through testing different prediction models of bank failure that use ratios generated from publicly available Call Report data. Two models are generated from these ratios, one to determine the significance of an entity’s fair value exposure in predicting risk of failure, and the other to determine if a better model can be generated in the absence of the Fair Value Exposure/Total Assets ratio. The first model shows that Fair Value Exposure/Total Assets is a statistically significant ratio, and that the model employing Fair Value Exposure/Total Assets has greater bank failure predictive power than the second model that excludes this ratio. Contrary to expectations, the study determines that greater fair value exposure actually decreases a bank’s risk of failure, rather than increases it. A number of possibilities as to why this may be are presented in the conclusion of the paper. 2010-01-01 text application/pdf http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/28 http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1028&context=cmc_theses CMC Senior Theses Scholarship @ Claremont Bank failure Fair value Accounting Accounting Finance and Financial Management
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Bank failure
Fair value
Accounting
Accounting
Finance and Financial Management
spellingShingle Bank failure
Fair value
Accounting
Accounting
Finance and Financial Management
Spring, Jacob Edward Eugene
The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010
description Over the Past two and a half years banks have failed at the fastest pace since the Great Depression. These rapidly mounting bank failures have rekindled a debate surrounding the use of fair value accounting, with many arguing that fair value has exacerbated the severity of the recent financial crisis through asset devaluation and the forced sale of assets in an effort to meet capital requirements. This paper seeks to test if an entity’s exposure to fair value which includes assets available-for-sale, trading assets, and loans held-for-sale as a percent of total assets increases the probability of bank failure through testing different prediction models of bank failure that use ratios generated from publicly available Call Report data. Two models are generated from these ratios, one to determine the significance of an entity’s fair value exposure in predicting risk of failure, and the other to determine if a better model can be generated in the absence of the Fair Value Exposure/Total Assets ratio. The first model shows that Fair Value Exposure/Total Assets is a statistically significant ratio, and that the model employing Fair Value Exposure/Total Assets has greater bank failure predictive power than the second model that excludes this ratio. Contrary to expectations, the study determines that greater fair value exposure actually decreases a bank’s risk of failure, rather than increases it. A number of possibilities as to why this may be are presented in the conclusion of the paper.
author Spring, Jacob Edward Eugene
author_facet Spring, Jacob Edward Eugene
author_sort Spring, Jacob Edward Eugene
title The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010
title_short The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010
title_full The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010
title_fullStr The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Fair Value Accounting in Bank Failures: 2001-2010
title_sort role of fair value accounting in bank failures: 2001-2010
publisher Scholarship @ Claremont
publishDate 2010
url http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/28
http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1028&context=cmc_theses
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