FASB Eases Up On Repo Funding Source

A relatively inexpensive source of funding for banks, which an amendment to a new accounting standard appeared to threaten, was secured last week when the Financial Accounting Standards Board decided against a move that would have inflated the funding provider’s balance sheet.

The decision affected so-called repurchase agreements, or repos, in which a bank or other borrower pledges collateral in the form of securities in order to receive a relatively inexpensive loan. In what was expected to be its last meeting March 24 on the controversial amendment to Statement 125, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities, the board decided against making the party holding the collateral book it as an asset.

The board had been leaning toward that method, which caused a flurry of protest letters from Wall Street (see FMR 3/15/99 p. 5). The board reasoned that if the collateral holder–usually broker/dealers and large commercial banks–could use the securities and profit from them, the collateral should be accounted for somehow.

Firms complained that making banks and others record the collateral as an asset and the obligation to return it as a liability would create unforeseen effects on other types of collateral arrangements that the board had not considered. Further, "grossing up" the balance sheet would deplete capital, perhaps limiting repo lenders’ ability to do the transactions and tightening an inexpensive source funding for many banks.

"It would make everybody’s balance sheet look larger and more leveraged," said Patricia Brigantic, senior associate general counsel for the Bond Market Association. She explained that besides limiting repo lenders lenders’ ability to do the transactions, a bigger balance sheet would cause frowns among rating agencies, counterparties, and others analyzing the credit.

The board reconsidered the issue last week and after looking at seven different options, decided the holder of the collateral–the "secured party"– would have to report the value of the right to use the collateral during the period it has been pledged. Halsey Bullen, FASB project manager, explained that the amount to be recorded will be relatively small under the new plan, compared with having to book the entire asset.

Several bankers were pleased to hear of FASB’s change of heart, saying that the new accounting should mean a big difference in their repo market activity. John Spiegel, chief financial officer of SunTrust, said the change sounded positive and added that he thought the collaboration of the FASB staff and the banking community is "a good thing."

Although staffers have some draft language for this section of the amendment, the board asked them to check with the Wall Street community "to see how the ideas might best be articulated," Bullen said. Brigantic’s accounting committee and representatives from many Wall Street firms will meet this week to discuss how to allocate a value to the gains from using the collateral for the period it is held. Brigantic added that the new guidance doesn’t just apply to repo transactions, but securities lending, margin loans and collateralized derivatives transactions–in short, any situation in which financial instruments are used as collateral.

Bullen added that apart from possible minor language changes to the proposed amendment, which could result in another meeting, the board now only must review the amendment in its entirety. Five board members indicated at the meeting they would support the statement.

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