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The Link between Moral and Market Values
By William K. Black
The current wave of financial crises has renewed interest in one of the "silver bullet" solutions proposed
during the savings & loan debacle of the 1980s. Larry White, former Federal Home Loan Bank Board member,
proposed then that market value accounting was the key to avoiding future financial scandals. White has recently
proposed this reform again as the key to preventing a repetition of the ongoing scandals. However, at the sametime he advanced this argument another column was noting that Enron had requested permission to use market
value accounting in order to facilitate fraud.
I am not suggesting that market value accounting is a bad idea and would generally aid fraud by
controlling persons (control fraud). But market value accounting cannot prevent control fraud.
A little background. Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) normally uses a "book" or "original
cost" accounting "basis." That means that if a business buys a piece of real estate for $10 million, its value for
accounting purposes is that original cost of $10 million, and the value is not adjusted upwards even if the market
value of the land soars to $60 million. Gains on assets, therefore, are only "recognized" for GAAP purposes when
the assets are sold. (The treatment of market value losses under GAAP is more complex and has changed over the
last decade.)
Most of the arguments against market value accounting are unconvincing. Critics have emphasized that
adjusting the accounting value of assets to reflect their current market price would be expensive and would make
earnings more volatile. Investors dislike volatility (because it represents increased risk); therefore, market
valuations would lower share values. If true, that is quite a strong argument against the "efficient markets
hypothesis." The argument requires that false accounting values fool consumers and create a systematic upward
bias in stock prices. The standard financial hypothesis denies that such a systematic bias exists or could persist
(because it would create profit opportunities that would be arbitraged away only when the systematic bias was
removed).
On the other hand, fundamentalist believers in the efficient markets hypothesis consider all accounting
irrelevant. They argue that market participants have Superman-like vision that allows them, inerrantly, to "look
through" accounting statements and discern a firm's true financial condition no matter how opaque and abused
the accounting is. The S&L debacle should have put an end to that extreme view; the current crisis in which control
frauds have deceived investors for years to the tune of many billions of dollars of fictional capital has shattered the
remaining hubris.
What remains is this. Original cost and market value accounting system are both capable of monumentalabuse by control frauds. Publicly traded firms that are in fact deeply insolvent have been able to get clean opinions
from Big 5 (now 4) audit firms for financial statements that purport to show that the firms are not simply viable but
extraordinarily profitable.
It takes ethical principles on the part of the top audit firms to make accounting principles meaningful. It is
no coincidence that the large control frauds always use the top audit firms. They want that imprimatur; a clean
audit opinion by a top audit firm provides respectability. There are three reasons the top audit firms have proved
so vulnerable to manipulation by control frauds. First, it only takes one bad audit partner to create a disaster. In
the S&L debacle, one office, Arthur Young and Company's Dallas office, produced clean opinions for many of the
worst control frauds in Texas. Second, there is an "agency" problem. While the audit firm's interest in its
reputation outweighs any gain the firm might make from overlooking securities fraud by its client, the same may
not be true of individual audit partners. They are under enormous pressure from their firms to bring in clients.
Firms want to see their top audit partners as heroes, not villains. Third, there is a variant of "Gresham's law" at
work. Gresham's law deals with hyperinflation. It observes that "bad money drives good money out of circulation."
Bad accounting can drive good accounting out of circulation. These perverse financial incentives can be
compensated for to some extent through deterrence, but they cannot be eliminated. Audit partners have to
rediscover the professional and ethical restraints that once made them symbols of rectitude.
http://www.scu.edu/ethics/publications/ethicalperspectives/accountingethics.html