Quite a list though I didn't see anything about deregulation and Mark-to-Market accounting (Enron, Worldcom, Arthur Anderson, etc.)
Blips on the radar screen (except for Mark-to-Market, you're right on there). Enron? Worldcom? AA? Drops in the bucket. We're talking about trillions Skander. You're talking about billions.
Mark-to-market is just a valuation tool. It didn't create the toxic assets...it just was a way for accountants to attempt to value those "investment" vehicles. If you were to buy a company would you rather the "value" be determined strictly by historical cost? Is that land really the same value 20-30 years later? Would you want to buy a mutual fund that values Bank of America stock at the $50/share purchase price or the current $5/share value?
I take Lurkers point to heart, as it has some validity. I would though like to give an example of the problem with MtM that I see.
I know of a plant in Chile, with a 2 sawmills, dry kilns, cogen biomass energy center, and secondary processing plant. It was valued at xx million. They were forced into default by their bank, when wood prices collapsed, and the Chilean Peso appreciated in value 30 to 35% in less than a year. The bank took the assets, and attempted to sell the entire facility, as a whole and operating business. They advertised it to many potential buyers in many countries, but no one was interested in buying.
They then decided to liquidate it piecemeal through auction. They set up the auction and advertised it, and on the day of the auction NO ONE came. No one had any interest in any of the assets. Shocked they regrouped and tried again, advertising far and wide through out all of SA. They held the second auction and surprise! no one showed up.
So the book value was xx million. The NPV of the expected future cash flow was zero. The value of it in an open market sale was zero. The value of it at liquidation was zero.
What value should the bank place on this asset? They should value it at zero. That is a reasonable application of MTM.
About 1/4 mile from this mill is another similar, though larger complex. Same basic operation, just larger in capacity. It is still operating, generating cash flow. Under the principles of MTM, the market value of this kind of operation in this location, processing these kinds of logs, and making this kind of finished products is ZERO, especially if the bank wrote down the value of their asset. So the company operating the facility that is generating positive cash should write down their asset to ZERO under MTM. The market price for that kind of an asset in the open market is zero, so write your asset base to zero. That is absurd.
Now the company has 20 other similar complexes on their balance sheet. Since you have one complex you have been forced to write down to zero, because of MTM requirements, should you not also be forced to write each and every other one of those other assets to ZERO? That would be 20 complexes with a net asset value of perhaps $700 million to $1 billion marked to zero. If that was to happen then the company would lose $1 billion in assets, and also $1 billion in equity. In all reality they would be functionally insolvent, and the bank would then be able to force them into default, even though they are profitable, and are generating net positive cash in excess of their debt requirements. That is the arbitrary and absurd nature of mark-to-market.
Just because someone else sold an asset;
that is not a highly liquid asset
into an opaque market where price discovery is very difficult to discern
the asset is not absolutely identical in form, function, and make up to my asset
Then that price/value should not have any influence on the value I place on my asset on my financial statements. Use those 3 criteria for a share in Microsoft, and you get a different answer, and as such adjusting the value of my asset to what someone else did is fair and reasonable.