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stories filed under: "sarbanes oxley"
Venture Capital

Venture Capital

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
accounting, fas 157, regulations, sarbanes oxley, unintended consequences



Another Accounting Law Designed To Increase Transparency Does The Opposite

from the unintended-consequences dept

With all of the financial mess out there, it's likely that we'll soon see calls for new regulations to help "protect" against fraud. However, before we rush into doing so, it's worth looking at how damaging previous attempts to do the same thing have been. We've already covered the massive amount of damage done by Sarbanes-Oxley, which basically made it extremely difficult for a private company to go public and significantly increased costs for any public company -- all while doing next to nothing to actually cut down on fraud.

And, now, FAS 157 has come into play -- a new rule impacting many venture capitalists, forcing them to figure out what the "fair market value" of their investments are, and provide that number to their investors. This has many different VCs complaining about what a stupid process this is. It raises similar questions as the legal change a few years ago that required companies to put stock option valuations on their books as well. The problem is that these things are impossible to accurately value. Not difficult, but impossible. You're asking people to value a totally illiquid asset as if it were liquid.

Even if the venture capitalists use a rigorous process, the result will be wrong. There's simply no way to accurately value something like a private startup until another transaction happens where the value is actually set. And, that's the way it should be for a private investment (it's also why not everyone is allowed to invest in such endeavors, because it is inherently more risky). But forcing companies to make up bogus (no matter how well meaning) valuations for companies has dangerous unintended consequences. No matter how bogus the numbers are, since they're there, people will use them as if they're real. And that will lead to more bad investing, rather than less. So, once again, we have a law designed to stop bad investing, which will most likely cause the opposite to occur.

10 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
Politics

Politics

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
economic growth, jobs, sarbanes oxley



If Washington Wants To Create Jobs, It Should Get Out Of The Way In Silicon Valley

from the lead,-follow-or-get-out-of-the-way dept

It's already quite clear that Sarbanes-Oxley has done very little to actually prevent fraud of any kind, but it has been a tremendous burden, especially on smaller, innovative companies that help grow the economy and create new jobs. It's basically become a huge tax on tapping into public financial markets for growth. Michael S. Malone is now making the argument that if the incoming presidential administration is serious about creating jobs, it's time to roll back SarbOx and other accounting rules that have acted more for theatrical purposes rather than any legitimate reason. Basically, all they've done is create new reporting requirements that do little to nothing to either prevent fraud or clarify a company's actual financial position (its intended purpose). Regulators love these sorts of bogus rules because it makes it look like they've done something, when really all they've done is put up huge hurdles for actually doing anything. I'm all for radical transparency in financial info, but that's not what has been done. Instead, we've made it burdensome to actually grow a company -- and that doesn't help create jobs. It helps kill them.

18 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
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