The Valuation Blues (aka How FAS157 Is Tortuous)

I’m all for transparency and mark to market. As Roger Ehrenberg has blogged about consistently, investors need to know what the underlying securities are worth inside banks, brokerage firms, insurance companies, hedge funds, private equity funds, and yes venture capital funds.

The FASB (which governs accounting standards in this country) recently issued a new rule called FAS157. I’m not going to get technical on you, and the accountants in the community can weigh in via the comments if they feel the need for more rigor in this discussion.

In layman’s terms, FAS157 says that you have to value your investments at “fair market value.”

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This is a section of the AllThingsD Web site featuring posts that have been curated from around the Web: pieces we’ve read, discussions we’ve followed, stuff we like. Five posts are included here each weekday, but only the headline and the first two sentences. We link to the original site for the rest. The section is explicitly labeled, so it’s clear that content comes “from other Web sites.”

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