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资产担保证券:披露监管或实体立法?
2009-10-28 来源:XBRL Blog 编辑: 浏览量:

In addition to improving asset-backed securities disclosure (using XBRL perhaps), SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro called for substantive ABS regulation in a speech Tuesday to SIFMA, the parent anization of the American Securitization Forum (link to lorful Michael Lewis description):

ABS Regulation

In one final example, I believe there may be gaps that should be filled in the asset-backed securities (ABS) market. I have asked the staff to broadly review our regulation of ABS including disclosures, offering process, and reporting of asset-backed issuers. The staff is nsidering a number of proposed changes, which are designed to enhance investor protection in this vital part of the market.

However, not all problems with ABS can be addressed under our current rulemaking authority. So, I believe that legislative action is also necessary to deal with some of the issues that have been highlighted by the credit crisis.

As you know, the statutes erning the offer and sale of securities were written decades before asset backed securities were even dreamed of. The laws were written for rporations or other entities with active management attempting to grow a business.

In ntrast, asset-backed securities are generally securities that are backed by a discrete pool of self-liquidating financial assets. And asset-backed securitization is a financing technique in which financial assets, in many cases themselves less liquid, are pooled and nverted into instruments that may be offered and sold in the capital markets.

Most legislative proposals aimed at improving securitization, suggest amendments to the securities laws that are focused on the disclosure of material information. But substantive protections beyond disclosure requirements are needed for the ABS arena.

That’s because of the unique character of securitization and the role it plays in the national enomy. Creating a new act directed solely at securitizations would allow ngress to specifically tailor solutions for these investment vehicles — much like the Investment mpany Act of 1940. And, it uld be done without mpromising or changing the fundamental structure and underpinnings of existing statutes.

Similar to the Investment mpany Act, the ABS Act uld have substantive restrictions or requirements for the trust that issues the securities and for related parties. Such a statute uld set minimum requirements for the pooling and servicing agreements, such as requiring strong representations and warranties about the assets being securitized and procres for ensuring those representations and warranties are followed. That’s in addition to the disclosure requirements of the Securities Act, which would ntinue to apply when ABS securities were offered and sold.

The primary danger of substantive legislation, as opposed to disclosure regulation, is that substantive legislation uld enhance the ability of market participants to establish cartel powers by strengthening barriers to entry, mpetition, and innovation. For example, it took more than 60 years for ETF’s to create lower-st mpetition to mutual fund managers enjoying high fees protected by barriers to entry under the Investment mpany Act.

The ABS industry would like nothing more than a similar regulatory structure giving it decades of enhanced pricing power and profits. After all, Wall Street ultimately turned to ABS because the SEC limited excess profits from dealing in public mpany securities with the end of fixed mmissions in the 70s and enhanced public mpany disclosure in the 80s, 90s, and in this decade. If ABS market became similarly mpetitive and transparent, Wall Street would need to look elsewhere for opacity to exploit for excess profits — or settle for more modest profits, such as those earned in the mpetitive and transparent sectors of today’s capital markets.

Leadership to pierce self-interested arguments about so-called ABS mplexity is essential. After all, what’s so mplex about analyzing an interest in a future stream of payments? Both mpany securities and ABS are subject to risk, but groups of similar cash flows must be nsiderably easier to evaluate than the value of a share in a public mpany — particularly if information about cash flow obligations, actual performance-to-date, and other empirical data is available in an industry standard mputer language like XBRL.

One fact that might be disclosed in XBRL with no need for additional legislation: The amount of credit risk permanently borne by securities issuers and loan originators. You want me to buy an ABS to which you ntributed assets or that you assembled? Maybe it makes sense as part of a diversified portfolio, but you need to be in it with me and I need to understand exactly how we’re going to share the risk and the reward. Crank up the taxonomy machine — or another taxonomy machine — or another taxonomy machine — and get to work.

 

 
 
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