Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5086694 | Journal of Accounting and Economics | 2013 | 13 Pages |
Beck and Narayanamoorthy (this issue) argue and provide evidence that SEC pressure culminating in the issuance of SAB 102 in July 2001: (1) caused banks to record allowances for loan losses that were more associated with historical loan charge-offs and less associated with current non-accrual loans; (2) primarily affected large and strong banks; and (3) caused allowances for loan losses to be more (less) informative of future loan charge-offs for strong (weak) banks. We argue and provide evidence that the results the authors ascribe to SAB 102 are primarily explained by consumer loan charge-offs dominating banks' loan charge-offs and, thus, allowances for loan losses in the post-SAB 102/pre-financial crisis period. This period coincided with a real estate and general macroeconomic boom in which other loan types experienced very low charge-offs.