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SAN FRANCISCO -Bank of America Corp said it wrongly classified as much as $10.7 billion of short-term repurchase and lending transactions as sales from 2007 to 2009 to reduce its end-of-quarter assets.
"A $10.7 billion accounting error would be a material event for about 99.9 percent" of US banks, said Cornelius Hurley, director of the Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law at Boston University School of Law. "It's hard to see how the SEC can accept BofA's rejoinder as being sufficient."
The SEC sent letters to finance chiefs at about two dozen firms in March asking whether they employed accounting strategies like those at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. The bankrupt securities firm was accused of using repurchase agreements to move assets off its balance sheet to hide leverage, to improve its capital ratios. Bank of America had disclosed in a March 31 financial filing that "certain sales of agency mortgage-backed securities should have been recorded as secured borrowings rather than sales," bank spokesman Jerry Dubrowski said.
Bloomberg News