97-14072. Mark-to-Market Valuation Software  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 103 (Thursday, May 29, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 29188-29189]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-14072]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Internal Revenue Service
    [SPR-104006-97]
    
    
    Mark-to-Market Valuation Software
    
    AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Solicitation for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The IRS is soliciting comments on the scope, algorithms, and 
    use of its new software to provide historic market values for certain 
    financial instruments.
    
    DATES: Comments are requested on or before July 28, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send written comments to: Internal Revenue Service, Attn: 
    CC:DOM:CORP:R (SPR-104006-97), room 5226, POB 7604, Ben Franklin 
    Station, Washington, DC. 20044. Alternatively, respondents may hand 
    deliver written comments to CC:DOM:CORP:R (SPR-104006-97), Courier's 
    Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Ave., NW., 
    Washington, DC., or may submit comments electronically via the IRS 
    Internet site at: http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/tax__regs/
    comments.html.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Suzanne J. Boule at 212-298-2116 (not 
    a toll-free number).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        Section 475 of the Internal Revenue Code requires that dealers in 
    securities use a mark-to-market method of accounting. Under that 
    method, inventory securities must be included in inventory at fair 
    market value. For a security that is not inventory in the hands of the 
    dealer and that is held at the close of a taxable year, the dealer must 
    recognize gain or loss as if the security were sold for its fair market 
    value on the last business day of that taxable year.
        The IRS intends to implement mark-to-market valuation software to 
    assist with the administration of section 475. The software is being 
    developed by the Los Alamos National Laboratory under the supervision 
    of the IRS's Office of Financial Products and Transactions. The 
    software will be used to compute ranges of values for various financial 
    instruments.
    
    Comments
    
        The IRS is soliciting comments from the public concerning this new 
    software. Comments are invited concerning the scope, algorithms, use, 
    and other aspects of the software.
    
    Scope
    
        The software can compute a range of values for interest rate swaps; 
    currency swaps; path-independent caps, floors, and collars; path-
    dependent caps, floors, and collars; ndex-amortizing swaps; European 
    options on any of the above; and American and mid-Atlantic (Bermudan) 
    options on path-independent instruments. The IRS invites comments 
    concerning which instruments should be included in the scope of the 
    software for various historic periods.
    
    Algorithms
    
        The software uses models of the term structure of interest rates 
    developed by Black, Derman, and Toy [1]; Black and Karasinski [2]; 
    Heath, Jarrow, and Morton [3,4,5]; Ho and Lee [6]; and Hull and White 
    [7]. These models are widely used in the financial products industry. 
    The IRS invites comments concerning which models should be used by the 
    software for various historic periods.
    
    Use
    
        The software uses models and financial data appropriate to the date 
    as of which a financial instrument is to be valued. The models are 
    calibrated to match market data for swaps, caps, floors, and swaptions 
    on that date. For this purpose, the IRS has acquired extensive 
    databases of historical interest rates, currency exchange rates, and 
    interest rate and currency derivative data. The IRS invites comments 
    concerning the use of the models, including the derivation of inputs to 
    the models from these databases.
    
    Credit Risk, Etc.
    
        In industry practice, the values computed using the basic models 
    are often adjusted to reflect credit risk and other factors. The IRS 
    invites comments concerning which, if any, such adjustments are 
    appropriate for valuations under section 475 and concerning the methods 
    by which any adjustments should be effected. More generally, the IRS 
    invites comments identifying any reason why there might be differences 
    between the values produced by the software and the values that should 
    be taken into account under section 475. The IRS also invites 
    suggestions regarding appropriate ways to reconcile those differences.
    
    Batch Processing
    
        The software currently supports on-line interactive processing of 
    single instruments, and will soon support off-line batch processing of 
    portfolios of instruments. The IRS invites comments on the 
    implementation of batch processing.
        Comments are requested on or before July 28, 1997. Written comments 
    should be sent to: Internal Revenue Service, Attn: CC:DOM:CORP:R (SPR-
    104006-97), room 5226, POB 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC. 
    20044. Alternatively, respondents may hand deliver written comments to 
    CC:DOM:CORP:R (SPR-104006-97), Courier's Desk, Internal Revenue 
    Service, 1111 Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC., or may submit 
    comments electronically via the IRS Internet site at: http://
    www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/tax__regs/comments.html.
        If a respondent is submitting written comments, a signed original 
    and eight (8) copies are requested. All comments will be available for 
    public inspection and copying in their entirety.
    
    References
    
    1. Black, Fischer, Emanuel Derman and William Toy. ``A One-Factor 
    Model of Interest Rates and its Application to Treasury Bond 
    Options.'' Financial Analysts Journal 46 (January-February 1990): 
    33-39.
    2. Black, Fischer, and Piotr Karasinski. ``Bond and Option Pricing 
    When Short Rates are Lognormal.'' Financial Analysts Journal 47 
    (July-August 1991): 52-59.
    3. Heath, David, Robert Jarrow and Andrew Morton. ``Bond Pricing and 
    the Term Structure of Interest Rates: A Discrete Time 
    Approximation.'' Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 25 
    (December 1990): 419-440.
    4. Heath, David, Robert Jarrow and Andrew Morton. ``Contingent Claim 
    Valuation with a Random Evolution of Interest Rates.'' Review of 
    Futures Markets 9 no. 1 (1990): 54-76.
    5. Heath, David, Robert Jarrow and Andrew Morton. ``Bond Pricing and 
    the Term Structure of Interest Rates: A New Methodology for 
    Contingent Claims Valuation.'' Econometrica 60 (January 1992): 77-
    105.
    
    [[Page 29189]]
    
    6. Ho, Thomas S. Y., and Sang-Bin Lee. ``Term Structure Movements 
    and Pricing Interest Rate Contingent Claims.'' Journal of Finance 41 
    (December 1986): 1011-1029.
    7. Hull, John, and Alan White. ``Pricing Interest Rate Derivative 
    Securities.'' Review of Financial Studies 3 no. 4 (1990): 573-592.
    Belinda S. McCafferty,
    Director, Office of Financial Products and Transactions, Office of 
    Assistant Commissioner (International).
    [FR Doc. 97-14072 Filed 5-28-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4830-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/29/1997
Department:
Internal Revenue Service
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Solicitation for comments.
Document Number:
97-14072
Dates:
Comments are requested on or before July 28, 1997.
Pages:
29188-29189 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
SPR-104006-97
PDF File:
97-14072.pdf