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A very interesting recap of Buffet's latest letter to shareholders
Buffett said that the accounting obligation to use Black-Scholes, which he sees as deeply flawed, meant that Berkshire had to increase its balance-sheet liability during the year to December 2010 from $8.9bn to $9.6bn, a change that, after the effect of tax accruals, reduced the group’s net income for the final quarter by $455 million. Buffett said,
Buffett said that the accounting obligation to use Black-Scholes, which he sees as deeply flawed, meant that Berkshire had to increase its balance-sheet liability during the year to December 2010 from $8.9bn to $9.6bn, a change that, after the effect of tax accruals, reduced the group’s net income for the final quarter by $455 million. Buffett said,
http://www.qfinance.com/blogs/ian-f...slams-black-scholes-and-flat-earth-economistsBoth Charlie and I believe that Black-Scholes produces wildly inappropriate values when applied to long-dated options. We set out one absurd example in these pages two years ago. […] We continue, nevertheless, to use that formula in presenting our financial statements. Black-Scholes is the accepted standard for option valuation – almost all leading business schools teach it – and we would be accused of shoddy accounting if we deviated from it.
"Moreover, we would present our auditors with an insurmountable problem were we to do that: They have clients who are our counterparties and who use Black-Scholes values for the same contracts we hold. It would be impossible for our auditors to attest to the accuracy of both their values and ours were the two far apart.