(CNN) Among the allegations in Michael Cohen's blistering testimony Wednesday about President Donald Trump is that his former boss "cheated" -- Cohen's word -- to inflate his net worth. Trump's former lawyer said the documents were generated as Trump was seeking to move up on the list of Forbes billionaires as well as obtain loans from Deutsche Bank in an effort to buy the Buffalo Bills.

The information provided by Cohen is extremely confusing. For two years, 2011 and 2012, he offered up documents that had been produced in June. For 2013, he submitted one had been produced in March. The two earlier years also include a more detailed list of Trump's assets and liabilities. It is not exactly clear who compiled the documents. But the final document submitted by Cohen does not list any payments to Trump's loans. And there are four loans that have the same values listed for 2012 as 2013, perhaps suggesting no payments were made on them.

Trump's cash and securities values fell by $89 million from 2011 to 2012, but then shot up by $176.4 million from 2012 to 2013.

It's also notable that Trump offers values for specific buildings in these documents. Trump Tower, for instance, is valued at $150 million plus, a top range value in his Office of Government Ethics disclosure forms . In the 2012 document released by Cohen, that building is valued at $501 million.

The documents offer fresh valuations of Trump's net worth, produced specifically for Forbes, according to Cohen. Trump has guarded access to specifics about his financials and is still the only modern president not to release his tax returns. These documents do not seem to represent official valuations, however, so it's possible they should be viewed as ballpark estimates.