Audit Committee Disclosure
October 8, 1999
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has proposed new rules
(Proposal) to improve disclosure relating to the functioning of corporate audit
committees and to enhance the reliability and credibility of financial
statements of public companies.
The SEC stated in the Proposal that it has seen a number of significant
changes in the markets, such as technological developments and increasing
pressure on companies to meet earnings expectations, that make it ever more
important for the financial reporting process to remain disciplined and
credible. The SEC believes that additional disclosures about a company's audit
committee and its interaction with the company's auditors and management will
promote investor confidence in the integrity of the financial reporting process.
In addition, the SEC believes that increasing the level of scrutiny by
independent auditors of companies' quarterly financial statements should lead to
fewer year-end adjustments, and, therefore, more reliable financial information
about companies throughout the reporting year.
Accordingly, the SEC has proposed to:
- require that companies'
independent auditors review the financial information included in the companies'
Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q or 10-QSB prior to the companies filing such
forms with the Commission;
- require that companies include
reports of their audit committees in their proxy statements; in the report, the
audit committee must state whether the audit committee has: (i) reviewed and
discussed the audited financial statements with management; (ii) discussed with
the independent auditors the matters required to be discussed by Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61, as may be modified or supplemented; and (iii)
received certain disclosures from the auditors regarding the auditors'
independence as required by the Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1, as
may be modified or supplemented, and discussed with the auditors the auditors'
independence;
- require that the report of the
audit committee also include a statement by the audit committee whether, based
on such review and discussions, anything has come to the attention of the
members of the audit committee that caused the audit committee to believe that
the audited financial statements included in the company's Annual Report on Form
10-K or 10-KSB, as applicable, for the year then ended contain an untrue
statement of material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make
the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading;
- require that companies disclose
in their proxy statements whether their audit committee has adopted a written
charter and, if the audit committee has adopted a charter, to include a copy of
the charter as an appendix to the company's proxy or information statement at
least once every three years;
- require that companies whose
securities are quoted on Nasdaq or listed on the American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
or New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) disclose in their proxy statements certain
information regarding any director on the audit committee who is not
"independent," as defined in the applicable listing standard; small
business issuers would not be required to comply with this requirement;
- require that all other
companies, including small business issuers, disclose in their proxy statements
whether, if they have an audit committee, the members are
"independent" within the definition of the National Association of
Securities Dealer's (NASD), AMEX's or NYSE's proposed amendments to their
listing standards and which definition of independence was used; and
- create "safe harbors"
for the information required to be disclosed under the proposals to protect
companies and their directors from certain liabilities under the federal
securities laws.
To view a copy of the Proposal, see www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/34-41987.htm.
In addition, the NYSE, AMEX and NASD have proposed rule changes to their
listing standards. The NYSE, AMEX and NASD, among other things, have proposed
to:
- require a more demanding
definition of "independence" for audit committee members;
- require that audit committees
include at least three members, comprised solely of "independent"
directors who are "financially literate," with limited exceptions
(under the AMEX's and NASD's proposed amendments to their listing standards,
small business issuers must establish and maintain an audit committee composed
of at least two members; a majority of the members must be independent
directors);
- require that at least one
member of the audit committee has accounting or related financial management
expertise; and
- require that companies adopt a
written audit committee charter that outlines certain specified responsibilities
of the audit committee.
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) also has
proposed amendments to Statements on Auditing Standards (AICPA Amendments). The
AICPA, among other things, has proposed to:
- require that the auditor
discuss certain information relating to the auditor's judgments about the
quality, not just the acceptability, of the company's accounting principles with
the audit committees of the companies. The discussion would include matters
relating to the consistency of application of the entity's accounting policies
and the clarity, consistency, and completeness of the entity's accounting
information contained in the financial statements and related disclosures. The
discussion also is to include certain items that have a significant impact on
the accounting information included in the financial statements, such as changes
to accounting policies and unusual transactions;
- clarify that the accountant
should communicate to the audit committee or be satisfied, through discussions
with the audit committee, that matters discussed above have been communicated to
the audit committee by the management when they have been identified in the
conduct of interim financial reporting.
- Require the accountant to
attempt to discuss with the audit committee the matters discussed above prior to
the filing of the Form 10-Q or prior to a public announcement of interim
information.
To view a copy of the AICPA Amendments, see www.aicpa.org/members/div/auditstd/amend.htm.