SEC Issues Proposed Rules Prohibiting Improper Influence of Auditors and Requiring Disclosures Under Sarbanes-Oxley Act
November 6, 2002
The Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) issued
proposed rules on October 18 and October 22, 2002, in accordance with the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act (the Act). The proposed rules prohibit public companies from
improperly influencing auditors and require those companies to make certain
disclosures relating to (i) internal control reports; (ii) a code of ethics for
senior financial and principal executive officers; and (iii) the number and
names of the “financial experts” serving on the company’s audit committee and
their independence.
Improper Influence on Auditors
Section 303(a) of the Act prohibits officers and directors
of a company, and persons acting under the direction of an officer or director,
from taking any action to fraudulently influence, coerce, manipulate or mislead
the company's auditor for the purpose of rendering the financial statements
materially misleading.
The proposed rules would cover not only the direct or
indirect activities of officers and directors of the company, but also any other
person acting under the direction, but not necessarily the supervision, of the
officers and directors.
Examples of conduct that could, if successful, result in
rendering the financial statements misleading include:
- issuing a report on a company’s financial statements that
is not warranted in the circumstances (due to material violations GAAP, GAAS or
other standards)
- not performing an audit, review or other procedures
required by GAAS or other professional standards
- not withdrawing an issued report
- not communicating matters to a company’s audit committee
Conduct that may constitute improper influence includes,
directly or indirectly:
- offering or paying bribes or other financial incentives,
including offering future employment or contracts for non-audit services
- providing an auditor with inaccurate or misleading legal
analysis
- threatening to cancel or canceling existing non-audit or
audit engagements if the auditor objects to the company’s accounting
- seeking to have a partner removed from the audit engagement
because the partner objects to the company’s accounting
- blackmailing
- making physical threats
Management Assessment of Internal Controls
Section 404 of the Act requires companies, other than
registered investment companies, to include an internal control report with each
annual report filed with the SEC. The internal control report must:
- state the responsibility of management for establishing and
maintaining an adequate internal control structure and procedures for financial
reporting and
- contain an assessment by management about the effectiveness
of the company’s internal controls and procedures for financial reporting as of
the end of the company’s most recent fiscal year
The company’s registered public accountant must attest to,
and report on, management's evaluation of the company’s internal controls and
procedures for financial reporting.
Under the proposed rules, quarterly evaluations of the
company’s disclosure procedures and controls would be required. Although the
Act does not require filing of the attestation report, the proposed rules would
require its inclusion in the company’s annual report to stockholders on Form
10-K.
If adopted, the proposed rules would first apply to
companies whose fiscal years end on or after September 15, 2003.
Code of Ethics Disclosure Requirements
Under Section 406 of the Act, every public company must
disclose in its periodic reports whether it has a written code of ethics for its
principal financial officer and comptroller or principal accounting officer, or
persons performing similar functions, and if it does not, the reasons why. The
proposed rules expand this disclosure requirement to include a company's
principal executive officer.
The Act defines “code of ethics” as a set of standards that
are reasonably necessary to promote:
- honest and ethical conduct, including the ethical handling
of actual or apparent conflicts of interest between personal and professional
relationships
- full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure
in the periodic reports required to be filed by the company, and
- compliance with applicable government rules and regulations
The proposed rules broaden the Act’s definition of code of
ethics to include three additional factors:
- avoidance of conflicts of interest, including disclosure to
an appropriate person or persons identified in the code of any material
transaction or relationship that reasonably could be expected to give rise to
such a conflict
- the prompt, internal reporting of code violations to an
appropriate person or persons identified in the code, and
- accountability for adherence to the code
Under the proposed rules, a copy of the company’s code of
ethics would be required to be included as an exhibit in its annual report to
stockholders on Form 10-K. The proposed rules would also require companies,
other than foreign private issuers and registered investment companies, to
report any change or waiver of their ethics code within two business days on a
Form 8-K or on their Web site. Alternatively, the company may disseminate
information on such changes or waivers on the company’s Web site provided the
company discloses its intention to do so in its most recently filed annual
report to stockholders on Form 10-K. Foreign private issuers and registered
investment companies would be required to disclose changes and waivers in their
periodic reports or on their Internet Web sites.
Financial Experts on Company’s Audit Committee
Section 407 of the Act requires a company to disclose
whether the company’s audit committee includes at least one financial expert, as
the term is defined by the SEC, and if not, the reasons why.
Pursuant to the proposed rules, a "financial expert" is
defined as a person who, in the opinion of the company’s board of directors has,
through education and experience as a public accountant or auditor or a
principal financial officer, controller, or principal accounting officer of a
public company or experience in one or more positions that involve the
performance of similar functions (or that results, in the judgment of the
company’s board of directors, in the person’s having similar expertise and
experience), the following attributes:
- an understanding of GAAP and financial statements
- experience applying GAAP in connection with the accounting
for estimates, accruals and reserves that are generally comparable to the
estimates, accruals and reserves, if any used in the company’s financial
statements
- experience preparing or auditing financial statements that
present accounting issues that are generally comparable to those raised by the
registrant’s financial statements
- experience with internal controls and procedures for
financial reporting, and
- an understanding of audit committee functions
To determine if a potential financial expert has all the
requisite attributes, the board of directors must evaluate the totality of the
individual’s education and experience. The company should consider a variety of
factors described in the proposed rules in making that evaluation.
For a foreign private issuer, the board of directors should
also consider the person’s experience with public companies in the foreign
private issuer’s home country, generally accepted accounting principles used by
the issuer, and the reconciliation of financial statements with U.S. generally
accepted accounting principles.
Companies would be required to disclose the new information
in their annual reports on Form 10-K. Any arrival or departure of a director
would be disclosed in Form 8-K.
Amendments to SEC Forms
The proposed rules amend the various forms used by
companies to file their annual reports. These amendments are as follows:
- Form 10-K has been amended to include Item 10, Directors
and Executive Officers of the Registrant, and Item 15, Audit Committee Financial
Experts.
- Form 10-KSB has been amended to include Item 9, Directors
and Executive Officers of the Registrant, and Item 15, Audit Committee Financial
Experts.
- Form 20-F has been amended to include Item 15(a), Controls
and Procedures, Item 15(b) Audit Committee Financial Experts, and Item 15(c)
Code of Ethics.
The SEC is currently soliciting public comment on the
proposed rules.
For more information, contact Michael Jamieson at mjamieson@hklaw.com or Steven Sonberg at ssonberg@hklaw.com. They both may be reached through our toll-free telephone number, 888-688-8500.