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SARBANES-OXLEY
ACT of 2002
A summary of the major provisions of
this complex bill is below. Please keep in mind that details about how
some provisions in the bill will work will only become known as the SEC
and the new Public Company Accounting Oversight Board begin implementing
the bill. The conference report on the measure can be found at
http://financialservices.house.gov/ When on the site, look for the "Featured Items" section and
click on "Conference Report."
You can also find the full text of the bill
by going to
www.congress.gov. In the
word/phrase search box, type "Sarbanes Oxley" (without the
quotation marks) and hit <Enter> on your keyboard. From the results
listed, choose the "Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002" link, and then
click on "full display."
If, after reading the summary, you
have questions, please call or e-mail: Peter Kravitz, AICPA Director for
Congressional and Political Affairs, 202/434-9218,
pkravitz@aicpa.org;
Cynthia Lund, AICPA Vice President for State Society Affairs and Strategic
Planning, 202/434-9257,
clund@aicpa.org;
or Tom Higginbotham, AICPA Vice President for Congressional and Political
Affairs, 202/434-9205,
thigginbotham@aicpa.org.
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Section
3: Commission Rules and Enforcement.
A
violation of Rules of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
(“Board”) is treated as a violation of the ’34 Act, giving
rise to the same penalties that may be imposed for violations of
that Act. |
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Section
101: Establishment; Board Membership.
The
Board will have five financially-literate members, appointed for
five-year terms. Two of
the members must be or have been certified public accountants, and
the remaining three must not be and cannot have been CPAs.
The Chair may be held by one of the CPA members, provided
that he or she has not been engaged as a practicing CPA for five
years.
The
Board’s members will serve on a full-time basis.
No
member may, concurrent with service on the Board, “share in any of
the profits of, or receive payments from, a public accounting
firm,” other than “fixed continuing payments,” such as
retirement payments.
Members
of the Board are appointed by the Commission, “after consultation
with” the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board and the Secretary
of the Treasury.
Members
may be removed by the Commission “for good cause.” |
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Section
101: Establishment; Duties Of The Board.
Section
103: Auditing, Quality Control, And Independence Standards And
Rules.
The
Board shall:
(1)
register public accounting firms;
(2) establish, or
adopt, by rule, “auditing, quality control, ethics, independence,
and other standards relating to the preparation of audit reports for
issuers;”
(3)
conduct inspections of accounting firms;
(4)
conduct investigations and disciplinary proceedings, and impose
appropriate sanctions;
(5)
perform such other duties or functions as necessary or appropriate;
(6) enforce
compliance with the Act, the rules of the Board, professional
standards, and the securities laws relating to the preparation and
issuance of audit reports and the obligations and liabilities of
accountants with respect thereto;
(7)
set the budget and manage the operations of the Board and the staff
of the Board.
Auditing
standards.
The Board would be required to “cooperate on an on-going
basis” with designated professional groups of accountants and any
advisory groups convened in connection with standard-setting, and
although the Board can “to the extent that it determines
appropriate” adopt standards proposed by those groups, the Board
will have authority to amend, modify, repeal, and reject any
standards suggested by the groups.
The Board must report on its standard-setting activity to the
Commission on an annual basis.
The
Board must require registered public accounting firms to “prepare,
and maintain for a period of not less than 7 years, audit work
papers, and other information related to any audit report, in
sufficient detail to support the conclusions reached in such
report.”
The
Board must require a 2nd partner review and approval of
audit reports registered accounting firms must adopt quality control
standards.
The
Board must adopt an audit standard to implement the internal control
review required by section 404(b).
This
standard must require the auditor evaluate whether the internal
control structure and procedures include records that accurately and
fairly reflect the transactions of the issuer, provide reasonable
assurance that the transactions are recorded in a manner that will
permit the preparation of financial statements in accordance with
GAAP, and a description of any material weaknesses in the internal
controls.
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Section
102(a): Mandatory Registration
Section
102(f): Registration And Annual Fees.
Section
109(d): Funding; Annual Accounting Support Fee For The Board.
In
order to audit a public company, a public accounting firm must
register with the Board.
The
Board shall collect “a registration fee” and “an annual fee”
from each registered public accounting firm, in amounts that are
“sufficient” to recover the costs of processing and reviewing
applications and annual reports.
The
Board shall also establish by rule a reasonable “annual accounting
support fee” as may be necessary or appropriate to maintain the
Board. This fee will be
assessed on issuers only. |
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Section
104: Inspections of Registered Public Accounting Firms
Annual
quality reviews (inspections) must be conducted for firms that audit
more than 100 issues, all others must be conducted every 3 years.
The SEC and/or the Board may order a special inspection of
any firm at any time. |
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Section
105(b)(5): Investigation
And Disciplinary Proceedings; Investigations; Use Of Documents.
Section
105(c)(2): Investigations
And Disciplinary Proceedings; Disciplinary Procedures; Public
Hearings.
Section
105(c)(4): Investigations And Disciplinary Proceedings; Sanctions.
Section
105(d): Investigations
And Disciplinary Proceedings; Reporting of Sanctions.
All
documents and information prepared or received by the Board shall be
“confidential and privileged as an evidentiary matter (and shall
not be subject to civil discovery other legal process) in any
proceeding in any Federal or State court or administrative agency, .
. . unless and until presented in connection with a public
proceeding or [otherwise] released” in connection with a
disciplinary action. However,
all such documents and information can be made available to the SEC,
the U.S. Attorney General, and other federal and appropriate state
agencies.
Disciplinary
hearings will be closed unless the Board orders that they be public,
for good cause, and with the consent of the parties.
Sanctions
can be imposed by the Board of a firm if it fails to reasonably
supervise any associated person with regard to auditing or quality
control standards, or otherwise.
No
sanctions report will be made available to the public unless and
until stays pending appeal have been lifted. |
Section
106: Foreign Public Accounting Firms.
The
bill would subject foreign accounting firms who audit a U.S. company to
registrations with the Board. This
would include foreign firms that perform some audit work, such as in a
foreign subsidiary of a U.S. company, that is relied on by the primary
auditor.
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Section
107(a): Commission Oversight Of The Board; General Oversight
Responsibility.
Section
107(b): Rules Of The Board.
Section
107(d): Censure Of The Board And Other Sanctions.
The
SEC shall have “oversight and enforcement authority over the
Board.” The SEC can,
by rule or order, give the Board additional responsibilities. The SEC may require the Board to keep certain records, and
it has the power to inspect the Board itself, in the same manner as
it can with regard to SROs such as the NASD.
The
Board, in its rulemaking process, is to be treated “as if the
Board were a ‘registered securities association’”—that is, a
self-regulatory organization. The
Board is required to file proposed rules and proposed rule changes
with the SEC. The SEC
may approve, reject, or amend such rules.
The
Board must notify the SEC of pending investigations involving
potential violations of the securities laws, and coordinate its
investigation with the SEC Division of Enforcement as necessary to
protect an ongoing SEC investigation.
The
SEC may, by order, “censure or impose limitations upon the
activities, functions, and operations of the Board” if it finds
that the Board has violated the Act or the securities laws, or if
the Board has failed to ensure the compliance of accounting firms
with applicable rules without reasonable justification. |
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Section
107(c): Commission Review Of Disciplinary Action Taken By The Board.
The
Board must notify the SEC when it imposes “any final sanction”
on any accounting firm or associated person.
The Board’s findings and sanctions are subject to review by
the SEC.
The
SEC may enhance, modify, cancel, reduce, or require remission of
such sanction. |
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Section
108: Accounting Standards.
The
SEC is authorized to “recognize, as ‘generally accepted’...
any accounting principles” that are established by a
standard-setting body that meets the bill’s criteria, which
include requirements that the body:
(1)
be a private entity;
(2)
be governed by a board of trustees (or equivalent body), the
majority of whom are not or have not been associated persons with a
public accounting firm for the past 2 years;
(3)
be funded in a manner similar to the Board;
(4)
have adopted procedures to ensure prompt consideration of changes to
accounting principles by a majority vote;
(5)
consider, when adopting standards, the need to keep them current and
the extent to which international convergence of standards is
necessary or appropriate. |
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Section
201: Services Outside The Scope Of Practice Of Auditors; Prohibited
Activities.
It
shall be “unlawful” for a registered public accounting firm to
provide any non-audit service to an issuer contemporaneously with
the audit, including: (1) bookkeeping or other services related to
the accounting records or financial statements of the audit client;
(2) financial information systems design and implementation; (3)
appraisal or valuation services, fairness opinions, or
contribution-in-kind reports; (4) actuarial services; (5) internal
audit outsourcing services; (6) management functions or human
resources; (7) broker or dealer, investment adviser, or investment
banking services; (8) legal services and expert services unrelated
to the audit; (9) any other service that the Board determines, by
regulation, is impermissible. The
Board may, on a case-by-case basis, exempt from these prohibitions
any person, issuer, public accounting firm, or transaction, subject
to review by the Commission.
It
will not be unlawful to provide other non-audit services if they are
pre-approved by the audit committee in the following manner.
The bill allows an accounting firm to “engage in any
non-audit service, including tax services,” that is not listed
above, only if the activity is pre-approved by the audit committee
of the issuer. The
audit committee will disclose to investors in periodic reports its
decision to pre-approve non-audit services.
Statutory insurance company regulatory audits are treated as
an audit service, and thus do not require pre-approval.
The
pre-approval requirement is waived with respect to the provision of
non-audit services for an issuer if the aggregate amount of all such
non-audit services provided to the issuer constitutes less than 5 %
of the total amount of revenues paid by the issuer to its auditor
(calculated on the basis of revenues paid by the issuer during the
fiscal year when the non-audit services are performed), such
services were not recognized by the issuer at the time of the
engagement to be non-audit services; and such services are promptly
brought to the attention of the audit committee and approved prior
to completion of the audit.
The
authority to pre-approve services can be delegated to 1 or more
members of the audit committee, but any decision by the delegate
must be presented to the full audit committee. |
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Section
203: Audit Partner Rotation.
The
lead audit or coordinating partner and the reviewing partner must
rotate off of the audit every 5 years.
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Section
204: Auditor Reports to Audit Committees.
The
accounting firm must report to the audit committee all “critical
accounting policies and practices to be used…all alternative
treatments of financial information within [GAAP] that have been
discussed with management…ramifications of the use of such
alternative disclosures and treatments, and the treatment
preferred” by the firm. |
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Section
206: Conflicts of Interest.
The
CEO, Controller, CFO, Chief Accounting Officer or person in an
equivalent position cannot have been employed by the company’s
audit firm during the 1-year period proceeding the audit. |
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Section
207: Study of Mandatory Rotation of Registered Public Accountants.
The
GAO will do a study on the potential effects of requiring the
mandatory rotation of audit firms. |
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Section
209: Consideration by Appropriate State Regulatory Authorities.
State
regulators are directed to make an independent determination as to
whether the Boards standards shall be applied to small and mid-size
non-registered accounting firms. |
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Section
301: Public Company Audit Committees.
Each
member of the audit committee shall be a member of the board of
directors of the issuer, and shall otherwise be independent.
“Independent”
is defined as not receiving, other than for service on the board,
any consulting, advisory, or other compensatory fee from the issuer,
and as not being an affiliated person of the issuer, or any
subsidiary thereof.
The
SEC may make exemptions for certain individuals on a case-by-case
basis. |
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Section
301: Public Company Audit Committees.
The
audit committee of an issuer shall be directly responsible for the
appointment, compensation, and oversight of the work of any
registered public accounting firm employed by that issuer.
The
audit committee shall establish procedures for the “receipt,
retention, and treatment of complaints” received by the issuer
regarding accounting, internal controls, and auditing.
Each
audit committee shall have the authority to engage independent
counsel or other advisors, as it determines necessary to carry out
its duties.
Each
issuer shall provide appropriate funding to the audit committee. |
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Section
302: Corporate Responsibility For Financial Reports.
The
CEO and CFO of each issuer shall prepare a statement to accompany
the audit report to certify the “appropriateness of the financial
statements and disclosures contained in the periodic report, and
that those financial statements and disclosures fairly present, in
all material respects, the operations and financial condition of the
issuer.” A violation
of this section must be knowing and intentional to give rise to
liability. |
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Section
303: Improper Influence
on Conduct of Audits
It shall be
unlawful for any officer or director of an issuer to take any action
to fraudulently influence, coerce, manipulate, or mislead any
auditor engaged in the performance of an audit for the purpose of
rendering the financial statements materially misleading. |
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Section
304: Forfeiture Of
Certain Bonuses And Profits.
Section
305: Officer And
Director Bars And Penalties; Equitable Relief.
If an issuer is
required to prepare a restatement due to “material
noncompliance” with financial reporting requirements, the chief
executive officer and the chief financial officer shall “reimburse
the issuer for any bonus or other incentive-based or equity-based
compensation received” during the twelve months following the
issuance or filing of the non-compliant document and “any profits
realized from the sale of securities of the issuer” during that
period.
In any action
brought by the SEC for violation of the securities laws, federal
courts are authorized to “grant any equitable relief that may be
appropriate or necessary for the benefit of investors.” |
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Section
305: Officer And Director Bars And Penalties.
The
SEC may issue an order to prohibit, conditionally or
unconditionally, permanently or temporarily, any person who has
violated section 10(b) of the 1934 Act from acting as an officer or
director of an issuer if the SEC has found that such person’s
conduct “demonstrates unfitness” to serve as an officer or
director of any such issuer. |
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Section
306: Insider Trades
During Pension Fund Black-Out Periods Prohibited.
Prohibits the
purchase or sale of stock by officers and directors and other
insiders during blackout periods.
Any profits resulting from sales in violation of this section
“shall inure to and be recoverable by the issuer.”
If the issuer fails to bring suit or prosecute diligently, a
suit to recover such profit may be instituted by “the owner of any
security of the issuer.” |
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Section
401(a): Disclosures In Periodic Reports; Disclosures Required.
Each
financial report that is required to be prepared in accordance with
GAAP shall “reflect all material correcting adjustments . . . that
have been identified by a registered accounting firm . . . .”
“Each
annual and quarterly financial report . . . shall disclose all
material off-balance sheet transactions” and “other
relationships” with “unconsolidated entities” that may have a
material current or future effect on the financial condition of the
issuer.
The
SEC shall issue rules providing that pro forma financial information
must be presented so as not to “contain an untrue statement” or
omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the pro
forma financial information not misleading. |
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Section
401 (c): Study and Report on Special Purpose Entities.
SEC
shall study off-balance sheet disclosures to determine a) extent of
off-balance sheet transactions (including assets, liabilities,
leases, losses and the use of special purpose entities); and b)
whether generally accepted accounting rules result in financial
statements of issuers reflecting the economics of such off-balance
sheet transactions to investors in a transparent fashion and make a
report containing recommendations to the Congress. |
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Section
402(a): Prohibition on Personal Loans to Executives.
Generally,
it will be unlawful for an issuer to extend credit to any director
or executive officer. Consumer
credit companies may make home improvement and consumer credit loans
and issue credit cards to its directors and executive officers if it
is done in the ordinary course of business on the same terms and
conditions made to the general public.
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Section
403: Disclosures Of Transactions Involving Management And Principal
Stockholders.
Directors,
officers, and 10% owner must report designated transactions by the
end of the second business day following the day on which the
transaction was executed. |
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Section
404: Management Assessment Of Internal Controls.
Requires each
annual report of an issuer to contain an “internal control
report”, which shall:
(1) state the
responsibility of management for establishing and maintaining an
adequate internal control structure and procedures for financial
reporting; and
(2) contain an
assessment, as of the end of the issuer’s fiscal year, of the
effectiveness of the internal control structure and procedures of
the issuer for financial reporting.
Each issuer’s
auditor shall attest to, and report on, the assessment made by the
management of the issuer. An
attestation made under this section shall be in accordance with
standards for attestation engagements issued or adopted by the
Board. An attestation
engagement shall not be the subject of a separate engagement.
The
language in the report of the Committee which accompanies the bill
to explain the legislative intent states, “--- the Committee does
not intend that the auditor’s evaluation be the subject of a
separate engagement or the basis for increased charges or fees.”
Directs
the SEC to require each issuer to disclose whether it has adopted a
code of ethics for its senior financial officers and the contents of
that code.
Directs
the SEC to revise its regulations concerning prompt disclosure on
Form 8-K to require immediate disclosure “of any change in, or
waiver of,” an issuer’s code of ethics.
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Section
407: Disclosure of Audit Committee Financial Expert.
The
SEC shall issue rules to require issuers to disclose whether at
least 1 member of its audit committee is a “financial expert.” |
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Section
409: Real Time Disclosure.
Issuers
must disclose information on material changes in the financial
condition or operations of the issuer on a rapid and current basis. |
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Section
501: Treatment of Securities Analysts by Registered securities
Associations.
National
Securities Exchanges and registered securities associations must
adopt conflict of interest rules for research analysts who recommend
equities in research reports. |
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Section
601:
SEC Resources and
Authority.
SEC
appropriations for 2003 are increased to $776,000,000.
$98 million of the funds shall be used to hire an additional
200 employees to provide enhanced oversight of auditors and audit
services required by the Federal securities laws.
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Section
602(a): Appearance and
Practice Before the Commission.
The
SEC may censure any person, or temporarily bar or deny any person
the right to appear or practice before the SEC if the person does
not possess the requisite qualifications to represent others, lacks
character or integrity, or has willfully violated Federal securities
laws.
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Section
602(c): Study and
Report.
SEC
is to conduct a study of “securities professionals” (public
accountants, public accounting firms, investment bankers, investment
advisors, brokers, dealers, attorneys) who have been found to have
aided and abetted a violation of Federal securities laws. |
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Section
602(d): Rules of
Professional Responsibility for Attorneys.
The
SEC shall establish rules setting minimum standards for professional
conduct for attorneys practicing before it.
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Section
701: GAO Study and Report Regarding Consolidation of Public
Accounting Firms.
The
GAO shall conduct a study regarding the consolidation of public
accounting firms since 1989, including the present and future impact
of the consolidation, and the solutions to any problems discovered. |
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Title
VIII: Corporate and Criminal Fraud Accountability Act of 2002.
It
is a felony to “knowingly” destroy or create documents to
“impede, obstruct or influence” any existing or contemplated
federal investigation.
Auditors
are required to maintain “all audit or review work papers” for
five years.
The
statute of limitations on securities fraud claims is extended to the
earlier of five years from the fraud, or two years after the fraud
was discovered, from three years and one year, respectively.
Employees
of issuers and accounting firms are extended “whistleblower
protection” that would prohibit the employer from taking certain
actions against employees who lawfully disclose private employer
information to, among others, parties in a judicial proceeding
involving a fraud claim. Whistle
blowers are also granted a remedy of special damages and
attorney’s fees.
A
new crime for securities fraud that has penalties of fines and up to
10 years imprisonment. |
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Title
IX: White Collar Crime Penalty Enhancements
Maximum
penalty for mail and wire fraud increased from 5 to 10 years.
Creates
a crime for tampering with a record or otherwise impeding any
official proceeding.
SEC
given authority to seek court freeze of extraordinary payments to
directors, offices, partners, controlling persons, agents of
employees.
US
Sentencing Commission to review sentencing guidelines for securities
and accounting fraud.
SEC
may prohibit anyone convicted of securities fraud from being an
officer or director of any publicly traded company.
Financial
Statements filed with the SEC must be certified by the CEO and CFO.
The certification must state that the financial statements
and disclosures fully comply with provisions of the Securities
Exchange Act and that they fairly present, in all material respects,
the operations and financial condition of the issuer.
Maximum penalties for willful and knowing violations of this
section are a fine of not more than $500,000 and/or imprisonment of
up to 5 years.
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Section
1001: Sense of Congress Regarding Corporate Tax Returns
It
is the sense of Congress that the Federal income tax return of a
corporation should be signed by the chief executive
officer of such corporation.
Section
1102: Tampering With a Record or Otherwise Impeding an Official
Proceeding
Makes
it a crime for any person to corruptly alter, destroy, mutilate, or
conceal any document with the intent to impair
the object’s integrity or availability for use in an official
proceeding or to otherwise obstruct, influence or impede
any official proceeding is liable for up to 20 years in prison and a
fine.
Section
1103: Temporary Freeze Authority
The
SEC is authorized to freeze the payment of an extraordinary payment to
any director, officer, partner, controlling
person, agent, or employee of a company during an investigation of
possible violations of securities laws.
Section
1105: SEC Authority to Prohibit Persons from Serving as Officers or
Directors
The
SEC may prohibit a person from serving as an officer or director of a
public company if the person has committed securities fraud.
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