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FINAL SEC RULE REGARDING DISCLOSURE OF AUDIT
COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT UNDER SECTION 407 OF SARBANES-OXLEY
By Brent Eller
[February 2003]
Section 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(the "Act") mandates that the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) issue rules to require issuers to disclose
in their periodic reports under the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (the "Exchange Act") whether or not their
audit committees have at least one member who is a "financial
expert" and, if not, the reason why. On January 23, 2003,
the SEC issued a final rule regarding audit committee financial
expert disclosure that clarifies (and in some cases expands)
the requirements of Section 407 in a number of respects.1
In response to comments, the final rule adopts a less restrictive
definition of the term "financial expert" than the
proposed rule issued by the SEC on October 22, 20022
and reduces the level of disclosure that the proposed rule would
have required.
Section 407
Section 407(a) of the Act requires the SEC to "issue rules,
as necessary or appropriate in the public interest and consistent
with the protection of investors, to require each issuer, together
with periodic reports required pursuant to sections 13(a) and 15(d)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, to disclose whether or not,
and if not, the reasons therefor, the audit committee of that issuer
is comprised of at least one member who is a financial expert, as
such term is defined by the [SEC]."
Section 407(b) provides the following guidance regarding who
can be a "financial expert":
b. Considerations. In defining the term "financial expert"
for purposes of subsection (a), the [SEC] shall consider whether
a person has, through education and experience as a public
accountant or auditor or a principal financial officer, comptroller,
or principal accounting officer of an issuer, or from a position
involving the performance of similar functions--
- an understanding of generally accepted accounting principles
and financial statements;
- experience in--
- the preparation or auditing of financial statements
of generally comparable issuers; and
- the application of such principles in connection
with the accounting for estimates, accruals, and reserves;
- experience with internal accounting controls; and
- an understanding of audit committee functions.
Disclosure Obligations Under the Final Rule
Under the final rule, an issuer must disclose whether or not
its board of directors has at least one "audit committee
financial expert" serving on its audit committee.3
An issuer that does not have an audit committee financial expert
must explain why it does not. In an expansion of the requirements
of Section 407, the final rule requires the issuer to disclose
the name of at least one audit committee financial expert. Although
the issuer may determine that it has more than one audit committee
financial expert on its audit committee, it is not required
to make this determination, nor is it required to disclose the
names of the additional audit committee financial experts.4
In an additional expansion of Section 407 requirements, the
final rule requires an issuer to disclose whether its named
audit committee financial expert is independent5
of management. The SEC noted that this requirement, which was
also included in the proposed rule, is necessary even though
Section 301 of the Act will require issuers listed on a national
securities exchange or association to have audit committees
comprised solely of independent directors, because not all reporting
companies are so listed. Finally, if an issuer elects to disclose
the names of more than one audit committee financial expert,
it must also disclose whether or not the additional named audit
committee financial experts are independent. The SEC noted that
when rules implementing Section 301 are adopted, the Section
407 rules will be revised to be consistent with the independence
standard set forth in the Section 301 rules.
Definition of "Audit Committee Financial
Expert"
The final rule defines an audit committee financial expert
as a person who has the following attributes:
- An understanding of generally accepted accounting principles
and financial statements;6
- The ability to assess the general application of such principles
in connection with the accounting for estimates, accruals,
and reserves;7
- Experience preparing, auditing, analyzing or evaluating8
financial statements that present a breadth and level of complexity
of accounting issues that are generally comparable9
to the breadth and complexity of issues that can reasonably
be expected to be raised by the registrant's financial statements,
or experience actively supervising one or more persons engaged
in such activities;10
- An understanding11
of internal controls and procedures for financial reporting;
and
- An understanding of audit committee functions.12
The final rule requires the audit committee financial expert
to have acquired these attributes through:
- Education and experience as a principal financial officer,
principal accounting officer, controller, public accountant
or auditor or experience in one or more positions that involve
the performance of similar functions;13
- Experience actively supervising a principal financial officer,
principal accounting officer, controller, public accountant,
auditor or person performing similar functions;
- Experience overseeing or assessing the performance of companies
or public accountants with respect to the preparation, auditing
or evaluation of financial statements;14
or
- Other relevant experience.
The issuer is not required, as was proposed, to disclose the
basis for its board's determination that an audit committee
financial expert qualify as such through "other relevant
experience"; however, the person's experience must be briefly
listed in the issuer's disclosure. The SEC stated that actual
experience, rather than merely education, is required. The SEC
also eliminated the lengthy list of factors that the proposed
rule would have required an issuer's board to consider in assessing
the qualifications of a potential audit committee financial
expert, noting that the board should instead consider all the
available facts and circumstances, including but not limited
to factors of the type listed in the proposed rule. Finally,
the SEC noted that prior service on an audit committee or the
mere fact that a person has experience as a public accountant,
auditor, principal financial officer, controller or principal
accounting officer does not, by itself, justify the board in
deeming the person to be an audit committee financial expert.
The SEC stated that in addition to considering a candidate's
knowledge and experience, "the board must ensure that it
names an audit committee financial expert who embodies the highest
standards of personal and professional integrity."
Safe Harbor From Liability
In response to requests by commenters that it clarify that
identification or designation of an audit committee financial
expert increase or decrease such person’s duties, obligations
or potential liability as an audit committee member, the SEC
adopted a so-called “safe harbor” provision stating
that:
- A person who is determined to be an audit committee financial
expert will not be deemed an "expert" for any purpose,
including without limitation for purposes of Section 11 of
the Securities Act, as a result of being designated as an
audit committee financial expert pursuant to the new disclosure
item;
- The designation or identification of a person as an audit
committee financial expert pursuant to the new disclosure
item does not impose on such person any duties, obligations
or liability that are greater than the duties, obligations
and liability imposed on such person as a member of the audit
committee and board of directors in the absence of such designation
or identification; and
- The designation or identification of a person as an audit
committee financial expert pursuant to the new disclosure
item does not affect the duties, obligations, or liability
of any other member of the audit committee or board of directors.
The SEC noted that because an audit committee financial expert
is not an "expert" for purposes of Section 11 of the
Securities Act of 1933, he or she is not subject to any higher
level of due diligence with respect to any portion of the issuer's
registration statement as a result of his or her designation
as an audit committee financial expert.
Location and Timing of Disclosure; Applicability
of Disclosure Requirements
The final rule provides that the audit committee financial
expert disclosure must be made in an issuer's annual reports
on Forms 10-K, 10-KSB, 20-F or 40-F. A domestic company may
elect to include this disclosure in its proxy or information
statement and incorporate it by reference in its Form 10-K or
10-KSB if it files the proxy or information statement with the
SEC no later than 120 days after the end of the fiscal year
covered by the Form 10-K or 10-KSB.
The disclosure requirements under Section 407 apply to all
domestic reporting companies other than asset-backed issuers.15
The disclosure requirements also apply to foreign private issuers,
except that until the Section 407 rules are revised to reflect
the independence standard that is eventually adopted and set
forth in the rules implementing Section 301 of the Act, foreign
private issuers will not be required to disclose whether their
audit committee financial experts are independent. The final
rule also provides that if a foreign private issuer has a two-tier
board of directors, the "board of directors" that
is responsible for identifying the issuer's audit committee
financial expert(s) is the supervisory or non-management board,
and that the term "generally accepted accounting principles"
means the body of generally accepted accounting principles used
by the foreign private issuer in its primary financial statements
filed with the SEC.
Effective Date and Compliance Dates
The final rule is effective March 3, 2003. Companies other
than small business issuers must comply with the audit committee
financial expert disclosure requirements in their annual reports
for fiscal years ending on or after July 15, 2003. Small business
issuers must comply with these disclosure requirements in their
annual reports for fiscal years ending on or after December
15, 2003.
For More Information, Please
Contact the Author:
Brent Eller
brenteller@dwt.com
(206) 628-7786
This Corporate Finance Advisory Bulletin
is a publication of the Business Transactions/Corporate Finance
Group of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP. Our purpose in publishing
this Advisory Bulletin is to inform our clients and friends
of developments in business, corporate finance and securities
laws. It is not intended, nor should it be used, as a substitute
for specific legal advice as legal counsel may only be given
in response to inquiries regarding particular situations.
Footnotes:
1Final
Rule: Disclosure Required by Sections 406 and 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002 (Release No. 33-8177). The text of the release is
available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/33-8177.htm.
2Proposed
Rule: Disclosure Required by Sections 404, 406 and 407 of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (Release No. 33-8138). The text of
the release is available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/33-8138.htm.
3The
final rule adopted the term "audit committee financial
expert" instead of "financial expert" because
the SEC believes the term "suggests more pointedly that
the designated person has characteristics that are particularly
relevant to the functions of the audit committee, such as: a
thorough understanding of the audit committee's oversight role,
expertise in accounting matters as well as understanding of
financial statements, and the ability to ask the right questions
to determine whether the company's financial statements are
complete and accurate."
4This
differs from the proposed rule, which would have required an
issuer to disclose the number of the audit committee financial
experts on its audit committee and the names of all the audit
committee financial experts.
5Independence
is currently determined by reference to Item 7(d)(3)(iv) of
Schedule 14A, which provides as follows:
A. For registrants whose securities are
listed on the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") or
American Stock Exchange ("AMEX") or quoted on Nasdaq:
1. Disclose whether the members of the
audit committee are independent (as independence is defined
in Sections 303.01(B)(2)(a) and (3) of the NYSE's listing
standards, Section 121(A) of the AMEX's listing standards,
or Rule 4200(a)(15) of the National Association of Securities
Dealers' ("NASD") listing standards, as applicable
and as may be modified or supplemented); and
2. If the registrant's Board of Directors
determines in accordance with the requirements of Section
303.02(D) of the NYSE's listing standards, Section 121(B)(b)(ii)
of the AMEX's listing standards, or Section 4310(c)(26)(B)(ii)
or 4460(d)(2)(B) of the NASD's listing standards, as applicable
and as may be modified or supplemented, to appoint one director
to the audit committee who is not independent, disclose
the nature of the relationship that makes that individual
not independent and the reasons for the Board's determination.
Small business issuers (Item 10(a)(1) of Regulation S-B)
need not provide the information required by this paragraph
(d)(3)(iv)(A)(2).
B. For registrants, including small business
issuers, whose securities are not listed on the NYSE or AMEX
or quoted on Nasdaq, disclose whether, if the registrant has
an audit committee, the members are independent. In determining
whether a member is independent, registrants must use the
definition of independence in Sections 303.01(B)(2)(a) and
(3) of the NYSE's listing standards, Section 121(A) of the
AMEX's listing standards, or Rule 4200(a)(15) of the NASD's
listing standards, as such sections may be modified or supplemented,
and state which of these definitions was used. Whichever definition
is chosen must be applied consistently to all members of the
audit committee.
6This
attribute was adopted as proposed.
7This
attribute differs from the proposed rule in that the proposed
rule would have required the audit committee financial expert
to have experience applying such principles in connection with
accounting for estimates, accruals and reserves that are generally
comparable to the estimates, accruals and reserves, if any,
used in the issuer's financial statements. The SEC agreed with
commenters' concerns that the proposed attribute would have
unduly limited the pool of available audit committee financial
experts.
8The proposed
rule would have required an audit committee financial expert
to have direct experience preparing or auditing financial statements.
The SEC acknowledged that people with experience in analyzing
or evaluating financial statements, such as investment bankers,
venture capitalists, or professional financial analysts, would
also have the necessary expertise to serve as audit committee
financial experts.
9The
SEC retained the proposed rule's requirement that an audit committee
financial expert have experience with financial statements that
raise accounting issues that are generally comparable to those
raised by the issuer's financial statements. However, the SEC
clarified that it did not mean to imply that the audit committee
financial expert must have experience in the issuer's industry
or with a reporting company. Accordingly, the SEC modified this
requirement to focus on the breadth and level of complexity
of accounting issues raised by the issuer's financial statements.
10The
SEC expanded the proposed rule to reflect its agreement with
comments that a person who actively supervises a person who
prepares, audits, analyzes or evaluates financial statements
could possess this attribute. The SEC stated that by "active
supervision" it means that the supervisor "participates
in, and contributes to, the process of addressing, albeit at
a supervisory level, the same general types of issues . . .
as those addressed by the person or persons being supervised"
and that the supervisor "should have experience that has
contributed to the general expertise necessary to prepare, audit,
analyze or evaluate financial statements that is at least comparable
to the general expertise of those being supervised." The
SEC also noted that a principal executive officer should not
be presumed to be exercising active supervision.
11The
final rule uses the word "understanding" instead of
"experience" to make it clear that the focus of this
attribute is on the audit committee financial expert's understanding
of internal controls and procedures for financial reporting
rather than the experience the audit committee financial expert
may have had in establishing or evaluating such controls and
procedures.
12This
attribute was adopted as proposed.
13The
final rule eliminated the proposed rule's requirement that the
audit committee financial expert must have gained the relevant
experience with a reporting company.
14The
final rule added this provision, noting that individuals could
obtain the requisite in-depth knowledge and experience of accounting
and financial issues through engaging in oversight or assessment
of the preparation, auditing, or evaluation of financial statements.
The SEC commented that certain individuals who serve in bodies
that oversee the banking, insurance and securities industries
work on financial statement issues on a regular basis and that
this experience could constitute a useful background for an
audit committee financial expert.
15In
a separate rule adopted January 27, 2003, the SEC adopted similar
audit committee financial expert disclosure requirements for
registered management investment companies. See Final Rule:
Certification of Management Investment Company Shareholder Reports
and Designation of Certified Shareholder Reports as Exchange
Act Periodic Reporting Forms; Disclosure Required by Sections
406 and 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (Release No. 37-47262.
The text of the release is available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/34-47262.htm.
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