|
ACCOUNTING AND DISCLOSURE ISSUESCurrent Accounting and Disclosure Issues November 30, 2004 Prepared by Accounting Staff Members in the Division of Corporation Finance
Table of Contents
Current Accounting and Disclosure Issues |
For Fiscal Years
Ending On Or After | Form 10-Q Deadline | Form 10-K Deadline |
December 15, 2003 | 45 days after fiscal quarter end | 75 days after fiscal year end |
December 15, 2004 | 40 days after fiscal quarter end | 75 days after fiscal year end |
December 15, 2005 | 40 days after fiscal quarter end | 60 days after fiscal year end |
December 15, 2006 | 35 days after fiscal quarter end | 60 days after fiscal year end |
The deadlines provide for a scheduled phase-in over a defined period in time, so that all registrants who meet the definition of an accelerated filer will have the same reporting deadlines no matter when they became an accelerated filer.
Rule 12b-25 permits registrants an extension of time in which to file their Forms 10-K and 10-Q and still be considered to have filed those reports timely. The new rules do not change the 15 calendar day period (for Form 10-K) and 5 calendar day period (for Form 10-Q) provided for under Rule 12b-25.
Accelerated filers can file their Article 12 financial statement schedules by amendment within 30 days following the due date of their Form 10-K. Consequently, at the end of the phase-in period, accelerated filers will be required to file the schedules within 90 days of the end of the fiscal year.
If an accelerated filer changes its fiscal year end, the transition report deadlines are phased in under the same schedule as quarterly and annual reports on Forms 10-Q and 10-K.
Forms 10-K and 10-Q Disclosures
The new rules require that all Exchange Act registrants filing on Form 10-K include new cover page disclosures in their Forms 10-K for fiscal years ending on or after December 15, 2002. The amended cover page requires the registrant to indicate by check mark either that it is or is not an accelerated filer and to disclose its non-affiliated common equity public float as of the end of the last business day of the registrant' most recently completed second fiscal quarter. The accelerated filing status disclosure is also required on Form 10-Q.
If a registrant' cover page to its Form 10-K mistakenly discloses its non-affiliated common equity public float as of the date of filing, rather than as of the last business day of its most recently completed second fiscal quarter, it should file an amended Form 10-K. That amendment should include a corrected cover page, a new signature page, and Exhibit 31, a revised 302 certification required by Item 601 of Regulations S-K and S-B which includes the first 2 certifying statements. Note that both the share price and outstanding share amount must be as of the last business day of the most recently completed second fiscal quarter.
For purposes of completing the cover page to their first Form 10-K, we have advised registrants who complete their IPO after their most recently completed second quarter to compute their common equity public float as of a date within 60 days of filing the report. This method was used prior to the adoption of the new rules. Note that this is only to fulfill the cover page disclosure requirement. It does not mean the issuer uses that common equity public float to determine whether it is an accelerated filer. In this scenario, the registrant would not qualify as an accelerated filer because it was not a public company for 12 months and it had not filed at least one annual report as of its fiscal year-end.
Transactional Filings
In addition to accelerating the Form 10-Q filing deadlines, the new rules accelerate the updating requirements of interim financial statements required in registration statements at the time of effectiveness and in proxy statements at the time they are mailed to conform to the accelerated phase-in filing deadlines of Form 10-Q. Therefore, if the registrant meets the definition of an accelerated filer, its interim financial statements must meet the following:
For Fiscal Years
Ending On Or After | Interim Financial Statements Cannot be Older Than |
December 15, 2003 | 134 days |
December 15, 2004 | 129 days |
December 15, 2005 | 129 days |
December 15, 2006 | 124 days |
An accelerated filer that meets the three tests specified in S-X Rule 3-01(c) will have to update to include its audited year-end financial statements using the same phase-in schedule for its Form 10-K. Therefore, an accelerated filer meeting the tests must include its audited year-end financial statements according to the following schedule:
For Fiscal Years
Ending On Or After | Audited Year End Financial Statements Must be Included by |
December 15, 2003 | 75 days after year-end |
December 15, 2004 | 75 days after year-end |
December 15, 2005 | 60 days after year-end |
If the filer does not meet the Rule 3-01(c) tests, it will still be able to delay updating to include its year-end financial statements until 45 days after its year-end. The 45-day period has not changed. Note that, despite the stipulated timeframes, registrants are required to include their year-end audited financial statements in definitive proxy statements and registration statements at the time of effectiveness if they are available.
Financial Statements under S-X Rules 3-05 and 3-09
The requirement for updating interim and fiscal year-end financial statements of an acquired business included in an acquirer' Form 8-K or in its proxy/registration statement under S-X Rule 3-05 has been accelerated only when the acquired company is itself an accelerated filer. Therefore, an acquirer that is either an accelerated or non-accelerated filer must include the financial statements of the acquired business at least as current as the financial statements required to be filed by the acquired company in its own periodic reports. Accelerated filers will still have 75 days from consummation to file 3-05 financial statements on Form 8-K.
Separate financial statements of unconsolidated subsidiaries and 50% or less owned persons required by S-X Rule 3-09 will not be accelerated for inclusion in the parent' Form 10-K unless both the parent and the subsidiary/investee are accelerated filers.
Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act directed the Commission to adopt rules requiring each annual report of a registrant, other than a registered investment company, to contain (1) a statement of management' responsibility for establishing and maintaining an adequate internal control structure and procedures for financial reporting; and (2) management' assessment, as of the end of the registrant' most recent fiscal year, of the effectiveness of the registrant' internal control structure and procedures for financial reporting. Section 404 also requires the registrant' auditor to attest to, and report on management' assessment of the effectiveness of the registrant' internal controls and procedures for financial reporting in accordance with standards established by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. The Commission adopted final rules on May 27, 2003, in Release No. 34-47986 concerning management' report on internal control over financial reporting and certification of disclosures in Exchange Act periodic reports.
The final rules require that management' annual internal control report include:
Under the new rules, a registrant is required to file the registered public accounting firm' attestation report as part of the annual report. The rules also require that management evaluate any change in the registrant' internal control over financial reporting that occurred during a fiscal quarter that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant' internal control over financial reporting.
The Commission also adopted amendments to rules and forms under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 to revise the Section 302 certification requirements and to require registrants to provide the certifications required by Sections 302 and 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 as exhibits to certain periodic reports. The amendments permit registrants to furnish rather than file the Section 906 certifications with the Commission. Thus, the certifications will not be subject to liability under Section 18 of the Exchange Act. Moreover, the certifications will not be subject to automatic incorporation by reference into a registrant' Securities Act registration statements, which are subject to liability under Section 11 of the Securities Act, unless the registrant takes steps to include the certifications in a registration statement.
The compliance schedule for the rules regarding management' report on internal controls was revised in February 2004 in Release No. 33-8392. As a result, an accelerated filer must begin to comply with the rules regarding management' report on internal controls for its first fiscal year ending on or after Nov. 15, 2004 (originally June 15, 2004). A non-accelerated filer must begin to comply with these requirements for its first fiscal year ending on or after July 15, 2005 (originally April 15, 2005).
On November 30, 2004 the Commission issued an exemptive order to grant certain accelerated filers up to an additional 45 days to include in their annual reports management' report on internal control over financial reporting and the related auditor' report on management' assessment of internal control over financial reporting. The exemptive order applies to an accelerated filer that has a fiscal year ending between and including November 15, 2004 and February 28, 2005, and that had a public equity float of less than $700 million at the end of its second fiscal quarter in 2004. All other information required in annual reports, including audited financial statements, would have to be filed on the original due date for the annual reports. The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCOAB) also adopted a temporary rule that permits the delayed filing of auditor' internal control reports consistent with the Commission' order.
The Commission staff has received questions regarding the implementation and interpretation of the rules. For answers to some of the questions most frequently posed, please see Management' Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting and Certification of Disclosure in Exchange Act Periodic Reports, Frequently Asked Questions (revised October 6, 2004) at http://www.sec.gov/info/accountants/controlfaq1004.htm. The PCAOB' Office of Chief Auditor has also issued staff questions and answers related to PCAOB Auditing Standard No. 2, An Audit of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting Performed in Conjunction with an Audit of Financial Statements available at http://www.pcaobus.com/Standards/Staff_Questions_and_Answers/index.asp
Section 401(a) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act added Section 13(j) to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which required the Commission to adopt final rules by January 26, 2003, to require each annual and quarterly financial report required to be filed with the Commission, to disclose "all material off-balance sheet transactions, arrangements, obligations (including contingent obligations), and other relationships of the registrant with unconsolidated entities or other persons, that may have a material current or future effect on financial condition, changes in financial condition, results of operations, liquidity, capital expenditures, capital resources, or significant components of revenues or expenses."
On January 22, 2003, the Commission adopted rule amendments to implement section 401 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (see Release No. 34-47264). The amendments, which are effective, require a registrant to provide an explanation of its off-balance sheet arrangements in a separately captioned subsection of the Management' Discussion and Analysis (MD&A) section in its disclosure documents. The amendments also require registrants (other than small business issuers) to provide an overview of certain known contractual obligations in a tabular format.
The amendments include a definition of off-balance sheet arrangements that primarily targets the means through which registrants typically structure off-balance sheet transactions or otherwise incur risks of loss that are not fully transparent to investors. The definition of off-balance sheet arrangements employs concepts in accounting literature in order to define the categories of arrangements with precision. Generally, the definition will include the following categories of contractual arrangements:
The amendments require disclosure of off-balance sheet arrangements that either have, or are reasonably likely to have, a current or future effect on the registrant' financial condition, changes in financial condition, revenues or expenses, results of operations, liquidity, capital expenditures or capital resources that is material to investors. That disclosure threshold is consistent with the existing disclosure threshold under which information that could have a material effect on financial condition, changes in financial condition or results of operations must be included in MD&A.
The amendments require disclosure of the following specified information to the extent necessary to an understanding of off-balance sheet arrangements and their material effects:
Consistent with other MD&A requirements, the amendments contain a principles-based requirement that a registrant provide such other information that it believes is necessary for an understanding of its off-balance sheet arrangements and their material effects. In addition, the amendments include a requirement for registrants to disclose, in a tabular format, the amounts of payments due under specified contractual obligations, aggregated by category of contractual obligation, for specified time periods. The categories of contractual obligations to be included in the table are defined by reference to the applicable accounting literature.
On December 19, 2003, the Commission issued an interpretive release providing guidance regarding MD&A disclosure in registrants' disclosure documents. The guidance reminds registrants of existing disclosure requirements and provides additional guidance, designed to elicit more informative and transparent MD&A, that satisfies the principal objectives of MD&A:
The guidance emphasizes that MD&A should not be merely a recitation of financial statements in narrative form or an otherwise uninformative series of technical responses to MD&A requirements, neither of which provides the important management perspective called for by MD&A. Instead, the release encourages top-level management involvement in the drafting of MD&A, and provides guidance regarding:
The release does not create new legal requirements, nor does it modify existing legal requirements. A copy of the release can be found on the Commission' Web site at http://www.sec.gov/rules/interp/33-8350.htm under Regulatory Actions / Interpretive Releases.
Reported financial position and results often imply a degree of precision, continuity and certainty that can be belied by rapid changes in the financial and operating environment that produced those measures. As a result, even a technically accurate application of generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) may nonetheless fail to communicate important information if it is not accompanied by appropriate and clear analytic disclosures to facilitate an investor' understanding of the registrant' financial status, and the possibility, likelihood and implication of changes in the financial and operating status.
To facilitate better disclosure in this area, on December 12, 2001 the Commission issued Financial Reporting Release (FRR) No. 60, Cautionary Advice Regarding Disclosure About Critical Accounting Policies (http://www.sec.gov/rules/other/33-8040.htm). The purpose of the release was to remind management, auditors, audit committees, and their advisors that the selection and application of the registrant' accounting policies must be appropriately reasoned.
On May 10, 2002, the Commission proposed, in Release No. 34-45907, disclosure requirements that would enhance investor' understanding of the application of registrants' critical accounting policies. The proposals would encompass disclosure in two areas: accounting estimates a registrant makes in applying its accounting policies and the initial adoption by a registrant of an accounting policy that has a material impact on its financial presentation.
Under the first part of the proposals, a registrant would have to identify the accounting estimates reflected in its financial statements that required it to make assumptions about matters that were highly uncertain at the time of estimation. Disclosure about those estimates would then be required if different estimates that the registrant reasonably could have used in the current period, or changes in the accounting estimate that are reasonably likely to occur from period to period, would have a material impact on the presentation of the registrant' financial condition, changes in financial condition or results of operations. A registrant' disclosure about these critical accounting estimates would include a discussion of: the methodology and assumptions underlying them; the effect the accounting estimates have on the registrant' financial presentation; and the effect of changes in the estimates.
Under the second part of the proposals, a registrant that has initially adopted an accounting policy with a material impact would have to disclose information that includes: what gave rise to the initial adoption; the impact of the adoption; the accounting principle adopted and method of applying it; and the choices it had among accounting principles.
As proposed, registrants would place all of the new disclosure in the MD&A section of their annual reports, registration statements and proxy and information statements. In addition, in the MD&A section of their quarterly reports, U.S. registrants would have to update the information regarding their critical accounting estimates to disclose material changes. The proposal remains under consideration.
In December 2001, the five largest national accounting firms, with support from the AICPA, petitioned the Commission to issue an interpretive release covering enhanced MD&A disclosures in three areas. On January 22, 2002, the Commission issued FR No. 61, Commission Statement About Management' Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (http://www.sec.gov/rules/other/33-8056.htm), which covers many of the items in that petition.
Disclosures Concerning Liquidity and Capital Resources, Including "Off-Balance Sheet" Arrangements
The first section of the release discusses disclosures relating to liquidity and off-balance sheet arrangements. The release suggested that investors would find disclosure of aggregated information about contractual obligations and commercial commitments beneficial if it were provided in a single location in MD&A so that a total picture of obligations would be readily available. In particular, a registrant's liquidity and capital resources and the integral role of on- and off-balance sheet arrangements may best be shown in tabular presentations of contractual obligations and commercial commitments. The Commission' off-balance sheet rules discussed above supercede this section of FR No. 61, except for the tabular presentation of commercial commitments.
Certain trading activities involving non-exchange traded contracts accounted for at fair value
The second section of the release discusses disclosures relating to trading activities that include non-exchange traded contracts accounted for at fair value. A registrant engaged in these activities should be considering disclosure of its critical accounting policies in this area. The release provides additional disclosures to consider.
Relationships and transactions on terms that would not be available from clearly independent third parties
The last section of the release discusses disclosures of related party transactions. By their nature, transactions with related parties create uncertainty as to the terms of the arrangements. When those transactions are material, GAAP and SEC regulations require that they be disclosed. Informative disclosures could include the business purpose of the arrangement, the reason for entering into the arrangement with a related party, how the transactions are priced, the nature of the ongoing contractual or other commitments, and a comparison of the terms of the related party transactions with terms that would result from transactions with unrelated parties.
Section 401(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act directed the Commission to issue rules requiring that any public disclosure or release of pro forma financial information by a public company be presented in a manner that (1) does not contain an untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the pro forma financial information, in light of the circumstances under which it is presented, not misleading; and (2) reconciles the pro forma financial information presented with the financial condition and results of operations of the registrant under GAAP. On January 15, 2003 the Commission adopted rules, in Release No. 34-47226, that satisfy the mandate of Section 401(b) by defining the category of financial information that is subject to that mandate and then taking a two-step approach to regulating the use of that financial information. On June 13, 2003, the Commission staff issued Frequently Asked Questions Regarding the Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures (http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/faqs/nongaapfaq.htm).
The Commission' rules apply to the public disclosure or release of material information that includes a non-GAAP financial measure. For this purpose, a non-GAAP financial measure is defined as a numerical measure of a registrant' financial performance that (1) excludes amounts, or is subject to adjustments that have the effect of excluding amounts, that are included in the comparable measure calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP in the statement of income, balance sheet or statement of cash flows (or equivalent statements) of the registrant; or (2) includes amounts, or is subject to adjustments that have the effect of including amounts, that are excluded from the comparable measure so calculated and presented. Statistical and operating measures are not considered non-GAAP financial measures.
The rules require registrants to furnish to the Commission, under Item 2.02 (formerly Item 12) of Form 8-K, within four business days of any public announcement or release disclosing material non-public information regarding a registrant's results of operations or financial condition for an annual or quarterly fiscal period that has ended. The requirements to furnish apply regardless of whether the release or announcement includes disclosure of a non-GAAP financial measure. Item 2.02 requires the registrant to identify briefly the announcement or release and include the announcement or release as an exhibit to the Form 8-K. Registrants are required to disclose:
Registrants may satisfy this requirement by including the disclosure in the Form 8-K or in the release or announcement that is included as an exhibit to the Form 8-K. Registrants may satisfy the requirement to provide these additional two statements by including the disclosure in their most recent annual report filed with the Commission (or a more recent filing) and by updating those statements, as necessary, no later than the time the Form 8-K is furnished to the Commission.
The Commission adopted new Regulation G, which applies whenever a registrant publicly discloses or releases material information that includes a non-GAAP financial measure. This regulation prohibits material misstatements or omissions that would make the presentation of the material non-GAAP financial measure, under the circumstances in which it is made, misleading, and requires a quantitative reconciliation (by schedule or other clearly understandable method) of the differences between the non-GAAP financial measure presented and the comparable financial measure or measures calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP.
Regulation G provides a limited exception for foreign private issuers where (1) the securities of the registrant are listed or quoted on a securities exchange or inter-dealer quotation system outside the United States; (2) the non-GAAP financial measure and the most comparable GAAP financial measure are not calculated and presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States; and (3) the disclosure is made by or on behalf of the registrant outside the United States, or is included in a written communication that is released by or on behalf of the registrant outside the United States.
The Commission adopted amendments to Item 10 of Regulation S-K and Item 10 of Regulation S-B that address specifically the use of non-GAAP financial measures in filings with the Commission. These amendments apply to the same categories of non-GAAP financial measures as are covered by Regulation G, but contain more detailed requirements than Regulation G. The Commission also amended Exchange Act Form 20-F to apply these requirements to annual reports filed with the Commission by foreign private issuers.
On November 19, 2003 the Commission approved rules that will improve disclosure regarding the nominating committee process of public companies and the ways by which security holders may communicate with directors at the companies in which they invest (see Release No. 33-8340). The rules implement recommendations made by the Division of Corporation Finance to the Commission in its July 15 Staff Report: Review of the Proxy Process Regarding the Nomination and Election of Directors. The Staff Report is available on the Commission' Web site at http://www.sec.gov/news/studies.shtml. The new disclosure standards require registrants to disclose in proxy statements important additional information regarding a registrant' process of nominating directors, including:
The new disclosure standards also require registrants to disclose significant new information regarding shareholder communications with directors, including:
These rules apply to proxy and information statements of registered investment companies in the same manner that they apply to other companies. The rules require that any material change to the procedures for security holder nominations be disclosed in the registrant' Form 10-Q, 10-QSB, 10-K or 10-KSB filed for the period in which the material change occurs.
On March 11, 2004, the Commission proposed to amend Form 20-F to provide an accommodation relating to financial statements prepared under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) for foreign private issuers registered with the SEC (Securities Act Release 33-8397). Form 20-F generally requires a registrant to provide in its SEC filings three years of audited financial statements prepared on a consistent basis of accounting. The proposed amendments would apply to registrants that publish IFRS financial statements for the first time for any financial year beginning no later than Jan. 1, 2007.
The accommodation would permit eligible foreign private issuers for their first year of reporting under IFRS to file two years rather than three years of statements of income, changes in shareholder' equity and cash flows prepared in accordance with IFRS, with appropriate related disclosure. The accommodation would retain current requirements regarding the reconciliation of financial statement items to GAAP as used in the United States (U.S. GAAP), but modify the form in which the reconciliations are presented in the first filing that includes IFRS financial statements by requiring certain additional condensed US GAAP information.
The proposed amendments also would require any registrant that adopts IFRS for the first time, in any financial year to provide disclosure related to exceptions from IFRS on which it relied, and to include a specified level of information in the reconciliation from its previous system of accounting to IFRS.
The proposals are intended to ease the burdens that foreign companies may face when they adopt IFRS for the first time, while improving the quality of financial disclosure that they provide to investors. The proposals are addressed particularly at foreign issuers located in the European Union (EU), which under current EU law will generally be required to adopt IFRS for reporting on their 2005 financial year.
On April 13, 2004 the Commission proposed rule and form amendments relating to public shell companies. The amendments would prohibit shell companies from using Form S-8, the form used by public companies to register securities in connection with employee benefit plans under the Securities Act of 1933. The amendments also would require a public shell company, when obligated to report a corporate event on Form 8-K that causes it to cease being a shell company, to include the same type of information as it would be required to file to register a class of securities under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
The Commission proposed the amendments to assure that investors in shell companies that acquire operations or assets have access on a timely basis to the same kind of information as is available to investors in public companies with continuing operations. The proposals are intended to protect investors by deterring fraud and abuse in the securities markets through the use of shell companies. The proposals would define the term shell company to mean a company with no or nominal operations, and with no or nominal assets or assets consisting solely of cash and cash equivalents. The definition would include foreign private shell companies, but the release solicits comment on the manner in which these companies should report the information that would be required on Form 8-K for a domestic shell company. The proposed amendments to Form S-8 would allow a company that ceases to be a shell company to use Form S-8 to register securities 60 days after it has filed information equivalent to the information filed by companies registering a class of securities under the Exchange Act.
As part of its initiative to assess the benefits of tagged data and its potential for improving the timeliness, accuracy and analysis of financial disclosure in Commission filings, on September 27, 2004, the Commission issued a proposing release, Release No. 33-8496, to establish a voluntary program allowing registrants to file supplemental financial information using eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL). Registrants would be able to voluntarily furnish XBRL data in an exhibit to specified EDGAR filings under the Exchange Act and the Investment Company Act. This program would begin with the 2004 calendar year-end reporting season.
On the same day, the Commission also issued a concept release, Release No. 33-8497 seeking public comment on the benefits of tagging data to improve reporting quality and efficiency, the implications of tagging data for filers, investors, the Commission and other market participants, and the adequacy and efficacy of XBRL as a format for reporting financial information.
Data tagging is gaining prominence as a format for enhancing financial reporting data using eXtensible Mark-Up Language (XML) derivatives, such as XBRL. Tagging provides greater context to data through standard definitions that turn text-based information, such as the filings currently contained in the Commission' EDGAR system, into documents that can be retrieved, searched and analyzed through automated means. Data tags describe information such as items included in financial statements. This enables investors and other marketplace participants to analyze data from different sources and allows for the automatic exchange of financial information across various software platforms, including web services.
On October 26, 2004, the Commission voted in Release No. 34-50624 to propose rules that would address communications related to registered securities offerings, delivery of information to investors, and procedural restrictions in the offering and capital formation processes (see Release No. 33-8501). The proposals would divide registrants into four categories, non-reporting issuers, unseasoned issuers, seasoned issuers, and well-known seasoned issuers. The most significant revisions to the Commission' communications rules and registration processes would apply to well-known seasoned issuers. The proposals would also require registrants to include disclosure in their Exchange Act periodic reports regarding risk factors (for Form 10-K filers), the registrant' status as a voluntary filer of Exchange Act reports, and, for accelerated filers, disclosure in their Exchange Act annual reports of written staff comments that were issued more than 180 days before the end of the fiscal year to which the annual report relates, where those comments remain unresolved at the time of filing the annual report and the registrant believes those comments to be material.
Comments on the proposals should be submitted to the Commission on or before January 31, 2005.
On April 28, 2004 the Commission voted to propose new and amended rules and forms to address comprehensively the registration, disclosure and reporting requirements for asset-backed securities under the Securities Act and the Exchange Act (see Release No. 34-49644). Principally, the proposals would:
The proposals are intended to clarify the regulatory requirements for asset-backed securities in order to increase market efficiency and transparency and provide more certainty for the overall ABS market and its participants.
On October 8, 2003, the Commission voted to propose rule changes that would, under certain circumstances, require registrants to include in their proxy materials security holder nominees for election as director (see Release No. 34-48626). These proposed rules are intended to improve disclosure to security holders to enhance their ability to participate meaningfully in the proxy process for the nomination and election of directors. The proposed rules would not provide security holders with the right to nominate directors where it is prohibited by state law. Instead, the proposed rules are intended to create a mechanism for nominees of long-term security holders, or groups of long-term security holders, with significant holdings to be included in company proxy materials where there are indications that security holders need such access to further an effective proxy process. This mechanism would apply in those instances where evidence suggests that the company has been unresponsive to security holder concerns as they relate to the proxy process. The proposed rules would enable security holders to engage in limited solicitations to form nominating security holder groups and engage in solicitations in support of their nominees without disseminating a proxy statement. The proposed rules also would establish the filing requirements under the Exchange Act for nominating security holders.
AICPA Statement of Position 81-1, Accounting for Performance of Construction/Production Contracts, specifically scopes out most service transactions. Footnote 1 of the SOP discusses its application to separate contracts to provide services essential to the construction or production of tangible property, such as design, engineering, procurement, and construction management. Nonetheless, long-term service contracts are not substantially different from other revenue arrangements. In determining whether delivery has occurred, companies should pay careful attention to the terms of the arrangement, specifically the rights and obligations of the service provider and the customer. Provided all other revenue recognition criteria have been met, the revenue recognition method selected should reflect the pattern in which the obligations to the customer are fulfilled.
For example, in situations where a registrant cannot apply SOP 81-1 to their service contracts, a revenue recognition model that recognizes revenue as the service is performed using a proportional performance model, as contemplated by SAB Topic 13, is an often acceptable model. An output-based approach would generally be utilized. An input-based approach may be acceptable where the input measures are a reasonable surrogate for output measures. However, a cost-to-cost approach to revenue recognition is generally not appropriate outside the scope of SOP 81-1 since it rarely gives a good estimate of proportional performance.
Since revenue recognition is often a critical accounting policy, registrants should review the completeness and accuracy of disclosures concerning their sources of revenues, method of accounting for revenues, and material considerations in evaluating the quality and uncertainties surrounding their revenue generating activity. The disclosure should be concise and to the point; more disclosure is not necessarily better. Basic descriptive information about revenue generating activities, customary contract terms and practices, and specific uncertainties inherent in the registrant' business activities may be most appropriate in Description of Business. Descriptive information about the effects of variations in revenue generating activities and practices, or changes in the magnitude of specific uncertainties, is most appropriate in MD&A. Accounting policies, material assumptions and estimates, and significant quantitative information about revenues should be included in notes to the financial statements or in MD&A, as appropriate (see Section I.A. above). Some disclosure examples follow:
Disaggregate product and service information
Disclose when revenue is recognized (examples)
If revenue is recognized over the service period, based on progress toward completion, proportional performance, or based on separate contract elements or milestones, disclose how the period' revenue is measured
Disclose material assumptions, estimates and uncertainties
FASB Statement No. 141 requires that the cost of an acquired entity be allocated to the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed based on their fair value at the acquisition date. Any residual of the purchase price in excess of the identified assets and liabilities is accounted for as goodwill. Because FAS 141 eliminates the requirement to amortize goodwill, it is important for companies to ensure they are identifying all intangible assets acquired rather than inappropriately adding their value to goodwill if unidentified.
Staff reviews have uncovered companies that allocated the excess purchase price to an intangible asset rather than goodwill, under the premise that the intangible asset could not be separately valued because it is indistinguishable from goodwill. However, this method, called the residual method, does not comply with FAS 141 which requires that intangible assets that meet the recognition criteria be recorded at fair value. As a result, the SEC staff made a Staff Announcement, No. D-108, Use of the Residual Method to Value Acquired Assets Other Than Goodwill, at the September 2004 EITF meeting. EITF D-108 states that the residual method should no longer be used to value intangible assets other than goodwill. Rather, intangible assets should be separately and directly valued and the resulting fair value recognized. Companies that have applied the residual method to the valuation of intangible assets should refer to EITF D-108 for transition guidance.
FASB Statement No. 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets, requires that goodwill be tested, at the reporting unit level, for impairment on an annual basis. An impairment test also could be triggered between annual tests if an event occurs or circumstances change. A reporting unit is required to perform the annual impairment test at the same time every year, however, nothing precludes a company from changing the date of the annual impairment test. If a company chooses to change the date of the annual impairment test, it should ensure that no more than 12 months elapse between the tests. The change in testing dates should not be made with the intent of accelerating or delaying an impairment charge. The staff will likely raise concerns if a registrant is found to have changed the date of its annual goodwill impairment test frequently.
Any change to the date of the annual goodwill impairment test would constitute a change in the method of applying an accounting principle, as discussed in paragraph 7 of APB Opinion No. 20, Accounting Changes, and therefore would require justification of the change on the basis of preferability. The registrant is required by Rule 10-01(b)(6) of Regulation S-X to disclose the date of and reason for the change. The registrant is also required by Item 601 of Regulation S-K to file, as an exhibit to the first Form 10-Q or 10-QSB after the date of the change, a letter from the registrant' independent registered public accounting firm indicating whether or not the change is to an alternative principle which in his judgment is preferable under the circumstances. See Staff Accounting Bulletin Topic 6.G.2.b. for additional guidance.
Temporary declines in the value of debt securities held-to-maturity are not recognized in earnings; temporary declines in value of available-for-sale debt and equity securities are netted with unrealized gains and reported as a net amount in a separate component of shareholder' equity. However, a decline in fair value below amortized cost that is other than temporary is accounted for as a realized loss. FASB Statement No. 115, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities, specifies that "[i]f the decline in fair value is judged to be other than temporary, the cost basis of the individual security shall be written down to fair value… and the amount of the write down shall be included in earnings." This write down results in a new cost basis for the security, which cannot be recovered if the fair value subsequently increases.
Bright line or rule of thumb tests are not appropriate for evaluating other-than-temporary impairments. The determination of whether a decline is other than temporary must be made using all evidence that is available to the investor, and not just that related to the registrant such as its financial condition and near-term prospects, but also the severity and duration of the decline in fair value and the investor' intent and ability to hold an investment for a reasonable period of time sufficient for a forecasted recovery. Guidance in evaluating whether a security' recent decline in value is other than temporary has in the past only been found in SAB Topic 5:M, Other Than Temporary Impairment of Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities.
The EITF recently issued No. 03-01, Other-Than-Temporary Impairments, which is similar to the staff' historical analysis discussed above. Issue 03-01 requires disclosures addressing impairments in a qualitative and quantitative manner. The consensus requires the securities to be segregated by SFAS 115 classifications and also by length of decline – those with declines of less than a year and those in excess of a year. Remember that SAB Topic 5:M states that management should perform this analysis "[a]cting upon the premise that a write-down may be required." Registrants should not infer that securities with declines of less than one year are not other-than-temporarily impaired, nor should they infer that those declines of greater than a year are automatically impaired. Rather, an other-than-temporary decline could occur within a very short period or, if the facts and circumstances support it, a decline in excess of a year might still be temporary.
Since the typical equity security does not have a contractual cash flow at maturity on which to rely, an investor' intent and ability to hold an equity security for a reasonable period of time should be analyzed differently than a typical debt security. The ability to hold an equity security indefinitely would not, by itself, allow an investor to avoid an other-than-temporary impairment.
As a practical matter there are limitations on the period of time that management can incorporate into its forecast of market price recoveries. As the forecasted market price recovery period lengthens, the uncertainties inherent in management' estimate increase, which impact the reliability of that estimate. Market price recoveries that cannot reasonably be expected to occur within an acceptable forecast period should not be included in the assessment of recoverability.
A recognized or potential other than temporary impairment may require discussion in MD&A, if material, if it is considered to be a known material event or uncertainty, an unusual or infrequent event or transaction, or necessary to an understanding of financial condition or results of operations. Some items to consider in an MD&A discussion, including discussion of critical accounting policies, include the amount of the charge, the underlying reasons for the charge and its timing, an identification of which segment the charge relates, to whether or not it is included in the segment' profit or loss measure under SFAS 131, potential risk and uncertainties regarding future declines, and the estimated effects that material declines would have on the registrant' liquidity.
In several Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Releases, e.g., In the Matter of Fleet/Norstar, AAER No. 29557; In the Matter of Excel Bancorp, Inc., AAER No. 29675; In the of Matter Abington Bancorp, Inc., AAER No. 30614; and In the Matter of Presidential Life Corporation, AAER No. 31934, the Commission has taken action in instances when other than temporary declines in value were not reported in a timely and appropriate fashion. In these releases, the Commission observed that a registrant' assessment of the realizable value of a marketable security should begin with its contemporaneous market price because that price reflects the market' most recent evaluation of the total mix of available information. Objective evidence is required to support a realizable value in excess of a contemporaneous market price. That information may include the registrant' financial performance (including such factors as earnings trends, dividend payments, asset quality, and specific events), the near term prospects of the registrant, the financial condition and prospects of the registrant' region and industry, and the registrant' investment intent.
Additionally, the releases state that the Commission expects registrants to employ a systematic methodology that includes documentation of the factors considered. The methodology should ensure that all available evidence concerning declines in market values below cost are identified and evaluated in a disciplined manner by responsible personnel. Auditors are reminded of the need to closely examine the documentation concerning their client' determinations of other than temporary declines in market values.
Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs), such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, issue marketable debt to the public. In addition, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have publicly held common stock and also issue guaranteed mortgage-backed securities to the public. None of the debt securities issued by any of these GSEs is backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government. Section II of Industry Guide 3 requires disclosure of the book value of a bank holding company' investment portfolio based on specified categories of obligations, such as obligations of the U.S. Treasury and obligations of States of the U.S. Because the GSE obligations are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government, registrants should not disclose these investments aggregated with the Guide 3 category, obligations of the U.S. Treasury. Separate categorization of these obligations is appropriate, as their nature is not consistent with any of the categories currently listed in Guide 3. Registrants should consider similar disclosure categorization when providing disclosure pursuant to FASB Statement No. 115, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities, and FASB Statement No. 107, Disclosures about Fair Value of Financial Instruments.
FASB Statement No. 5, Accounting for Contingencies, requires accrual of payments for contingent liabilities if payment is both probable and estimable. SFAS 5 also requires disclosure of the nature of any contingency, including the amounts that might be paid, if a loss is at least reasonably possible. Other literature also provides accounting and disclosure guidance, such as Staff Accounting Bulletin Topic 5.Y., Accounting and Disclosures Relating to Loss Contingencies, FASB Interpretation No. 14, Reasonable Estimation of the Amount of a Loss, and AICPA Statement of Position 94-6, Disclosure of Certain Significant Risks and Uncertainties.
Registrants, their auditors, and their advisors have a responsibility to critically assess the claims against the company in order to identify those for which losses should be accrued and those that are not accrued because the success of the claim is only reasonably possible. Disclosure should discuss the nature of the claim, the amount accrued, if any, and the possible range of loss for claims where any amount within the range of reasonably possible loss is material. Circumstances where a loss was accrued for a claim without disclosure in prior filings of the nature of the claim and the range of reasonably possible loss should be rare due to the nature of most contingencies. A registrant that accrues a significant loss for a contingency, but whose prior disclosure of the low end of the range of reasonably possible loss was zero with no loss accrued, should ensure that there is robust disclosure that explains what triggered the significant loss in the period in which it was recorded.
Income tax contingencies also fall within the scope of SFAS 5. FASB Statement No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes, also provides disclosure requirements for income tax items that arise as a result of temporary differences. As with other contingencies, such as litigation contingencies, registrants need to balance concerns regarding confidentiality with the need for the registrant' investors, analysts, and regulators to gain a clear understanding of the registrant' liquidity, as well as results of operations and financial position, through footnote disclosure and discussions in MD&A.
Item 303(a) of Regulation S-K requires the disclosure of any known trends, demands, commitments, events or uncertainties that will result in or that are reasonably likely to result in the registrant' liquidity increasing or decreasing in any material way, or which would cause reported financial information not to be necessarily indicative of future operating performance or future financial condition. The discussion of employee benefit plans in MD&A should provide readers with information regarding the following to the extent material:
The discussion and analysis of employee benefits should also provide readers with information regarding the following to the extent material:
Assumptions and Estimates
The accounting for employee benefit plans typically involves numerous assumptions and estimates, and frequently the use of experts such as actuaries in determining asset allocations and quantifying benefit obligations, funding requirements, and compensation expense. The accounting standards for pension and post-retirement plans also involve mechanisms that serve to limit the volatility in earnings, which would otherwise result from recording changes in the value of plan assets and benefit obligations in the financial statements in the periods in which such changes occur.
MD&A should identify the following:
Registrants should ensure that the disclosure of their accounting policies and other footnote disclosure in the financial statements are comprehensive and minimize unnecessary repetition of information in MD&A.
Changes to Assumptions and Estimates
A registrant should consider the impact of its various assumptions, to determine the extent to which the assumptions or changes in the assumptions have a material effect, including those concerning:
While some of these assumptions are subject to frequent revision, others may be relatively static. In describing material changes to the assumptions, it may be necessary to indicate how often revisions are made.
Comparison of Actual and Expected results
Accounting for employee benefit plans is largely dependent on the assumptions concerning the periods of attribution (the process of assigning the cost of benefits to period of employee service) and the calculation and amortization of gains and losses. Therefore, MD&A should address the material trends or patterns of amounts reflected in the financial statements, significant assumptions and any material variations between the results based on those assumptions, and the registrant' actual experience. For example, when results of operations are materially impacted by benefit plans, the registrant should disclose the material underlying assumptions and their effect to sufficiently address the quality of the registrant' earnings. In addition, when material deviations between the actual and expected long-term rates of return on plan assets arise, those amounts should be disclosed, as should any material deferred gains or losses that result. Under these circumstances, a registrant should quantify the amounts, and indicate the periods in which these will be reflected in the results of operations.
When addressing the expected and actual long-term rates of return on plan assets, registrants should disclose, where material:
A sensitivity analysis, demonstrating how a change in the assumed long-term rates of return would impact the results of operations, may also be necessary to sufficiently convey the quality of the registrant' earnings and the degree of uncertainty. If deferred gains and losses are material, a registrant should discuss the amortization periods, while differentiating between gains and losses that are subject to amortization and those that are not.
Other disclosures in MD&A related to benefit plans, including those related to exposure, recognition and funding obligations, should follow a similar approach. MD&A should build on and not unnecessarily repeat information disclosed in the notes to the financial statements. Registrants should disclose material assumptions and changes in assumptions, the resulting material effect on financial condition and operating performance, material deviations between results based on the assumptions used by registrants and actual plan performance, and the known material trends and uncertainties relating to plans, including those caused by these deviations. For example, registrants should consider whether disclosure of the historical pattern of expense recognition and the periods over which any amounts deferred in other comprehensive income will be recognized in results of operations is necessary.
Funding Obligations
If there are material funding obligations, a registrant should:
The FASB issued FIN 46 in January 2003 and revised it with FIN 46R in December 2003. The purpose of FIN 46 is to provide guidance on consolidation of certain kinds of entities. Although FIN 46 resulted in consolidation of many previously off-balance sheet structures, it also resulted in deconsolidation of certain subsidiary trusts that issue trust preferred securities. This deconsolidation has in turn raised the question of whether issuers of trust preferred securities may continue to provide the modified financial information permitted by Rule 3-10 of Regulation S-X, which presumes that consolidation is the basis for the 100% owned requirement in that rule. The staff believes that FIN 46 will not affect the ability of finance subsidiaries issuing trust preferred securities to avail themselves of Rule 3-10(b) of Regulation S-X and Exchange Act Rule 12h-5 if the finance subsidiaries meet the conditions of that paragraph and provide the following footnote disclosure:
However, registrants should remember that consolidation is a requirement for entities that seek to avail themselves of the modified reporting provided by paragraphs (c) through (f) of Rule 3-10.
FASB Statement No. 131, Disclosures about Segments of an Enterprise and Related Information, became effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1997. One significant focus of staff reviews continues to be the evaluation of whether registrants have complied completely with all the disclosure requirements of SFAS 131.
SFAS 131 defines an operating segment, in part, as a component of an enterprise whose operating results are regularly reviewed by the chief operating decision maker to make decisions about resources to be allocated to the segment and assess its performance. Operating segments may be aggregated in the disclosure only to the limited extent permitted by the standard. If operating segments are aggregated, that fact must be disclosed. Under SFAS 131, the chief operating decision maker is not necessarily a single person, but is a function that may be performed by several persons.
If the chief operating decision maker receives reports of a component' operating results on a quarterly or more frequent basis, the staff may challenge a registrant' determination that the component is not an operating segment for purposes of SFAS 131 unless reports of other overlapping sets of components are more clearly representative of the way the business is managed. On a few occasions, the staff has requested copies of all reports furnished to the chief operating decision maker if the reported segments did not appear realistic for management' assessment of a registrant' performance or conflicted with that officer' public statements describing the registrant. The staff also has reviewed analyst' reports, interviews by management with the press, and other public information to evaluate consistency with segment disclosures in the financial statements. Where that information revealed different or additional segments, amendment of the registrant' filings to comply with SFAS 131 was required.
SFAS 131 allows for aggregation of operating segments that sell similar products or services created with similar production processes to similar customers using similar distribution systems in similar regulatory environments, and that have similar economic characteristics. These criteria are listed in paragraph 17 of SFAS 131, along with the requirement that aggregation must be consistent with the objectives and principles of the standard. The staff believes aggregation is a high hurdle and is appropriate only in situations where, as stated by the FASB in the basis for conclusions to SFAS 131, "separate reporting of segment information will not add significantly to an investor' understanding of an enterprise [because] its operating segments have characteristics so similar that they can be expected to have essentially the same future prospects." The FASB rejected recommendations that the aggregation criteria be indicators rather than tests. Therefore, after a company identifies their operating segments, aggregation is only allowed if the identified operating segments meet all of the aggregation criteria, with the resulting segments being reported if they meet the significance test in paragraph 19 of the standard.
Registrants should remember to identify the products and services from which each reportable segment derives its revenues, and to report the total revenues from external customers for each product or service or each group of similar products and services. Disclosures for products and services that are not substantially similar must be disaggregated. The staff has objected to overly broad views of what constitutes similar products. In its assessment of whether dissimilar products have been aggregated, the staff may review public disclosures and marketing materials that describe the registrant' products.
Information about geographic areas is also required to be disclosed based on countries, both the country of domicile and for foreign countries. If a company manages its business by geographic regions and determines its reportable segments accordingly, it still must provide the separate geographic disclosures for each country in which revenues are material. Some companies provide this disclosure by presenting material countries separately within the subtotals by region.
The reconciliation of segment elements to the consolidated financial statements should quantify and clearly explain each material reconciling item. Effects of measurement differences should be identified, and asymmetrical allocations among segments should be highlighted.
The requirement to recast prior information to correspond with current reportable segments, or to otherwise provide comparable information, is discussed in paragraphs 34 and 35 of SFAS 131. Effects of changes in significance of reportable segments are discussed in paragraphs 22 and 23. If management changes the structure of its internal organization after fiscal year end, or intends to make a change, the new segment structure should not be presented in financial statements until operating results managed on the basis of that structure are reported. Disclosures based on the historical reportable segments should be presented until financial statements for periods managed on the basis of the new organizational structure are presented. However, supplemental disclosure of the future effects of the changes may be useful.
If annual financial statements are required in a registration or proxy statement that includes subsequent periods managed on the basis of the new organizational structure, the annual audited financial statements should include a revised segment footnote that reflects the new reportable segments. The registrant' Description of Business and MD&A should be similarly revised. Prior filings that reported the old organizational structure should not be amended. The revised annual financial statements and related disclosures may be included in the registration or proxy statement or in a Form 8-K incorporated by reference. If a registrant files a Form S-3 that incorporates its most recent Forms 10-K and 10-Q before the new organizational structure is required to be presented in the financial statements, management and their advisors should consider whether the change in reportable segments is a material change per Item 11 of Form S-3. If the change in reportable segments is deemed to be a material change, the registrant should report recasted segment information prior to the effective date of the Form S-3.
SFAS 133 contains explicit guidance regarding the application of hedge accounting models, including documentation and effectiveness assessment requirements. One of the fundamental requirements of SFAS 133 is that formal documentation be prepared at inception of a hedging relationship. The standard stresses the need for the documentation to be prepared contemporaneously with the designation of the hedging relationship. The formal documentation must identify the following:
Contemporaneous designation and documentation of a hedging relationship are fundamental to the application of hedge accounting. If contemporaneous documentation can not be demonstrated, an auditor will be unable to determine whether the company has, after the fact, selected the hedged item or transaction, or the method of measuring effectiveness, to achieve a desired accounting result. Upon the adoption of SFAS 133, the staff believes that most registrants undertook efforts to adhere to the spirit and form of the standard and to satisfy all of its requirements. In the course of the filing review process, however, the staff has encountered instances where registrants have not been diligent in meeting those requirements. The staff has noted instances of shortcutting or minimizing the process, as well as instances of aggressive interpretation and attempts to achieve results inconsistent with the spirit of SFAS 133. The staff will continue to challenge the application of hedge accounting in instances where an entity has not contemporaneously complied with SFAS 133' formal documentation requirements upon designation of a hedging relationship, or has otherwise shortcutted or circumvented the process. Two documentation requirements are emphasized below.
The hedged forecasted transaction
SFAS 133 stresses that the documentation of the hedged forecasted transaction must be sufficiently specific such that when a transaction occurs, it is clear whether or not that particular transaction is the hedged transaction. Thus, the documentation of the forecasted transaction should include reference to the timing (i.e., the estimated date), the nature, and amount (i.e. the hedged quantity or amount) of the forecasted transaction.
Description of how the entity will assess and measure hedge effectiveness
While SFAS 133 provides an entity with flexibility in determining the method for assessing hedge effectiveness, the methodology used must be reasonable, and must be documented at inception of the hedging relationship. Additionally, SFAS 133 requires that an entity use the chosen method consistently throughout the hedge period (a) to assess, at inception of the hedge and on an on-going basis, whether it expects the hedging relationship to be highly effective in achieving offset and (b) to determine the ineffective aspect of the hedge. The method used for assessing hedge effectiveness and measuring ineffectiveness must be documented with sufficient specificity so that a third party could perform the measurement based on the documentation and arrive at the same result as the registrant.
Companies generally have continued the historical practice of including the results of hedging relationships on a net basis in the income statement line item associated with the hedged item. There is no required classification for the gain or loss recognized for hedge ineffectiveness or for any component of a derivative instrument' gain or loss that is excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness, but the amount of this net gain or loss and its income statement classification must be disclosed. Consistent classification should be observed in each period. Derivative assets and liabilities may be offset only to the extent permitted by FASB Interpretation No. 39, Offsetting of Amounts Related to Certain Contracts. Although bifurcated for measurement purposes, embedded derivatives should be presented on a combined basis with the host contract.
There is similarly no guidance in SFAS 133 related to classification of derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting. As a result, we encourage disclosure of the location in the income statement where the changes in the fair value of non-hedge accounting derivatives are reflected as well as the amount. However, we generally believe that a presentation that splits the components of a derivative into different line items on the income statement or that reclassifies realized gains and losses of a derivative out of the line item that included unrealized gains and losses of the same derivative is inappropriate. For example, if a company classifies changes in fair value of economic hedges (unrealized gains and losses) in a single line item such as "risk management activities", a company should not reclassify realized gains and losses (the periodic or final cash settlements from these economic hedges) in the period realized out of risk management activities and into revenue or expense lines associated with the related exposure. While SFAS 133 was essentially "silent on geography," it was the clear intention of the FASB to eliminate the practice of synthetic instrument accounting. The presentation described in the above example is essentially a form of synthetic instrument accounting from an income statement perspective.
Registrants should focus on the clarity of their disclosures when they use hedges, both those that qualify for hedge accounting under SFAS 133 and those that don't. Registrants should provide transparent, "plain English" disclosures related to derivatives, including reasons for their use, associated hedging strategies, and methods and assumptions used to estimate fair value, as required by FASB Statements No. 107 and No. 133, and Item 305 of Regulation S-K.
Management' assertions regarding fair values, timely hedge designation and documentation, and hedging effectiveness should be subject to on-going audit testing. Auditors should refer to SAS 92, SAS 73, SAS 70, and 37, as adopted by the PCAOB in Rule 3200T, as well as Independence Standards Board Interpretation 99-1, as adopted by the PCAOB in Rule 3600T, for guidance in this area. In addition, the AICPA has issued an Audit Guide, Auditing Derivative Instruments, Hedging Activities and Investment Securities.
Item 305 of Regulation S-K prescribes disclosures about derivatives and market risks inherent in derivatives and other financial instruments. Registrants should clearly explain how they manage their primary market risk exposures, including describing the objectives, general strategies and instruments used to manage each exposure. In the discussion of how the registrant manages risk exposure, registrants should separately discuss business decisions that result in natural (or economic) hedges and decisions to use derivative instrument positions to hedge exposures. Changes in the strategies or tools used to manage exposures during the year in comparison to the prior year should be clearly disclosed, as well as any known or expected changes in the future. Registrants should be specific in explanations of the intended result of the application of these policies (e.g., percentage of production intended to be hedged) and furnish any other information that would assist investors in understanding your particular position. To assure balance and usefulness, disclosures about commodity derivatives should be related to the registrant' exposures in the underlying commodity.
The determination of the allowance for loan losses requires significant judgment. The balance in the allowance for loan losses should reflect management' best estimate of probable loan losses related to specifically identified loans as well as probable incurred loan losses in the remaining loan portfolio. SFAS 5 and FASB Statement 114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan, limit loss allowances to losses that have been incurred as of the balance sheet date. Accordingly, allowances for loan losses should be based on past events and current economic conditions. Disclosures that explain the allowance in terms of potential, possible, or future losses, rather than probable losses, suggest a lack of compliance with GAAP and are not appropriate.
APB Opinion 22 sets forth the general requirements for accounting policy disclosures in the financial statements. Industry Guide 3 specifies additional detail that should be provided in explanation of loss allowances within the Description of Business. Viewed together, these disclosures should describe in a comprehensive and clear manner the registrant' accounting policies for determining the amount of the allowance in a level of detail sufficient to explain and describe the systematic analysis and procedural discipline applied. Registrants commonly develop different elements in their allowances to estimate (1) losses based upon specific evaluations of known loss on individual loans, (2) estimated unidentified losses on various pools of loans and/or groups of graded loans, and (3) other elements of estimated probable losses based on other facts and circumstances. The disclosures should describe and quantify each element of the allowance, and explain briefly how the registrant' procedural discipline was applied in determining the amount, and not simply the "adequacy," of each specific element. If loans are grouped by pool or by grading within type to estimate unidentified probable losses, the basis for those groupings and the methods for determining loss factors to be applied to those groupings should be described. The basis for estimating the impact of environmental factors, such as local and national economic conditions and trends in delinquencies and losses, whether through modifying loss factors or through a separate allowance element, should be disclosed. Changes in methodology and their impact should be disclosed in accordance with APB Opinion #20.
MD&A should explain the period-to-period changes in specific elements of the allowance. It also should discuss the extent to which actual experience has differed from original estimates. The reasons for changes in management' estimates should indicate what evidence management relied upon to determine that the revised estimates were more appropriate and how those revised estimates were determined. A registrant following a procedural discipline should be recording provisions for loan losses that reflect the changes in asset quality as measured in the registrant' periodic loan reviews. MD&A should discuss the reasons for the changes in assets quality and explain how those changes have affected the allowance and provision. If historical loss experience appears low or high relative to the level of the allowance at the latest balance sheet date, a reconciling explanation should be provided. If a registrant changes its methodology, the basis for changing its methodology and the effects of the change should be explained.
Allowances for credit losses are valuation accounts that should be presented as a reduction of the carrying value of the related balance sheet item. The allowance for loan losses should not include amounts provided for losses on financial instruments that are not classified on the balance sheet as loans. FASB Interpretation No. 45, Guarantor' Accounting and Disclosure Requirements for Guarantees, Including Indirect Guarantees of Indebtedness of Others, issued in November 2002, requires that most guarantees be recognized and initially measured at fair value in the financial statements. The liability for guarantees should be classified separately from the allowance for loan losses.
As noted in Section H.1., SFAS 133 does not provide specific guidance on geography, but at the same time the staff believes that some classifications may not make sense. As an example, a financial institution classifying in the provision for loan losses all changes in credit derivatives used as economic hedges would not seem appropriate given the importance of that line item to certain credit quality analyses.
Financial institutions must present the provision for loan losses as a deduction in the determination of net interest income, pursuant to Article 9 of Regulation S-X. Credit loss provisions on other types of balance sheet and off-balance sheet items that do not affect net interest income should not be included in the provision for loan losses. Loss provisions not related to interest income should be recorded in other appropriate categories of income or expense. Direct transfers of amounts between the allowance for loan losses and other credit loss allowances are not appropriate. Changes in the amount of the allowance for loan losses should be reflected in the provision for loan losses, while changes in other allowances should be reflected in other appropriate categories of income or expense.
The terms of sale of loans or other receivables, including, but not limited to, those securitized through the Government National Mortgage Association or another GSE, may either require or allow for the transferor' repurchase of such loans or receivables upon an event of default.
Paragraph 55 of FASB Statement No. 140, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities, a replacement of FASB Statement No. 125, specifies the accounting in a circumstance where the seller regains control of assets previously accounted for appropriately as having been sold, such as in the case of a call option that becomes exercisable upon the event of borrower default. The assets should be accounted for in the same manner as a purchase of the assets from the former transferee in exchange for liabilities assumed. Specifically, the transferor recognizes in its financial statements those assets together with liabilities to the former transferees or beneficial interest holders in those assets at fair value on the date that the call becomes exercisable, regardless of whether it intends to exercise the call. EITF Issue 02-9 further clarifies the accounting for a transferor' re-recognition of assets pursuant to paragraph 55 of FASB Statement No. 140.
The original balance sheet classification of the asset when originally transferred should be maintained when control over that asset is re-recognized by the transferor. For instance, if the asset subject to the call or repurchased by the transferor is a loan, the balance sheet classification by the transferor upon re-recognition should be Loans, not Other Assets. No loan loss allowance should be recorded upon initial re-recognition of loans at fair value. Subsequent accounting for the re-recognized loan will depend on whether the loans are classified as held for investment or held for sale.
In the event that loans re-recognized by the transferor have the risk elements contemplated by Item III.C.1.of Industry Guide 3 (i.e., nonaccrual, past due, restructured), the amount of such loans should be included in the disclosures required by that Item. Supplemental disclosures may be made to facilitate understanding of the aggregate amounts reported pursuant to Item III.C.1. These disclosures may include, for example, information as to the nature of the loans, any guarantees, the extent of collateral, or amounts in process of collection. For example, if a loan re-recognized by a transferor is accruing, but it is contractually past due 90 days or more as to principal or interest, that loan should be included in the disclosure required by Item III.C.1(b) even if the loan is guaranteed through a government program, such as the Veterans Administration (VA) or Federal Housing Authority (FHA).
Paragraph 40 of FASB Statement No. 15, Accounting by Creditors for Troubled Debt Restructurings, as amended by FASB Statement No. 114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan, require disclosures about restructured loans, including information about restructured loans included in large groups of smaller-balance homogeneous loans such as credit cards, residential mortgages, and consumer installment loans. Paragraph 5 of FASB Statement No. 114 states, "[t]his Statement also addresses the accounting by creditors for all loans that are restructured in a troubled debt restructuring involving a modification of terms of a receivable, except loans that are excluded from the scope of this Statement in paragraphs 6(b)-(d), including those involving a receipt of assets in partial satisfaction of a receivable." Large groups of smaller-balance homogeneous loans that are collectively evaluated for impairment are not among those exclusions. Accordingly, in the event that a loan is restructured, all of the provisions of FASB Statement No. 114 apply, including the disclosure provisions set forth in paragraph 20 of that Statement, as amended by FASB Statement No. 118, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan – Income Recognition and Disclosures, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 114.
Disclosures about certain restructured loans also are required for certain registrants by Item III.C.1(c) of Industry Guide 3.
We remind registrants subject to the provisions of Industry Guide 3 that Instruction 2 to Item III.C. requires disclosures about loans which are not now disclosed as past due but where known information about possible credit problems of borrowers causes management to have serious doubts as to the ability of such borrowers to comply with the present loan repayment terms and which may result in their being included later in past due loans.
A merger of accounting firms always results in a change in accountants due to the change in legal entity of the firm that performs the audit. The merger could take the form of a legal merger of 2 firms, an asset purchase, or the admission of a new partner(s) from another firm who brings SEC clients to the admitting firm. The acquired firm may or may not separately continue in business, except in a legal merger where the acquired firm would not practice separately.
An Item 4.01 Form 8-K must be filed no later than 4 business days after the merger. In addition to disclosing the name of the new accounting firm, the Form 8-K disclosure should describe the merger and state whether the merged firm resigned as auditors or the registrant dismissed the old firm. Auditors and registrants should be aware of any independence issues that could arise from the merger and address them appropriately.
If the old firm continues in business, even if as a shell, and is licensed to practice and in good standing as a public accounting firm, it would be able to continue to reissue prior opinions or provide consents to the use of prior opinions. Should the new firm be willing to assume liability for the old firm' audits, it could issue a new opinion that covers the prior audited periods and provide consents to the use of that opinion.
If neither firm is willing or able to reissue opinions on prior audited periods or provide a consent to the use of a prior opinion, the registrant would have to provide a formal request for waiver of consent under Securities Act Rule 437C or write to the staff of the Office of the Chief Accountant in the Division of Corporation Finance to request a waiver of the re-issuance of a prior opinion where no consent is needed. Generally, the staff limits granting waivers to hostile takeovers/tender offers.
PCAOB Rule 2100 requires registration with the PCAOB of any firm that 1) prepares or issues an audit report with respect to a registrant or 2) plays a substantial role in the preparation or furnishing of an audit report with respect to a registrant. The deadline for registration was October 22, 2003 (or, for foreign public accounting firms, July 19, 2004). An unregistered firm cannot issue a new opinion (even if dated before October 22) or update/dual-date its opinion after October 22, 2003 on an issuer' financial statements.
A firm does not have to be registered to reissue a prior report (or issue a consent to the use of a prior report) issued before October 22, 2003, or to issue a report or consent on financial statements of a material acquiree that is a private company (non-issuer) that are filed pursuant to Rule 3-05 of Regulation S-X or Rule 310(c) of Regulation S-B.
An unregistered firm may be able to perform some audit services if the services represent less than 20% of the total engagement hours or fees provided by the principal accountant related to issuing all or part of its audit report. See PCAOB Rules 1001 and 2100 for more details.
Much information about the Commission, proposed and recently adopted rules, and other activities and developments may be found at the Commission' website -- http://www.sec.gov. Information about current issues and interpretations in the Division of Corporation Finance can be found at www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin.shtml. Information of particular interest to accountants practicing before the Commission is at http://www.sec.gov/about/offices/oca.htm. Other documents that may be of particular interest to readers of this outline include:
The Division' organizational structure follows:
Division Director – Alan Beller (202) 942-2800
Deputy Director – Martin P. Dunn (202) 942-2890
Deputy Director - Shelley Parratt (202) 942-2830
Operations
Associate Director (Disclosure Operations) – Paul Belvin (202) 942-7893
Associate Director (Disclosure Operations) – James Daly (202) 942-7893
Associate Director (Disclosure Operations) – Barry Summer (202) 942-7893
Senior Special Counsel (Disclosure Operations) – James Budge (202) 942-2830
Disclosure Support and Other Offices
Associate Director (Legal) – Paula Dubberly (202) 942- 2900
Associate Director (Regulatory Policy) – Mauri Osheroff (202) 942-2840
Senior Counsel to the Director – Amy Starr (202) 942- 2810
Senior Counsel to the Director – Consuelo Hitchcock (202) 942-2810
Senior Special Counsel (Regulatory Policy) – Mark Green (202) 942-2840
Office of Chief Counsel – David Lynn, Chief (202) 942-2925
Office of Mergers and Acquisitions – Brian Breheny, Chief (202) 942-2920
Office of International Corporate Finance – Paul Dudek, Chief (202) 942-2990
Office of Rulemaking – Elizabeth Murphy, Chief (202) 942-2910
Office of Small Business Policy – Gerald Laporte, Chief (202) 942-2950
Office of Enforcement Liaison – Mary Kosterlitz, Chief (202) 942- 2925
Office of EDGAR and Information Analysis – Herbert Scholl, Chief (202) 942-2930
Office of the Chief Accountant [fax (202) 942-9582]
Associate Director (Chief Accountant) – Carol Stacey (202) 942-2850
Craig Olinger, Deputy Chief Accountant (202) 942-2850 | ||
Liaison to: | Foreign Private Issuers | |
Louise Dorsey, Associate Chief Accountant (202) 942-2960 | ||
Liaison to: | Office # 5 (Structured Finance, Transportation and Leisure) | |
Office # 8 (Real Estate and Business Services) | ||
Todd Hardiman, Associate Chief Accountant (202) 942-2960 | ||
Liaison to: | Office # 1 (Health Care and Insurance) | |
Office # 10 (Electronics and Machinery) | ||
Joel Levine, Associate Chief Accountant (202) 942-2960 | ||
Liaison to: | Office # 2 (Consumer Products) | |
Office # 3 (Computers and On Line Services) | ||
Rachel Mincin, Associate Chief Accountant (202) 942-2960 | ||
Liaison to: | Office # 7 (Financial Services) | |
Leslie Overton, Associate Chief Accountant (202) 942-2960 | ||
Liaison to: | Office # 4 (Natural Resources and Food) | |
Office # 6 (Manufacturing and Construction) | ||
Sondra Stokes, Associate Chief Accountant (202) 942-2960 | ||
Liaison to: | Office # 9 (Emerging Growth Companies) | |
Office # 11 (Telecommunications) |
Assistant Directors (AD) and Senior Assistant Chief Accountants (SACA)
#1 Health Care and Insurance – AD - Jeffrey Riedler (202) 942-1840 | |||
SACA - | Jim Rosenberg | (202) 942-1803 | |
#2 Consumer Products – AD - H. Christopher Owings (202) 942-1900 | |||
SACA - | Jim Allegretto | (202) 942-1885 | |
#3 Computers and OnLine Services – AD - Barbara Jacobs (202) 942-1800 | |||
SACA - | Craig Wilson | (202) 942-2949 | |
#4 Natural Resources and Food – AD - Roger Schwall (202) 942-1870 | |||
SACA - | Barry Stem | (202) 942-1919 | |
#5 Structured Finance, Transportation and Leisure – AD - Max Webb (202) 942-1850 | |||
SACA - | Joseph Foti | (202) 942-1952 | |
#6 Manufacturing and Construction – AD - Pam Long (202) 942-1950 | |||
SACA - | John Hartz | (202) 942-1798 | |
#7 Financial Services – AD - Todd Schiffman (202) 942-1760 | |||
SACA - | Don Walker | (202) 942-1799 | |
#8 Real Estate and Business Services – AD - Karen Garnett (202) 942-1960 | |||
SACA - | Linda Van Doorn | (202) 942-1964 | |
#9 Office of Emerging Growth Companies – AD - John Reynolds (202) 942-2999 | |||
SACA - | Tia Jenkins | (202) 942-1902 | |
#10 Electronics and Machinery – AD - Peggy Fisher (202) 942-1880 | |||
SACA - | Martin James | (202) 942-1984 | |
#11 Telecommunications – AD - Larry Spirgel (202) 942-1990 | |||
SACA - | Carlos Pacho | (202) 942-1876 |
For more information about any of the positions or programs described below, contact Charlee Marcus, Program Support Specialist, at (202) 824-5553, or fax your resume to (202) 942-9652. You can also visit our website at http://www.sec.gov/jobs/jobs_accountants.shtml for current information about employment opportunities in the Division, salary and benefits, and how to apply for a federal job.
The full disclosure system for public companies is the foundation of the federal securities laws. Currently, the Division of Corporation Finance achieves the goal of improving the quality and timeliness of material disclosure to investors by selectively reviewing the periodic financial and other disclosures made by public companies. The Division is responsible for assuring full compliance with a number of new rules the Commission recently adopted that affect the disclosure of all public companies. Included are rules related to accelerated periodic reporting, certification of financial statements, use of non-GAAP financial measures, and MD&A disclosure about off-balance sheet arrangements and aggregate contractual obligations.
Corporation Finance accountants:
Accountants in the division work directly with corporate officers, underwriters, outside accountants and counsel, as well as with division lawyers and financial analysts. Much of the work involves novel and unique accounting issues, financing and business structures. Accountants in the division review a variety of disclosure documents including registration statements; initial public offerings; proxy materials; annual reports; documents concerning tender offers; and filings related to mergers and acquisitions.
The Division also has openings for up to ten positions for Professional Accounting Fellows for a nonrenewable term of two years. This program provides Accounting Fellows with in-depth exposure to the Commission' full disclosure system administered by the Division. Accounting Fellows, working in a team with other staff accountants and lawyers, review filings by public registrants to identify material accounting, auditing or financial reporting deficiencies resulting from deviations from GAAP, GAAS, and SEC rules and regulations.
The Commission offers fellowship opportunities in the Office of the Chief Accountant, the Division of Corporation Finance, and the Office of Economic Analysis for financial accounting and auditing professors; a fellowship typically lasts for 12 months (August 1-July 31). An academic fellowship at the SEC provides an unparalleled opportunity for a professor to be directly involved in the work of the Commission and to gain insight into the SEC' oversight and regulatory processes. An SEC fellowship is a notable way to spend a sabbatical year or a leave of absence and offers a set of memorable experiences that will greatly enhance subsequent teaching and publication activities.
The fellowship, which originated about six years ago, typically involves researching financial reporting issues in connection with Division policy or program initiatives, reviewing filings by public companies to identify significant accounting and disclosure problems, and developing and presenting training on emerging or controversial accounting issues for accountants and attorneys at the Commission. Requirements include a Master' or Ph.D. and teaching experience in upper-level/advanced financial accounting courses. Expertise in quantitative analysis and finance, as well as the ability to discuss issues in plain English, are plus factors.
While on sabbatical or leave of absence from the home university, an academic fellow maintains an employee relationship with the home institution, typically earning 12/9 of the usual 9-month academic salary (currently up to about $158,844), plus benefits and relocation expenses. [Note: The salary cap does not mean that an academic fellow' maximum 12-month salary is $158,844. Rather, $158,844 is the maximum salary that the SEC will reimburse to the school (all normal university benefits will also be reimbursed). The employing university is permitted to pay the professor more than this amount.]
Indicate your initial interest and request more information by sending an e-mail to one or more current academic fellows in Office of the Chief Accountant (Jonathan Glover gloverj@sec.gov; Audrey Gramling gramlinga@sec.gov), the Division of Corporation Finance (David Sherman shermand@sec.gov), or Office of Economic Analysis (Agnes Cheng (chenga@sec.gov). Feel free to contact the current academic fellows to discuss the nature of the position.
Application reviews for the 2005 -2006 academic fellowships will begin in late 2004, and will continue until the positions are filled. Interviews will be conducted at the SEC headquarters in Washington, DC. Candidates' travel expenses cannot be reimbursed. The SEC' goal is to announce final selections by the Spring of 2005.
To find out more about the experiences of three previous academic fellows, see Thomas J. Linsmeier' article in Accounting Horizons (September 1996) and articles by Steve Kolenda and Patricia Fairfield in the Financial Reporting Journal (Summer 2000.)
http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/acctdisnov2004.htm
Home | Previous Page | Modified: 02/25/2005 |