Letter to the SEC
Dated: December 9, 2002
Mr. Jonathan G. Katz
Secretary
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20549-0609
RE: Comment letter on proposed rule on disclosures required by Sections
404, 406, and 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the "Act"), File No.
S7-40-02
Dear Mr. Katz:
I represent the American Association of Bank Directors, a non-profit trade association
that represents the interests of bank and savings institution directors.
I am writing to express our concern about the proposed regulation's definition of
"financial expert" in section 407. The definition is so narrowly drawn that Alan
Greenspan would not qualify as one.
We urge the SEC to expand the definition of "financial expert" so that it
will include many qualified people excluded from the proposed definition.
The effect of the definition of "financial expert" is substantially broader
than simply a disclosure issue. The Act does not require that a public company appoint or
elect a board member who qualifies as a "financial expert" to serve on its Audit
Committee; rather, it requires disclosure of whether the company has a board member
serving on the Audit Committee who has been designated and qualifies as a "financial
expert" and if the company does not have such a person on its board serving on the
Audit Committee, it must disclose why it does not. However, the proposed amendments to the
listing requirements of the NASD now before the SEC require that every company whose stock
is listed with Nasdaq have at least one director who qualifies as a "financial
expert" as defined by SEC regulations to serve on the company's Audit Committee.
See proposed Rule 4350(d)(2)(A)(ii), as submitted to the SEC on October 9, 2002.
For many bank holding companies that are listed on Nasdaq, the task of identifying and
persuading a qualified person to serve in that capacity will be overwhelming, if not
impossible. Nasdaq-listed companies include many community banking organizations with
limited access to persons who may qualify under the exceedingly narrow proposed definition
of "financial expert."
The SEC's definition essentially provides that only an accountant or auditor or
chief financial officer with depository institution auditing or accounting experience or
comparable experience and education be considered a "financial expert." This
definition belies the title of the position ("financial" expert). The Act does
not use the term "accounting" expert for a reason.
Another concern is that many persons who are qualified as financial experts may not be
willing to serve on boards of public companies if they are designated as such because of
fear of heightened liability. The SEC does not believe that a person who serves as a
financial expert will increase his or her liability under the securities laws, but it has
not addressed how the fiduciary standards in each of the fifty states may be applied to a
"financial expert." AABD has concerns that anyone who serves in that capacity
may have a heightened fiduciary duty that may subject the person to a higher standard of
care and risk under state laws or under interpretations of state or federal courts in
lawsuits filed against such directors for breach of fiduciary duty.
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act does not require the SEC to adopt such a narrow definition of
"financial expert". Section 407(b) directs the SEC to "consider", in
defining the term "financial expert", "whether a person has, through
education and experience as a public accountant or auditor or a principal financial
officer, comptroller, or principal accounting officer of an issuer, or from a position
involving the performance of similar functions
" an understanding and/or
experience in certain accounting issues, internal controls and related matters. However,
the SEC's proposal does not merely "consider" these attributes; it adopts
the proposed definition based almost entirely on these attributes. The proposed definition
appears even to tighten the definition. The proposed regulation states (but the Act does
not address) that the required attributes include experience applying generally accepted
accounting principles in connection with the accounting for estimates, accruals and
reserves that are generally comparable to those, if any, used in the company's
financial statements, and experience preparing or auditing financial statements that
present accounting issues that are generally comparable to those raised by the
company's financial statements.
AABD urges the SEC to expand the definition of "financial expert" to include
individuals who are well qualified to serve as financial experts. Defining the term must
depend on an evaluation of the role and responsibilities of an audit committee member. An
audit committee member does not audit the company, or normally second-guess the auditors.
An audit committee member is not an employee of or consultant to the company. The Audit
Committee typically meets once a quarter, or, at most, once a month, at meetings that
ordinarily last approximately 2-4 hours. An audit committee member oversees the auditing
process, but does not conduct it. An oversight role is one that requires an understanding
of generally accepted accounting principles and financial statements, of how such
principles should be applied, of audit committee duties and responsibilities, and of the
role and nature of prudent internal accounting controls. In this context, a financial
expert may or may not be or have been an accounting or auditing professional in a company
in a similar business as the one on whose audit committee the person serves. Perhaps more
importantly, a financial expert is someone with an elevated level of knowledge and
experience than the average audit committee member appropriate for the oversight role that
the audit committee serves in a public company.
In sum, the proposed regulations do not reflect the appropriate focus necessary for the
SEC to develop a workable and useful definition of "financial expert." The
starting point should be an appreciation of the important, but limited role of an audit
committee member; one who is an overseer, not an active participant in the actual conduct
of an audit. The skill sets that are required for someone in that capacity may be quite
different than those required to conduct an audit of a public company. It is clear from a
reading of the proposed regulations that the SEC started and ended its analysis by relying
almost entirely on the Act's directive that the SEC "consider" certain
attributes in establishing a workable definition of "financial expert." The SEC
needs to return to an analysis of what kind of "financial expert" will be
helpful to a public company audit committee by evaluating the skill sets that such a
person, in his or her limited role, would need in order to be effective.
Sincerely,
David Baris
Executive Director
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