Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; Notice of Filing of Proposed Ethics and Independence Rules Concerning Independence, Tax Services, and Contingent Fees, 12720-12736 [06-2365]
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12720
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 48 / Monday, March 13, 2006 / Notices
amendments to the rule and amended
its filing on November 23, 2005. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
from interested persons.
Room 10230, New Executive Office
Building, Washington, D.C. 20503.
Charles Mierzwa,
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. E6–3476 Filed 3–10–06; 8:45 am]
I. Board’s Statement of the Terms of
Substance of the Proposed Rule
BILLING CODE 7905–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting Notice
FEDERAL REGISTER CITATION OF PREVIOUS
ANNOUNCEMENT: [71 FR 11249, March 6,
2006].
Closed Meeting.
100 F Street, NW., Washington,
STATUS:
PLACE:
DC.
DATE AND TIME OF PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED
MEETING: Thursday, March 9, 2006 at 2
p.m.
Deletion of Item.
The following item will not be
considered during the Closed Meeting
on March 9, 2006: Consideration of
amicus participation.
The Commission determined that no
earlier notice thereof was possible.
At times, changes in Commission
priorities require alterations in the
scheduling of meeting items. For further
information and to ascertain what, if
any, matters have been added, deleted
or postponed, please contact the Office
of the Secretary at (202) 551–5400.
CHANGE IN THE MEETING:
Dated: March 9, 2006.
J. Lynn Taylor,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06–2457 Filed 3–9–06; 3:54 pm]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
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Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board; Notice of Filing of Proposed
Ethics and Independence Rules
Concerning Independence, Tax
Services, and Contingent Fees
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March 7, 2006.
Pursuant to Section 107(b) of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the ‘‘Act’’),
notice is hereby given that on August 2,
2005, the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board (the ‘‘Board’’ or the
‘‘PCAOB’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘SEC’’) the proposed
rule described in Items I, and II below,
which items have been prepared by the
Board. On November 22, 2005, the
Board adopted certain technical
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SECTION 3. PROFESSIONAL
STANDARDS—Part 5—Ethics
Rule 3501. Definitions of Terms
Employed in Section 3, Part 5 of the
Rules
When used in Section 3, Part 5 of the
Rules, unless the context otherwise
requires:
(a)(i) Affiliate of the Accounting Firm
The term ‘‘affiliate of the accounting
firm’’ (or ‘‘affiliate of the registered
public accounting firm’’ or ‘‘affiliate of
the firm’’) includes the accounting
firm’s parents; subsidiaries; pension,
retirement, investment or similar plans;
and any associated entities of the firm,
as that term is used in Rule 2–01 of the
Commission’s Regulation S–X, 17 CFR
210.2–01(f)(2).
(a)(ii) Affiliate of the Audit Client
[Release No. 34–53427; File No. PCAOB–
2006–01]
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On July 26, 2005, the Board adopted
Rules 3501—Definitions of Terms
Employed in Section 3, Part 5 of the
Rules; 3502—Responsibility Not to
Cause Violations; 3520—Auditor
Independence; 3521—Contingent Fees;
3522—Tax Transactions; 3523—Tax
Services for Persons in Financial
Reporting Oversight Roles; and 3524—
Audit Committee Pre-approval of
Certain Tax Services (‘‘the proposed
rules’’). On November 22, 2005, the
Board adopted certain technical
amendments to Rule 3502, including its
title, and Rule 3522. The proposed rule
text is set out below.
The term ‘‘affiliate of the audit client’’
means—
(1) An entity that has control over the
audit client, or over which the audit
client has control, or which is under
common control with the audit client,
including the audit client’s parents and
subsidiaries;
(2) An entity over which the audit
client has significant influence, unless
the entity is not material to the audit
client;
(3) An entity that has significant
influence over the audit client, unless
the audit client is not material to the
entity; and
(4) Each entity in the investment
company complex when the audit client
is an entity that is part of an investment
company complex.
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(a)(iii) Audit and Professional
Engagement Period
The term ‘‘audit and professional
engagement period’’ includes both—
(1) The period covered by any
financial statements being audited or
reviewed (the ‘‘audit period’’); and
(2) The period of the engagement to
audit or review the audit client’s
financial statements or to prepare a
report filed with the Commission (the
‘‘professional engagement period’’)—
(A) The professional engagement
period begins when the registered
public accounting firm either signs an
initial engagement letter (or other
agreement to review or audit a client’s
financial statements) or begins audit,
review, or attest procedures, whichever
is earlier; and
(B) The professional engagement
period ends when the audit client or the
registered public accounting firm
notifies the Commission that the client
is no longer that firm’s audit client.
(3) For audits of the financial
statements of foreign private issuers, the
‘‘audit and professional engagement
period’’ does not include periods ended
prior to the first day of the last fiscal
year before the foreign private issuer
first filed, or was required to file, a
registration statement or report with the
Commission, provided there has been
full compliance with home country
independence standards in all prior
periods covered by any registration
statement or report filed with the
Commission.
(a)(iv) Audit Client
The term ‘‘audit client’’ means the
entity whose financial statements or
other information is being audited,
reviewed, or attested and any affiliates
of the audit client.
(c)(i) Confidential Transaction
The term ‘‘confidential transaction’’
means—
(1) In general. A confidential
transaction is a transaction that is
offered to a taxpayer under conditions
of confidentiality and for which the
taxpayer has paid an advisor a fee.
(2) Conditions of confidentiality. A
transaction is considered to be offered to
a taxpayer under conditions of
confidentiality if the advisor who is
paid the fee places a limitation on
disclosure by the taxpayer of the tax
treatment or tax structure of the
transaction and the limitation on
disclosure protects the confidentiality of
that advisor’s tax strategies. A
transaction is treated as confidential
even if the conditions of confidentiality
are not legally binding on the taxpayer.
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A claim that a transaction is proprietary
or exclusive is not treated as a limitation
on disclosure if the advisor confirms to
the taxpayer that there is no limitation
on disclosure of the tax treatment or tax
structure of the transaction.
(3) Determination of fee. For purposes
of this definition, a fee includes all fees
for a tax strategy or for services for
advice (whether or not tax advice) or for
the implementation of a transaction.
These fees include consideration in
whatever form paid, whether in cash or
in kind, for services to analyze the
transaction (whether or not related to
the tax consequences of the transaction),
for services to implement the
transaction, for services to document the
transaction, and for services to prepare
tax returns to the extent that the fees
exceed the fees customary for return
preparation. For purposes of this
definition, a taxpayer also is treated as
paying fees to an advisor if the taxpayer
knows or should know that the amount
it pays will be paid indirectly to the
advisor, such as through a referral fee or
fee-sharing arrangement. A fee does not
include amounts paid to a person,
including an advisor, in that person’s
capacity as a party to the transaction.
For example, a fee does not include
reasonable charges for the use of capital
or the sale or use of property.
(4) Related parties. For purposes of
this definition, persons who bear a
relationship to each other as described
in section 267(b) or 707(b) of the
Internal Revenue Code will be treated as
the same person.
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(c)(ii) Contingent Fee
The term ‘‘contingent fee’’ means—
(1) Except as stated in paragraph (2)
below, any fee established for the sale
of a product or the performance of any
service pursuant to an arrangement in
which no fee will be charged unless a
specified finding or result is attained, or
in which the amount of the fee is
otherwise dependent upon the finding
or result of such product or service.
(2) Solely for the purposes of this
definition, a fee is not a ‘‘contingent
fee’’ if the amount is fixed by courts or
other public authorities and not
dependent on a finding or result.
(f)(i) Financial Reporting Oversight Role
The term ‘‘financial reporting
oversight role’’ means a role in which a
person is in a position to or does
exercise influence over the contents of
the financial statements or anyone who
prepares them, such as when the person
is a member of the board of directors or
similar management or governing body,
chief executive officer, president, chief
financial officer, chief operating officer,
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general counsel, chief accounting
officer, controller, director of internal
audit, director of financial reporting,
treasurer, or any equivalent position.
(i)(i) Immediate Family Member
The term ‘‘immediate family member’’
means a person’s spouse, spousal
equivalent, and dependents.
(i)(ii) Investment Company Complex
(1) The term ‘‘investment company
complex’’ includes—
(i) An investment company and its
investment adviser or sponsor;
(ii) Any entity controlled by or
controlling an investment adviser or
sponsor in paragraph (i) of this
definition, or any entity under common
control with an investment adviser or
sponsor in paragraph (i) of this
definition if the entity—
(A) Is an investment adviser or
sponsor; or
(B) Is engaged in the business of
providing administrative, custodian,
underwriting, or transfer agent services
to any investment company, investment
adviser, or sponsor; and
(iii) Any investment company or
entity that would be an investment
company but for the exclusions
provided by section 3(c) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80a–3(c)) that has an investment
adviser or sponsor included in this
definition by either paragraph (i) or (ii)
of this definition.
(2) An investment adviser, for
purposes of this definition, does not
include a sub-adviser whose role is
primarily portfolio management and is
subcontracted with or overseen by
another investment adviser.
(3) A sponsor, for purposes of this
definition, is an entity that establishes a
unit investment trust.
Rule 3502. Responsibility Not To
Knowingly or Recklessly Contribute to
Violations
A person associated with a registered
public accounting firm shall not take or
omit to take an action knowing, or
recklessly not knowing, that the act or
omission would directly and
substantially contribute to a violation by
that registered public accounting firm of
the Act, the Rules of the Board, the
provisions of the securities laws relating
to the preparation and issuance of audit
reports and the obligations and
liabilities of accountants with respect
thereto, including the rules of the
Commission issued under the Act, or
professional standards.
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Subpart 1—Independence
Rule 3520. Auditor Independence
A registered public accounting firm
and its associated persons must be
independent of the firm’s audit client
throughout the audit and professional
engagement period.
Note 1: Under Rule 3520, a registered
public accounting firm or associated person’s
independence obligation with respect to an
audit client that is an issuer encompasses not
only an obligation to satisfy the
independence criteria set out in the rules and
standards of the PCAOB, but also an
obligation to satisfy all other independence
criteria applicable to the engagement,
including the independence criteria set out
in the rules and regulations of the
Commission under the federal securities
laws.
Note 2: Rule 3520 applies only to those
associated persons of a registered public
accounting firm required to be independent
of the firm’s audit client by standards, rules
or regulations of the Commission or other
applicable independence criteria.
Rule 3521. Contingent Fees
A registered public accounting firm is
not independent of its audit client if the
firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during
the audit and professional engagement
period, provides any service or product
to the audit client for a contingent fee
or a commission, or receives from the
audit client, directly or indirectly, a
contingent fee or commission.
Rule 3522. Tax Transactions
A registered public accounting firm is
not independent of its audit client if the
firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during
the audit and professional engagement
period, provides any non-audit service
to the audit client related to marketing,
planning, or opining in favor of the tax
treatment of, a transaction—
(a) Confidential Transactions—that is
a confidential transaction; or
(b) Aggressive Tax Position
Transactions—that was initially
recommended, directly or indirectly, by
the registered public accounting firm
and a significant purpose of which is tax
avoidance, unless the proposed tax
treatment is at least more likely than not
to be allowable under applicable tax
laws.
Note 1: With respect to transactions subject
to the United States tax laws, paragraph (b)
of this rule includes, but is not limited to,
any transaction that is a listed transaction
within the meaning of 26 CFR 1.6011–4(b)(2).
Note 2: A registered public accounting firm
indirectly recommends a transaction when
an affiliate of the firm or another tax advisor,
with which the firm has a formal agreement
or other arrangement related to the
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promotion of such transactions, recommends
engaging in the transaction.
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Rule 3523. Tax Services for Persons in
Financial Reporting Oversight Roles
A registered public accounting firm is
not independent of its audit client if the
firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during
the audit and professional engagement
period provides any tax service to a
person in a financial reporting oversight
role at the audit client, or an immediate
family member of such person, unless—
(a) The person is in a financial
reporting oversight role at the audit
client only because he or she serves as
a member of the board of directors or
similar management or governing body
of the audit client;
(b) The person is in a financial
reporting oversight role at the audit
client only because of the person’s
relationship to an affiliate of the entity
being audited—
(1) Whose financial statements are not
material to the consolidated financial
statements of the entity being audited;
or
(2) Whose financial statements are
audited by an auditor other than the
firm or an associated person of the firm;
or
(c) The person was not in a financial
reporting oversight role at the audit
client before a hiring, promotion, or
other change in employment event and
the tax services are
(1) Provided pursuant to an
engagement in process before the hiring,
promotion, or other change in
employment event; and
(2) Completed on or before 180 days
after the hiring or promotion event.
Rule 3524. Audit Committee PreApproval of Certain Tax Services
In connection with seeking audit
committee pre-approval to perform for
an audit client any permissible tax
service, a registered public accounting
firm shall—
(a) Describe, in writing, to the audit
committee of the issuer—
(1) The scope of the service, the fee
structure for the engagement, and any
side letter or other amendment to the
engagement letter, or any other
agreement (whether oral, written, or
otherwise) between the firm and the
audit client, relating to the service; and
(2) Any compensation arrangement or
other agreement, such as a referral
agreement, a referral fee or fee-sharing
arrangement, between the registered
public accounting firm (or an affiliate of
the firm) and any person (other than the
audit client) with respect to the
promoting, marketing, or recommending
of a transaction covered by the service;
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(b) Discuss with the audit committee
of the issuer the potential effects of the
services on the independence of the
firm; and
(c) Document the substance of its
discussion with the audit committee of
the issuer.
*
*
*
*
*
II. Board’s Statement of the Purpose of,
and Statutory Basis for, the Proposed
Rule
In its filing with the Commission, the
Board included statements concerning
the purpose of, and basis for, the
proposed rule and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule. The text of these statements may
be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. The Board has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
A. Board’s Statement of the Purpose of,
and Statutory Basis for, the Proposed
Rule
(a) Purpose
Section 103(a) of the Act directs the
Board, by rule, to establish ‘‘ethics
standards to be used by registered
public accounting firms in the
preparation and issuance of audit
reports, as required by th[e] Act or the
rules of the Commission, or as may be
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of
investors.’’ Moreover, Section 103(b) of
the Act directs the Board to establish
such rules on auditor independence ‘‘as
may be necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
investors, to implement, or as
authorized under, Title II of th[e] Act.’’
As discussed more fully in Exhibit 3,
two types of tax services have raised
serious concerns among investors,
auditors, lawmakers, and others relating
to the ethics and independence of
accounting firms that provide both
auditing and tax services—
1. The marketing to public company
audit clients of questionable tax
transactions used improperly to avoid
paying taxes or to manipulate financial
statements in order to make such
statements appear more favorable to
investors, and
2. The provision of tax services,
including tax shelter products, to
executives of public company audit
clients who are involved in the financial
reporting process at such companies.
Accordingly, the Board adopted a set
of rules designed to establish a
framework for addressing the concerns
that have arisen in connection with
auditors’ provision of tax services to
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their public company audit clients.
Specifically, the proposed rules are
designed, among other things, to
prevent auditors from providing (1)
certain aggressive tax shelter services to
public company audit clients, (2) any
other service to a public company audit
client for a contingent fee, which is a fee
arrangement often used in tax work, and
(3) any tax service to certain persons
who serve in financial reporting
oversight roles at a public company
audit client. The rules also codify, in an
ethics rule, the principle that persons
associated with a registered public
accounting firm should not cause the
firm to violate relevant laws, rules, and
standards, and introduce a foundation
for the independence component of the
Board’s ethics rules. Finally, the rules
implement the requirements of the Act
and the SEC’s independence rules when
an auditor seeks audit committee preapproval to provide tax services that are
not prohibited by the Board’s or the
SEC’s rules.
(b) Statutory Basis
The statutory basis for the proposed
rule is Title I of the Act.
B. Board’s Statement on Burden on
Competition
The Board does not believe that the
proposed rules will result in any burden
on competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. The proposed rules
would apply equally to all registered
public accounting firms and their
associated persons. Although some of
the proposed rules would prohibit a
registered public accounting firm from
providing certain non-audit services to
its audit clients, they would not restrict
the provision of these same services to
other companies.
C. Board’s Statement on Comments on
the Proposed Rule Received From
Members, Participants or Others
The Board released the proposed rules
for public comment in PCAOB Release
No. 2004–015 (December 14, 2004). A
copy of PCAOB Release No. 2004–015
and the comment letters received in
response to the PCAOB’s request for
comment are available on the PCAOB’s
Web site at https://www.pcaobus.org.
The Board received 807 written
comments. The Board has modified
certain aspects of the proposed rules in
response to comments it received, as
discussed below.
When the Board adopted the rules on
July 26, 2005, it stated the following: 1
1 As discussed above, the Board adopted
technical amendments to the rules on November 22,
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Rule 3502—Responsibility Not to Cause
Violations
Rule 3502, as proposed, provided that
a person associated with a registered
public accounting firm shall not cause
that firm to violate the Act, the Rules of
the Board, the provisions of the
securities laws relating to the
preparation and issuance of audit
reports and the obligations and
liabilities of accountants with respect
thereto, including the rules of the
Commission issued under the Act, or
professional standards, due to an act or
omission the person knew or should
have known would contribute to such
violation. The Board proposed the rule
to codify the ethical obligation of
associated persons of registered firms
not to cause registered firms to commit
such violations. Proposed Rule 3502
also made clear that an associated
person’s ethical obligation is not merely
to refrain from knowingly causing a
violation but also to act with sufficient
care to avoid negligently causing a
violation.
The Board received a number of
comments on proposed Rule 3502.
Several commenters supported the rule
as proposed and noted that they saw the
rule as essential to the Board’s ability to
carry out its disciplinary responsibilities
under the Act. Other commenters,
however, including the largest
accounting firms and an accounting
trade association, did not support the
rule as proposed. In general, these
commenters objected to the proposed
rule’s use of a negligence standard in
light of the complex regulatory
requirements with which auditors must
comply. Some of these commenters also
questioned the Board’s authority to
adopt the proposed rule, or at least the
proposed rule with a negligence
standard.
The Board has carefully considered
these comments and determined to
adopt Rule 3502, with some
modifications. The Board continues to
believe that it is authorized to adopt the
rule. Section 103(a) of the Act directs
the Board to, ‘‘by rule, establish * * *
such ethics standards to be used by
registered public accounting firms in the
preparation and issuance of audit
reports, as required by this Act or the
rules of the Commission, or as may be
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of
investors.’’ The Board believes that the
rule is an appropriate exercise of this
authority to set ethical standards for
accountants subject to the Board’s
jurisdiction.
2005. These amendments are discussed under The
Technical Amendments, below.
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Under the Act and Board rules, both
registered firms and their associated
persons must comply with PCAOB rules
and standards, as well as related laws.
When an associated person with such a
responsibility causes the firm with
which he or she is associated to violate
such rules, standards or laws, this
conduct operates to the detriment of the
protection of investors and the public
interest and may bear on the ethics of
the responsible associated person. When
such a person engages in this conduct
with knowledge that, or in reckless
disregard of whether, it would directly
and substantially contribute to the
firm’s violation, the Board believes this
conduct plainly reflects an ethical lapse
by the responsible person and,
therefore, is within the Board’s
authority—and indeed responsibility—
to proscribe.
At least one commenter asserted that
the proposed rule was not a proper
exercise of the Board’s ethics standardssetting authority because it reached a
range of conduct, rather than
delineating ‘‘particular impermissible
conduct.’’ The Board disagrees and
believes the type of conduct addressed
by the rule is plainly the type of
conduct the Board’s ethics rules can and
should address. In fact, the accounting
profession’s existing ethical code at the
time of enactment of the Act reaches
any act that may ‘‘discredit[]’’ the
profession—thereby reaching ranges of
conduct, including violations of certain
laws, rather than just specifying
‘‘particular impermissible conduct.’’ 2
When Congress vested the authority to
set ethics standards in the Board, the
Board believes it intended for this
authority to be at least as broad as the
scope of the existing ethics rules, at
least as to matters within the Board’s
jurisdiction. This authority, in the
Board’s view, plainly includes the
ability to require that persons subject to
the Board’s jurisdiction, as an ethical
obligation, not cause a violation of
relevant laws.
Commenters opposed to the proposed
rule also sought to analogize the rule to
a theory of liability that the Supreme
2 See AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, ET
section (‘‘sec.’’) 501, ‘‘Acts Discreditable’’ (‘‘A
member shall not commit an act discreditable to the
profession.’’). Interpretations of this part of the
ethical code provide that an accountant member
will be considered to have committed a
discreditable act if, among other things, he or she:
‘‘fails to comply with applicable federal, state or
local [tax] laws or regulations,’’ ET sec. 501.08,
Interpretation 501–7; fails to follow applicable
requirements of a governmental body, such as the
SEC, in performing accounting services, ET sec.
501.06, Interpretation 501–5; or fails to follow
government audit standards and rules in
conducting a governmental audit, ET sec. 501.04,
Interpretation 501–3.
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Court rejected in Central Bank of
Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of
Denver, N.A.3 In Central Bank, the
Supreme Court held that that there is no
private right of action for aiding and
abetting a violation of Section 10(b) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’). That decision turned
on the fact that the text of Section 10(b)
does not provide for aiding-and-abetting
liability.4 The Board does not believe
this decision affects the scope of the
Board’s explicit authority to set ethics
standards under Section 103 of the Act.5
Again, the Board notes that the
profession’s existing ethics code also
reaches what can be characterized as
‘‘secondary’’ conduct contributing to a
violation.6
The power to adopt Rule 3502 also is
inherent in, and necessary to, the
Board’s authority to enforce PCAOB
standards, rules, and related laws
against both registered firms and their
associated persons. Section 105
authorizes the Board to investigate and,
when appropriate, discipline registered
firms and their associated persons.
Certain types of violations, by their
nature, may give rise to direct liability
only for a registered public accounting
firm. Such firms, however, can only act
through the natural persons that
comprise them, many of whom are
‘‘associated persons’’ subject to the
Board’s ethics standards and
disciplinary authority. When one or
more of those associated persons has
caused that firm to violate PCAOB
standards, rules, or related laws with
the requisite state of mind, it is
appropriate, and consistent with the
Board’s duty to discipline registered
3 511
U.S. 164 (1994).
id. at 190 (‘‘Because the text of § 10(b) does
not prohibit aiding and abetting, we hold that a
private plaintiff may not maintain an aiding and
abetting suit under § 10(b).’’).
5 Rule 3502, of course, differs from an aiding-andabetting cause of action in important respects.
Among other things, the rule does not apply
whenever an associated person causes another to
violate relevant laws, rules and standards. Rather,
Rule 3502 applies only when an associated person
causes a violation by the registered firm with which
the person is associated.
6 See AICPA Code of Professional Conduct,
paragraph .02(2) of ET sec. 91, ‘‘Applicability’’ (‘‘A
member shall not knowingly permit a person,
whom the member has the authority or capacity to
control, to carry out on his or her behalf, either with
or without compensation, acts which, if carried out
by the member, would place the member in
violation of the rules. Further, a member may be
held responsible for the acts of all persons
associated with him or her in the practice of public
accounting whom the member has the authority or
capacity to control.’’); see also ET sec. 102.02,
Interpretation 102–1(c) (violation of ethics rules not
just to sign, but to ‘‘permit[] or direct[] another to
sign a document containing materially false and
misleading information’’) (adopted as a Board
interim ethics rule in Rule 3500T).
4 See
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firms and their associated persons under
Section 101(c)(4) of the Act, that the
Board be able to discipline the
associated person for that misconduct.7
After carefully considering the
comments received, the Board has
determined, however, to modify the
scope of Rule 3502 to apply only when
an associated person causes the
registered firm’s violation due to an act
or omission the person ‘‘knew, or was
reckless in not knowing, would directly
and substantially contribute to such
violation.’’ This revised formulation
reflects two changes to the rule as
proposed.
First, the Board has determined to
change the state-of-mind requirement in
the rule. Specifically, Rule 3502, as
adopted, will apply to ‘‘an act or
omission the [associated] person knew,
or was reckless in not knowing,’’ would
cause the violation. While the Board
believes it has the authority to adopt a
negligence standard,8 the Board believes
the revised standard strikes the right
balance in the context of this rule. The
Board believes that the phrase ‘‘knew, or
was reckless in not knowing’’ is a wellunderstood legal concept, and the Board
intends for the phrase to be given its
normal meaning.
Second, the Board has determined to
modify the phrase used to describe the
connection between the associated
person’s conduct and the violation.
Specifically, Rule 3502, as adopted,
provides that the associated person’s act
or omission must ‘‘directly and
substantially contribute to [the firm’s]
violation.’’ In particular, ‘‘substantially’’
in this context means that the associated
person’s conduct (i.e., an act or
omission) contributed to the violation in
a material or significant way. The term
‘‘substantially’’ also means, however,
that the associated person’s conduct
does not need to have been the sole
7 Some commenters suggested that the reference
to ‘‘any act, or practice * * * in violation of this
Act’’ in Section 105(c)(4)—the part of the Act
authorizing the Board to impose certain sanctions—
was inconsistent with the proposed rule. The Board
notes, however, as it did in the proposing release,
that Section 105(c)(5) expressly provides that the
more severe of these sanctions may be imposed
when intentional, knowing, or reckless conduct, or
repeated instances of negligent conduct, ‘‘results
in’’ violation of law, regulations, or professional
standards.
8 A number of commenters argued that Section
105(c) of the Act prevents the Board from imposing
discipline based on a negligence standard. The
Board’s determination to change the rule’s state-ofmind requirement to recklessness moots these
comments. The Board notes, however, that Section
105(c)(5) identifies a range of sanctions that the
Board may not impose in the absence of knowing
conduct, reckless conduct, or repeated instances of
negligent conduct. The Act does not similarly limit
the Board’s authority to impose certain other
sanctions.
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cause of the violation. ‘‘Directly’’ means
that the associated person’s conduct
either essentially constitutes the
violation—even though it is the firm
and not the individual that actually
commits the violation—or is a
reasonably proximate facilitating event
of, or a reasonably proximate stimulus
for, the violation. ‘‘Directly and
substantially’’ does not mean that the
associated person’s conduct must be the
sole cause of the violation, nor that it
must be the final step in a chain of
actions leading to the violation. In
addition, the term ‘‘directly’’ should not
be misunderstood to excuse someone
who knowingly or recklessly engages in
conduct that substantially contributes to
a violation, just because others also
contributed to the violation, or because
others could have stopped the violation
and did not. At the same time, the term
does not reach an associated person’s
conduct that, while contributing to the
violation in some way, is remote from,
or tangential to, the firm’s violation.
A number of commenters expressed
concern that adoption of a negligence
standard would allow the Board, or the
SEC, to proceed against associated
persons who in good faith, albeit
negligently, have caused a registered
firm to violate applicable laws or
standards. For example, commenters
suggested that the proposed rule could
be used against compliance personnel
within a firm who inadvertently design
a firm’s compliance system in a flawed
manner. Commenters also expressed
concern that, because the SEC can
enforce PCAOB rules under Section 3 of
the Act, the Board’s rule could have the
practical effect of altering the state-ofmind requirement applicable in SEC
enforcement proceedings against
accountants.
It was not the Board’s intention to
establish a new standard for SEC
enforcement of the securities laws and
related applicable rules. The Board also
recognizes that persons subject to its
jurisdiction must comply with complex
professional and regulatory
requirements in performing their jobs.
The Board does not seek to create
through this rule a vehicle to pursue
compliance personnel who act in an
appropriate, reasonable manner that, in
hindsight, turns out to have not been
successful. Nor does the Board seek to
reach those whose conduct,
unbeknownst to them, remotely
contributes to a firm’s violation. At the
same time, the Board continues to
believe that it is necessary and
appropriate for its ethics rules to apply
when an associated person has engaged
in an act or omission with knowledge
that, or in reckless disregard of whether,
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it would directly and substantially
contribute to a violation.9
The Board also believes that, because
the rule is essential to the functioning
of the Board’s independence rules, this
rulemaking provides the appropriate
forum to adopt the rule. For example,
Rule 3521 provides, in part, that a
registered firm is not independent of its
audit client if the firm provides that
audit client with a service for a
contingent fee. When an associated
person causes, in a manner consistent
with the discussion above, the
registered firm to provide that service
for a contingent fee, Rule 3502 would
allow the Board to discipline the
associated person for that conduct.10
Rule 3520—The Fundamental
Independence Requirement
Rule 3520 sets forth the fundamental
ethical obligation of independence: a
registered public accounting firm and its
associated persons must be independent
of the firm’s audit client throughout the
audit and professional engagement
period. This requirement encompasses
the independence requirements set out
in PCAOB Rule 3600T and goes further,
as a matter of the auditor’s ethical
obligation, to encompass any other
independence requirement applicable to
the audit in the particular
circumstances. Accordingly, in the case
of an audit client subject to the financial
reporting requirements of the securities
laws and the SEC’s rules, the ethical
obligation under Rule 3520 requires the
firm and its associated persons to
maintain independence consistent with
the SEC’s requirements.11
By giving this scope to Rule 3520, the
Board is not promulgating any new
independence requirement. The
Commission’s independence
requirements exist independently of
Rule 3520 and are subject to change at
the discretion of the Commission,
without Rule 3520 purporting separately
9 While the Board’s proposed rule tracked some
of the language of Section 21C of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’), the rule,
as adopted, differs significantly from, and should
not be interpreted in pari material with, that
statutory provision.
10 Rule 3502, of course, is not the exclusive means
for the Board to enforce applicable Board rules and
standards against associated persons. Among other
provisions, Rules 3100 and 3200T through 3600T
directly require associated persons to comply with
certain auditing and related professional practice
standards. In addition, PCAOB standards generally
contain directives to the ‘‘auditor.’’ The term
‘‘auditor’’ is defined in PCAOB Rule 1001(a)(xii) to
include both registered firms and their associated
persons. Accordingly, an associated person of a
registered firm that does not comply with such a
directive may be charged with violations of such
other standards, independent of any charges under
Rule 3502.
11 17 CFR 210.2–01.
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to lock in place any aspect of those
requirements. Instead, Rule 3520 is
based on the simple premise that ethical
standards for auditors can and should
encompass a duty by the auditor to
maintain independence necessary to
ensure compliance with independence
requirements in the circumstances of
the particular engagement.
A note to the rule emphasizes the
scope of the obligation in the rule by
pointing out that, even in circumstances
to which the Commission’s Rule 2–01
applies, a registered public accounting
firm and its associated persons still may
need to comply with other
independence requirements, including
those requirements separately
established by the Board. Using this
foundation, the Board may adopt
additional rules in the ‘‘Independence’’
subpart of the ethics rules that
effectively set out additional
requirements. As described below, with
the new rules adopted today, the
Board’s independence rules include
contingent fee arrangements and tax
services.
After carefully considering the
comments on proposed Rule 3520, the
Board has determined to adopt the rule,
with only one change. Most commenters
supported the scope and content of the
proposed rule. A few commenters,
however, asked the Board to add text to
the proposed rule to clarify or
emphasize that the rule incorporates
certain concepts in the existing
independence requirements. While
these comments are discussed in more
detail below, the Board did not adopt
these suggestions, as a general matter,
because of the purpose of Rule 3520.
Rule 3520 was simply intended to
require, by Board rule, compliance with
applicable independence requirements.
The rule was not intended to, and does
not, add to—or subtract from—these
existing requirements. Nor is it intended
to reflect the Board’s conceptual
approach to independence issues.
Accordingly, while the Board does not
necessarily disagree with the intent of
the commenters who suggested adding
text to the proposed rule, it does not
believe it is necessary or appropriate to
modify the rule to reflect their specific
suggestions.
Three commenters suggested that
Rule 3520 expressly require that
auditors maintain independence from
their audit client ‘‘both in fact and
appearance.’’ As proposed, the rule
already requires auditors to maintain
independence both in fact and
appearance, because the SEC’s
independence rules—which are
incorporated in Rule 3520, as discussed
above—are‘‘designed to ensure that
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auditors are qualified and independent
of their audit clients both in fact and in
appearance.’’ 12 In addition, Statement
on Auditing Standard (‘‘SAS’’) No. 1,
Codification of Auditing Standards and
Procedures, adopted by the Board as an
interim standard, requires that auditors
‘‘not only be independent in fact; [but
also] avoid situations that may lead
outsiders to doubt their
independence.’’ 13 Therefore, the Board
does not believe it is necessary to
include this additional language in Rule
3520 to preserve these existing
principles.
Some commenters also recommended
that Rule 3520 expressly include the
SEC’s four overarching independence
principles that it will look to in
determining whether a particular
service or client relationship impairs the
auditor’s independence.14 Other
commenters asked the Board to
explicitly note in the rule that certain
tax services are consistent with the
SEC’s four principles. For the reasons
described above, the Board has decided
not to change the rule in response to
either of these suggestions. The Board
notes, however, that the SEC’s
independence rules already refer to the
four principles, and these rules must be
complied with under Rule 3520.
Two commenters suggested that Rule
3520 include the text of the American
Institute of Certified Public
Accountants’ (‘‘AICPA’’) Ethics Rule
102, which provides, in pertinent part,
that members of the AICPA should
avoid any subordination of their
judgment.15 Although the Board shares
these commenters’ view about the
importance of this principle, the Board
has already adopted Ethics Rule 102 as
part of its interim ethics rule, Rule
3500T. Accordingly, this rule is already
part of the Board’s ethical standards and
12 17 CFR 210.2–01, Preliminary Note 1; accord
United States v. Arthur Young & Co., 465 U.S. 805,
819 n.15 (1984).
13 SAS No. 1, Codification of Auditing Standards
and Procedures, paragraph .03 of AU sec. 220. The
standard further states that ‘‘[p]ublic confidence
would be impaired by evidence that independence
was actually lacking, and it might also be impaired
by the existence of circumstances which reasonable
people might believe likely to influence
independence.’’ Id.
14 See 17 CFR 210.2–01, Preliminary Note 2.
Specifically, under those principles, the SEC looks
to whether a relationship or the provision of a
service: (a) Creates a mutual or conflicting interest
between the accountant and the audit client; (b)
places the accountant in the position of auditing his
or her own work; (c) results in the accountant acting
as management or an employee of the audit client;
or (d) places the accountant in a position of being
an advocate for the audit client.
15 See AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, ET
sec. 102, ‘‘Integrity and Objectivity’’.
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need not be separately repeated in Rule
3520 to be enforced by the Board.
Two firms suggested that Rule 3520,
as proposed, might have the effect of
precluding use of exceptions in the
SEC’s existing independence rules and
asked the Board to avoid that result.
Other than creating a requirement in a
Board rule to comply with existing and
applicable independence requirements,
it does not add to, or detract from, the
scope and substantive effect of these
existing requirements in any respect.
The Board has, however, as suggested
by a commenter, added ‘‘associated
persons’’ to the rule. While the
independence requirements added to
the Board’s rules through this
rulemaking apply to the firm, other
independence requirements covered by
Rule 3520 are directed to individual
accountants within auditing firms. Most
notably, certain of the SEC’s
independence rules impose
independence requirements directly on
individual accountants.16 Accordingly,
the Board believes it is appropriate for
the rule to apply to associated persons,
as well as registered firms themselves.
At the same time, the Board has added
a new note to the rule to make clear that
the rule applies only to those associated
persons of a registered public
accounting firm that are required to be
independent of the firm’s audit client by
standards, rules, or regulations of the
Commission or other applicable
independence criteria.17 Accordingly,
the rule does not impose independence
requirements on persons not already
subject to them, and does not impose
new independence requirements on any
associated person. Rather, Rule 3520
only requires associated persons who
are otherwise subject to independence
requirements to comply, as an ethical
obligation, with those requirements.
Rule 3521—Contingent Fees
The Board also has determined to
adopt Rule 3521 as proposed. There was
widespread support among commenters
for the Board’s view, expressed in the
proposal, that certain fee arrangements
used for the provision of tax services
create per se conflicts of interest that
impair auditors’ independence from
their audit clients. As discussed more
fully in the proposing release, when an
accounting firm provides a service to an
audit client for a contingent fee, the
firm’s economic interests become
16 See, e.g., Rule 2–01(c)(1), 17 CFR 210.2–
01(c)(1). See also PCAOB Rule 3600T.
17 Other applicable independence criteria include
any rules of the PCAOB, other than Rule 3520, that
contain independence requirements directly
applicable to associated persons of the firm, such
as Rule 3600T.
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aligned with the interests of its audit
client in a manner that is inconsistent
with the firm’s role as independent
auditor. The Board’s rule was adapted
from the SEC’s rule prohibiting
contingent fee arrangements 18 and thus
treats registered firms as not
independent if they enter into
contingent fee arrangements with audit
clients.
Specifically, Rule 3521 provides that
a registered public accounting firm is
not independent of its audit client 19 if
the firm, or any affiliate of the firm,20
during the audit and professional
engagement period,21 provides any
service or product to the audit client for
a contingent fee or a commission, or
receives from the audit client, directly
or indirectly, a contingent fee or
commission. The Board’s definition of a
contingent fee is ‘‘any fee established for
the sale of a product or the performance
of any service pursuant to an
arrangement in which no fee will be
charged unless a specified finding or
result is attained, or in which the
amount of the fee is otherwise
dependent upon the finding or result of
such product or service.’’ 22
Fees fixed by courts or other public
authorities and not dependent on a
finding or result are excluded from this
definition to permit contingencies that
do not pose a risk of establishing a
mutual interest between the auditor and
the audit client. In the proposing
release, the Board cited, as an example
of such a permissible fee, fees approved
by a bankruptcy court, as required
18 See
17 CFR 210.2–01(c)(5).
3501(a)(iv) defines ‘‘audit client’’ as ‘‘the
entity whose financial statements or other
information is being audited, reviewed, or attested
and any affiliates of the audit client.’’
20 Rule 3501(a)(ii) defines ‘‘affiliate of the
accounting firm’’ as ‘‘the accounting firm’s parents;
subsidiaries; pension, retirement, investment or
similar plans; and any associated entities of the
firm, as that term is used in Rule 2–01 of the
Commission’s Regulation S–X, 17 CFR 210.2–
01(f)(2).’’
21 Rule 3501(a)(iii) adapts the definition of ‘‘audit
and professional engagement period’’ from the
definition of that term in the Rule 2–01 of the SEC’s
Regulation S–X, which includes both the period
covered by the financial statements under audit or
review and the period beginning when a registered
public accounting firm signs an initial engagement
letter (or when such a firm begins audit, review or
attest procedures, whichever is earlier) and ends
when the audit client notifies the SEC that the
engagement has ceased. See 17 CFR 210.2–01(f)(5).
22 Rule 3501(c)(ii). As discussed in the Board’s
proposing release, the term ‘‘contingent fee’’
includes the aggregate amount of compensation for
a service, including any payment, service, or
promise of other value, taking into account any
rights to reimbursements, refunds, or other
repayments that could modify the amount received
in a manner that makes it contingent on a finding
or result.
under U.S. Federal bankruptcy law.23
The Board also sought comment on
whether there are courts or other public
authorities that fix fees that are not
dependent on a finding or result, other
than bankruptcy courts, such that the
term ‘‘courts or other public authorities’’
is necessary.
In response to this request, several
commenters noted that they are not
aware of any such authorities and
encouraged the Board to eliminate the
reference to ‘‘other public authorities’’
from the proposed rule. Other
commenters suggested that the Board
retain the phrase, even though they did
not identify other contexts in which fees
that are not contingent on a result of a
‘‘product or service’’ are nevertheless
subject to approval by a court or other
public authority.24 After considering
these comments, the Board has decided
to retain the exception for fees that
require approval of ‘‘courts or other
public authorities.’’ The Board
envisions that there may be fee approval
schemes outside the U.S. that are
analogous to U.S. bankruptcy law.
Although Rule 3521 and the related
definition of ‘‘contingent fee’’ are
modeled on the SEC’s independence
rules, as discussed in the Board’s
proposing release, they differ from those
rules in that the Board’s rules do not
include the SEC’s exception for fees ‘‘in
tax matters, if determined based on the
results of judicial proceedings or the
findings of governmental agencies.’’ 25
As discussed in the Board’s proposing
release, this exception may have been
misinterpreted in the past and is largely
redundant of the exception for fees fixed
by courts or other public authorities.26
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23 11 U.S.C. 328(a) (providing that, with a court’s
approval, a bankruptcy trustee may employ a
professional person ‘‘on any reasonable terms and
conditions of employment, including on a retainer,
on a fixed or percentage fee basis, or on a
contingent fee basis’’).
24 One commenter suggested that arbitration
panels should be captured in the final rule as an
example of ‘‘courts or other public authorities’’ that
may approve auditor fees. The Board is not aware,
and the commenter did not appear to suggest, that
any arbitration panels currently have authority, by
contract or law, to approve the payment of fees to
accountants. Therefore, the Board has not expanded
the exception to include fees fixed by arbitration
panels. Nevertheless, if an arbitration panel were by
contract given the authority to approve accountants’
fees, such fees would be permissible under the
Board’s rule so long as the determination of the fee
was not contingent on the result of a product or
service.
25 17 CFR 210.2–01(f)(10). By eliminating this
exception from its rule, the Board expresses no
view on any firm’s compliance with Rule 2–01 of
the Commission’s Regulation S–X. See 17 CFR
210.2–01(c)(5).
26 As the SEC Chief Accountant has stated, the
SEC’s ‘‘tax matters’’ exception only permits fee
arrangements where the determination of the fee is
‘‘taken out of the hands of the accounting firm and
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For these reasons, proposed Rule 3521
would eliminate this exception. The few
commenters who addressed this issue
agreed with the Board’s reasoning and
the elimination of this exception.
Therefore, the Board’s final rule does
not include an exception for tax matters
in which an auditor’s fee agreement is
based on the results of judicial
proceedings or the findings of
governmental agencies.
In addition, Rule 3521 treats a firm as
not independent of an audit client if it
receives a contingent fee or commission
from that client ‘‘directly or indirectly.’’
The rule’s use of the term ‘‘indirectly’’
is meant to prevent arrangements for a
fee from any person that is contingent
on a finding or result attained by the
audit client. The Board’s determination
to include such fees within the
prohibition is based on the principle
that, regardless of who pays the
contingent fee, such a contingency gives
an auditor a stake in the audit client
attaining the finding or result.
Accordingly, under Rule 3521, it does
not matter who pays the contingent fee,
if it is contingent on a finding or result
attained by the audit client or otherwise
related to the firm’s services for the
audit client. That is, while use of an
intermediary to disguise an audit
client’s agreement to a contingent fee is
certainly prohibited, the rule is not
limited to circumstances in which a
contingent fee may be traced (e.g.,
through an intermediary) to an
agreement or payment by an audit
client.
Comparable to the SEC’s
independence rules, proposed Rule
3521 treats contingent fee arrangements
between a registered firm’s affiliates and
the registered firm’s audit clients as
relevant to the firm’s independence.27
its audit client * * *., with the result that the
accounting firm and client are less likely to share
a mutual financial interest in the outcome of the
firm’s advice or service.’’ Letter from Donald T.
Nicolaisen, Chief Accountant, U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission, to Bruce P. Webb,
Professional Ethics Executive Committee Chair,
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
(May 21, 2004), available at https://www.sec.gov/
info/accountants/staffletters/webb052104.htm
(hereinafter ‘‘Nicolaisen Letter’’).
27 The rule does so by providing that the firm is
not independent if it ‘‘or any affiliate of the firm
* * * provides any service or product to the audit
client for a contingent fee or a commission, or
receives from the audit client, directly or indirectly,
a contingent fee or commission.’’ The scope of the
rule is intended to be the same as the scope of the
Commission’s rule, which defines the terms
‘‘accountant’’ and ‘‘accounting firm’’ to include
such affiliates. Because registration with the Board
is the basis for the Board’s authority over an
accountant, the rules would treat those persons that
are related to a registered public accounting firm
and satisfy the Commission’s definition of
‘‘accounting firm,’’ but are not registered firms
themselves, as ‘‘affiliates of the accounting firm.’’
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The inclusion of such affiliates within
the scope of those persons whose
activities may impair the independence
of a firm from an audit client is
intended to prevent frustration of the
rule’s purpose through the use of firm
subsidiaries and other affiliates.28 The
rule is not intended to, and does not,
impose any requirements on affiliates of
firms per se. Nonetheless, the conduct
of an affiliate of the firm can cause the
registered firm not to be independent in
the situations specified in the rules.
Finally, one accounting firm
commented that Rule 3521 should
prohibit value-added fees because such
fees could be used in lieu of contingent
fees to achieve a similar effect as
contingent fees. Fees that function as
contingent fee arrangements are already
prohibited under the SEC’s rule against
contingent fees,29 and thus under the
Board’s final rule as well, whether such
fees are labeled contingent fees, valueadded fees, or otherwise. The SEC has
indicated that it will closely monitor the
use of value-added fees ‘‘to determine
whether a fee labeled a ‘‘value added’’
fee is in fact a contingent fee, such as
where there are side letters or other
evidence that ties the fee to the success
of the services rendered,’’ 30 and the
Thus, Rule 3501(a)(i) would adapt the
Commission’s definition of the term ‘‘accounting
firm’’ to define the term ‘‘affiliate of the accounting
firm’’ as ‘‘the accounting firm’s parents,
subsidiaries, pension, retirement, investment or
similar plans, and any associated entities of the
firm, as that term is used in Rule 2–01 of the
Commission’s Regulation S–X, 17 CFR 210.2–
01(f)(2).’’
28 See, e.g., In re PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, &
PricewaterhouseCoopers Securities LLC, Exchange
Act Release No. 46216 (July 17, 2002), available at
https://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/34–46216.htm
(finding an auditing firm and an affiliate under the
control of the firm in violation of Commission
requirements because the affiliate performed
investment banking services for the firm’s audit
clients for contingent fees); In KPMG, LLP v.
Securities & Exch. Comm’n, 289 F.3d 109 (D.C. Cir.
2002), the D.C. Circuit Court declined to find KPMG
in violation of the AICPA’s rule against contingent
fees, where KPMG only indirectly received a
contingent royalty from an audit client, through an
associated entity of the firm. The Board’s rules
should be understood, however, to treat such an
arrangement as an impairment of a registered firm’s
independence.
29 See Revision of the Commission’s Auditor
Independence Requirements, SEC Release No. 33–
7919, § IV.D.5 (Nov. 21, 2000), 17 CFR parts 210
and 240. Indeed, the SEC staff has cautioned audit
committees against approving— any agreement ‘‘
from a direct contract provision to ‘‘a wink and a
nod’’—that provides for the possible additional
payment of a ‘value added’ fee based on the results
of an accounting firm’s performance of a tax or
other service [that] would be viewed as impairing
the firm’s independence. In addition, an audit
committee should consider carefully the impact on
an accounting firm’s independence of the
possibility of even a completely voluntary payment
of a ‘‘value added’’ fee by an audit client to the firm.
Nicolaisen Letter, supra note 25.
30 See Revision of the Commission’s Auditor
Independence Requirements, SEC Release No. 33–
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Board intends to do so as well before,
if necessary, considering additional
rulemaking.
Rule 3522—Aggressive Tax Positions
Rule 3522 is intended to describe a
class of tax-motivated transactions that
present an unacceptable risk of
impairing an auditor’s independence if
the auditor markets, plans, or opines in
favor of, such a transaction. As
discussed in the Board’s proposing
release, such conduct has seriously
damaged investors’ confidence in the
judgment, objectivity, and ethics of
firms that engage in such transactions.
Further, aggressive tax positions carry a
high risk that taxing authorities will not
allow the position taken by the auditor
and the audit client. As the SEC Chief
Accountant noted in the context of
contingent fees, ‘‘the fact that a
government agency might challenge the
amount of the client’s tax savings * * *
heightens * * * the mutuality of
interest between the firm and client.’’ 31
As proposed, Rule 3522 treated a firm
as not independent of its audit client if
the firm, or an affiliate of the firm,
provided services related to planning, or
opining on the tax consequences of a
transaction that is a listed or
confidential transaction under U.S.
Department of Treasury (‘‘Treasury’’)
regulations or that promoted an
interpretation of applicable tax laws for
which there is inadequate support. In
order to describe such transactions in a
manner that is clear and consistent with
existing constructs for analyzing taxoriented transactions, the rule is
adapted from certain Treasury
regulations and from the SEC’s release
accompanying its 2003 independence
rules.
Commenters generally supported the
notion that auditors should not provide
tax services involving aggressive tax
positions to their audit clients. They
also supported the scope of Rule 3522,
which as proposed covered listed
transactions, confidential transactions,
and other aggressive transactions. A
number of commenters made
suggestions to make the rule text clearer,
however, and after considering such
comments the Board has modified the
rule in several respects.
First, several commenters suggested
that the rule should make clear that it
does not prohibit auditors from advising
audit clients not to engage in an
aggressive transaction. Rule 3522 was
not intended to prevent such advice, so
in response to these comments the
7919, § IV.D.5 (Nov. 21, 2000), 17 CFR parts 210
and 240.
31 Nicolaisen Letter, supra 25.
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Board has modified the rule to make
clear the prohibition on opining on
aggressive transactions is limited to
‘‘opining in favor of the tax treatment
of’’ such transactions (emphasis added).
Thus, auditors are permitted to advise
against an audit client’s execution of an
aggressive tax transaction.32 However,
Rule 3522 prohibits an opinion that a
transaction does not satisfy the morelikely-than-not standard but does satisfy
a lower standard of confidence.
Similarly, the rule prohibits advice that
an audit client will ‘‘probably’’ lose an
argument in favor of a tax treatment,
because such advice can imply up to a
49-percent chance of success.
In addition, as recommended by one
commenter, given recent concerns about
accounting firms establishing marketing
centers to sell tax shelter products, the
Board has added the term ‘‘marketing’’
to the list of activities that compromise
an auditor’s independence. That is,
under Rule 3522, as adopted, an auditor
may not market an aggressive tax
transaction to an audit client, in
addition to being prohibited from
‘‘planning, or opining in favor of the tax
treatment of,’’ such a transaction.
Finally, proposed Rule 3522(a)’s
prohibition on auditors’ involvement in
listed transactions has been moved to
become a part of the prohibition on
involvement in aggressive tax position
transactions, in light of the overlap of
the two provisions and also in light of
questions regarding whether the
prohibition on listed transactions could
apply in the context of a non-U.S. tax
regime. Accordingly, Rule 3522 now
provides for two categories of
prohibitions related to aggressive tax
transactions, whereas, as proposed, it
had provided for three such categories.
These two categories, as well as
modifications of their proposed
versions, are discussed below.
Rule 3522(b)—Aggressive Tax Position
Transactions 33
Rule 3522(b) would treat a registered
firm as not independent if the firm, or
32 In addition, a number of commenters asked for
clarification of the scope of Rule 3522’s prohibition
against ‘‘opining’’ on an aggressive transaction. The
Board does not intend the rule to encompass the
auditor’s opinion on the fairness of financial
statements that reflect the accounting for a
transaction that an audit client has executed.
Rather, Rule 3522 is intended to prevent auditors
from facilitating clients’ execution of aggressive
transactions by, among other things, providing
auditors’ written tax opinions that protect the audit
client from the assertion of penalties by tax
authorities or courts.
33 As proposed, this provision was entitled
‘‘aggressive tax positions.’’ One commenter
questioned whether this title was intended to
expand the scope of this provision beyond
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an affiliate of the firm, provided an
audit client any service related to
marketing, planning, or opining in favor
of the tax treatment of, a transaction that
satisfies three criteria—
• The transaction was initially
recommended, directly or indirectly, by
the firm;
• A significant purpose of the
transaction is tax avoidance; and
• The proposed tax treatment of the
transaction is not at least more likely
than not to be allowed under applicable
tax laws.
Rule 3522(b) is adapted from the
SEC’s guidance to audit committees in
its release accompanying its 2003
independence rules, which cautioned
that audit committees should
‘‘scrutinize carefully’’ the retention of
the auditor ‘‘in a transaction initially
recommended by the accountant, the
sole business purpose of which may be
tax avoidance and the tax treatment of
which may be not supported in the
Internal Revenue Code and related
regulations.’’ 34 The rule builds on this
guidance from the perspective of the
auditor, by providing that a registered
firm is not independent of its audit
client if the firm, or an affiliate of the
firm, participates in such a transaction.
The first prong of the rule’s test looks
for transactions that the auditing firm—
directly or indirectly, e.g., through an
affiliate, through or with another tax
advisor with which the firm has an
arrangement, or otherwise—initially
recommended to the audit client. In this
manner, the rule excludes from its scope
those transactions that the audit client
itself, or a party other than a tax advisor
with which the firm has an
arrangement 35 (e.g., an acquiring
corporation), initiated. The term
‘‘initially recommended’’ is intended to
be a test based on fact. Thus, the prong
would be satisfied, notwithstanding a
representation from the audit client that
the audit client initiated the
development of the transaction,36 if the
auditor had knowledge that the auditor,
its affiliate, or another tax advisor with
which the firm has an arrangement,
initially recommended it. As proposed,
the rule would have looked for
transactions that were ‘‘initially
recommended by the registered public
accounting firm or another tax advisor.’’
Some commenters expressed concern
that an auditor might not be in a
position to know whether another tax
advisor with no relationship to the
auditor had recommended a transaction.
In response to these comments, the
Board has modified the first prong of
Rule 3522(b) to make clear that auditors
are only responsible for ascertaining
whether the firm, one of its affiliates, or
another tax advisor with which the firm
has a formal agreement or other
arrangement related to the promotion of
such a transaction, initially
recommended the transaction.37
The second and third prongs of Rule
3522(b) incorporate concepts that have
existing meaning and relevance to tax
advisors. The second prong of the test
set forth in Rule 3522(b) uses the phrase
‘‘significant purpose of which is tax
avoidance,’’ adapted from the Internal
Revenue Code.38 The term ‘‘tax
avoidance’’ should be understood to
include acceleration of deductions into
earlier taxable years and deferral of
income to later taxable years. A few
commenters noted that the test whether
a significant purpose of a transaction is
tax avoidance appears to be a low
threshold that could encompass any
plan to reduce taxes, and some of those
commenters suggested that the Board
raise that threshold. The Board intends
for the threshold to be low, however,
and therefore has not used terms that
might seem to establish a higher
threshold, such as requiring an
evaluation of whether the ‘‘sole
purpose’’ of a transaction is tax
avoidance.
In addition, the rule uses the term
‘‘more likely than not to be allowable
transactions. In addition, the commenter noted that
the term ‘‘transaction’’ was consistent with
Treasury regulations. In response to this comment,
the Board has re-titled this provision to be
‘‘aggressive tax position transactions.’’
34 Strengthening the Commission’s Requirements
Regarding Auditor Independence, at § II.B.11 (Jan.
28, 2003).
35 The term ‘‘tax advisor’’ is not intended to
denote a group with a certain license or
professional status, but rather to cover any person,
other than the client, that recommends a tax
transaction to the client.
36 Two commenters indicated that, as they
interpreted the term ‘‘transaction,’’ an auditor’s tax
services in connection with, for example, a merger
transaction that was initiated by the client or
another company, would not come within the ambit
of Rule 3522(b), because the auditor would not have
recommended the merger transaction itself. This is
not a fair interpretation of the rule and indeed
would thwart its purpose.
37 See Rule 3522(b), Note 2. The term ‘‘formal
agreement or other arrangement’’ in Note 2 relates
only to relationships a registered firm may have
with a tax advisor that is not already an affiliate of
the firm.
38 The Internal Revenue Code treats transactions
with respect to which a ‘‘significant purpose * * *
is the avoidance or evasion of Federal income tax’’
as tax shelters, for purposes of determining whether
an adequate disclosure defense is available for the
substantial understatement penalty. See 26 U.S.C.
6662(d)(2)(C) (amended by the Jobs Act; see also 26
U.S.C. 6662A(b)(2)(B) (imposing 20-percent penalty
on understatements of tax in connection with ‘‘any
reportable transaction (other than a listed
transaction) if a significant purpose of such
transaction is the avoidance or evasion of Federal
income tax’’).
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under applicable tax laws,’’ which is the
standard certain taxpayers must meet,
under Treasury regulations, to avoid
penalties for substantial understatement
of income tax in connection with a tax
shelter.39 This test is based, in part, on
the Board’s observation of some firms’
policies that rely on the ‘‘more likely
than not’’ standard to approve the firm’s
involvement in providing tax services
relating to a transaction initiated by the
firm. The rule also uses this standard
because a tax treatment that is not
‘‘more likely than not’’ to be allowed
poses a significantly higher risk of being
challenged by taxing authorities, such
that a mutuality of interest between the
auditor and the audit client could
arise.40 Moreover, the rule uses this
standard, as opposed to a higher
standard, in recognition of the fact that
tax laws may often be complex and
subject to differing good faith
interpretations.41
In order to satisfy Rule 3522(b)’s
‘‘more likely than not’’ standard, a
registered public accounting firm must
establish, based on an analysis of the
pertinent facts and authorities, that
there is a greater than 50-percent
likelihood that the tax treatment of the
transaction would, if challenged, be
upheld.42 To satisfy this test, an
auditor’s analysis must be objectively
reasonable and well-founded at the time
the analysis is conducted. The Board
would not, however, treat an auditor as
39 See
26 CFR 1.6664–4(f).
commenters noted that, while the term
‘‘more likely than not’’ is well-understood in the
context of evaluating U.S. tax advice, it has not
been used in non-U.S. contexts. One of these
commenters also noted that this standard may be
hard to judge in jurisdictions in which the rule of
law does not always prevail. After considering these
comments, the Board has determined to maintain
the ‘‘more likely than not standard,’’ because it is
an objective standard that may be applied in
contexts outside the U.S. even where it has not
applied to-date. Further, the Board notes that
foreign private issuers ordinarily file U.S. tax
returns and therefore are already expected to
comply—and be familiar with—U.S. tax laws and
regulations.
41 A few commenters recommended that the
Board use a standard higher than ‘‘more likely than
not,’’ on the ground that there is some evidence that
some accounting firms that used the ‘‘more likely
than not’’ standard in the past have not adhered to
it. While the Board is concerned about the record
on this issue, the Board has determined not to use
a higher standard at this time. The Board intends
to monitor compliance with the rule through its
inspections of registered public accounting firms
and will consider revising the rule in the future, if
that monitoring or other evidence reveals that the
rule is not achieving its intended purpose.
42 Cf. 26 CFR 1.6664–4(f)(2)(i)(B)(1) (incorporating
by reference methodology set forth in 26 CFR
1.6662–4(d)(3)(ii) for analysis of whether a tax
treatment has ‘‘substantial authority’’ or, in the case
of tax shelters, is ‘‘more likely than not’’ the proper
treatment, for purposes of determining whether a
penalty may be due on a substantial understatement
of income tax).
40 Some
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not independent if the law changed after
the service was provided or if the tax
treatment simply turned out to be not
allowed, despite the auditor’s
reasonable judgment before the ultimate
resolution of a tax claim or other
dispute.
Rule 3522(b) does not require a
registered public accounting firm to
obtain a third-party opinion that a tax
treatment is ‘‘more likely than not’’ to be
allowed under applicable tax laws. On
the contrary, while a firm may decide
for its own reasons to obtain a thirdparty opinion, such an opinion would
not relieve the firm of its obligation to
form its own judgment on the likelihood
of a proposed tax treatment to be
allowed.43
Finally, although the SEC’s release
accompanying its 2003 independence
rules cautioned audit committees to
scrutinize situations in which a
proposed tax treatment might not be
supported ‘‘in the Internal Revenue
Code and related regulations,’’ the
proposed rule would use the term
‘‘applicable tax laws’’ in recognition of
the variety of tax laws and regulations,
including Federal, state, local, foreign,
and other tax laws, that may be the
subject of tax services. For this reason,
and in response to questions from
several commenters, the Board also
incorporated its proposed prohibition
on auditors providing tax services in
connection with transactions that are
listed by the IRS into Rule 3522(b). That
is, IRS listing is one example of
aggressive tax transactions covered by
the rule.
Accordingly, the prohibition on
advising in favor of listed transactions,
which was proposed as Rule 3522(a),
has been moved to a note to what is now
Rule 3522(b). Specifically, Note 1 to
Rule 3522(b) treats a registered public
accounting firm as not independent of
its audit client if the firm, or any
affiliate of the firm, provided services
related to marketing, planning, or
opining in favor of the tax treatment of,
a listed transaction. Under Treasury
regulations, a listed transaction is ‘‘a
43 Treasury regulations permit corporations to
avoid penalties for substantial understatement of
income taxes in connection with tax shelters if they
‘‘reasonably rel[y] in good faith on the opinion of
a professional tax advisor, if the opinion is based
on the tax advisor’s analysis of the pertinent facts
and authorities * * * and unambiguously states
that the tax advisor concludes that there is a greater
than 50-percent likelihood that the tax treatment of
the item will be upheld if challenged by the Internal
Revenue Service.’’ 20 CFR 1.6664–4(f)(2)(i)(B)(2).
Rule 3522(b) would not permit registered public
accounting firms, who themselves serve as tax
advisors, to rely on other tax advisors to satisfy the
rule’s standard because registered firms that
provide tax services are themselves in a position to
perform such an analysis.
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transaction that is the same as or
substantially similar to one of the types
of transactions that the IRS has
determined to be a tax avoidance
transaction and identified by notice,
regulation, or other form of published
guidance as a listed transaction.’’ 44 The
IRS uses its listing process to identify
and publish a list of transactions that
tax promoters and advisors have
developed and sold to clients but that,
in the IRS’s view, do not comply with
applicable laws. Thus, the Treasury’s
regulation on ‘‘listed transactions’’
identifies a class of transactions that, in
the Board’s view, carries an
unacceptable risk of disallowance,
which in turn create an unacceptable
risk of establishing a mutuality of
interest between the auditor and the
audit client if the auditor participated in
marketing, planning, or opining in favor
of the tax treatment of a transaction that
impairs independence. By referring to
this class of transactions, Note 1 to Rule
3522(b) incorporates an existing
framework that auditors who serve as
tax advisors already follow in their tax
practices and that is highly likely to
remain current since the Treasury and
the IRS regularly update guidance
related to listed transactions.45
As discussed above, the Board’s
proposed prohibition on auditor
involvement in transactions that are
‘‘listed’’ by the IRS has been moved to
a note to Rule 3522(b). By definition, a
listed transaction is not ‘‘more likely
than not to be allowable under
applicable tax laws’’ at the time the
auditor advises on it. Because the risk
of IRS or other scrutiny of listed
transactions, including transactions that
are substantially similar to listed
transactions,46 is high, tax advisors and
taxpayers tend not to enter into such
44 See,
e.g., 26 CFR 1.6011–4(b)(2).
IRS updates the list of listed transactions
by issuing a listing notice, both adding to and
removing transactions from the list of listed
transactions. See, e.g., IRS Notice No. 2004–67,
2004–41 I.R.B. 600. Some commenters questioned
whether the Board should effectively incorporate
the IRS’s changes to its list into the Board’s rule on
aggressive transactions. This is, indeed, the Board’s
intention. To freeze the IRS’s list as of the date of
the Board’s final rule, or to establish a system of
reviewing the IRS’s list as it is updated, might
permit auditors to provide tax services in favor of
listed transactions notwithstanding that the IRS had
identified those transactions as potentially abusive.
Such a system would thwart the underlying intent
of the Board’s rule.
46 By its terms, the Treasury regulation requiring
reporting of listed transactions makes clear that the
definition of ‘‘listed transaction’’ includes
transactions that have been listed by the IRS as well
as transactions that are ‘‘substantially similar’’ to
such transactions. By expressly referring to the
Treasury’s regulation on listed transactions, the
Board intends Rule 3522(b) to encompass such
substantially similar transactions that are included
in the Treasury’s regulation.
45 The
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transactions once they are listed. In light
of this fact, when it proposed this rule,
the Board sought comment on whether
the rule should treat an auditor as not
independent if a transaction planned or
opined on by the auditor subsequently
became listed. In general, commenters
recommended against adopting a per se
rule that subsequent listing of such a
transaction impaired an auditor’s
independence with respect to either the
period in which the transaction was
executed or in subsequent periods. The
Board agrees that such a per se rule
would not be appropriate, but as
discussed below, firms should
nevertheless be cautious in participating
in transactions that they believe could
become listed.
Even if a firm were independent at the
time a transaction was executed,
because it reasonably and correctly
concluded the transaction was not the
same as, or substantially similar to, a
listed transaction, once a transaction is
actually listed (or a substantially similar
transaction becomes listed), a firm that
has participated in the transaction may
find its independence impaired due to
the mutuality of interest caused by the
listing. That is, depending on the
circumstances, a firm’s independence
may become impaired in some cases
after a transaction planned or opined on
by the firm becomes listed. In such
cases, the auditor should carefully
consider the potential impairment of its
independence with the audit committee
of its audit client.47 For example, once
a transaction is listed, either the audit
client or the firm, or both, may be
required to defend the tax treatment of
the transaction and, in some cases, pay
penalties. In addition, the firm may face
liability to the audit client related to the
firm’s tax advice. The auditor’s
judgment regarding appropriate
financial reporting and disclosure
concerning a transaction that becomes
listed could become biased by the
auditor’s vested interests in defending
its tax advice.
Some auditors commented that they
would prefer a bright-line rule
providing that, so long as a transaction
recommended by the firm was not listed
at the time it was executed, subsequent
listing cannot impair an auditor’s
independence later in time, when the
auditor is called on to defend its earlier
47 According to ISB Standard No. 1, which is
incorporated in the Board’s Rule 3600T interim
independence standards, at least annually, an
auditor must ‘‘disclose to the audit committee of the
company (or the board of directors if there is no
audit committee), in writing, all relationships
between the auditor and its related entities and the
company and its related entities that in the
auditor’s professional judgment may reasonably be
thought to bear on independence.’’
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tax advice. Such a bright-line rule,
however, would do little to address
circumstances in which, because of IRS
scrutiny after execution of the
transaction, the auditor’s interest in the
client’s successful defense of the
transaction becomes heightened to the
point where the auditor can no longer
be impartial about the financial
statement presentation of the
transaction. That said, as some
commenters noted, existing
independence requirements address
these kinds of circumstances, and thus
the Board has determined not to expand
Rule 3522(b) either to retroactively
deem an auditor not independent upon
subsequent listing of a transaction or to
deem an auditor not independent per se
in the period in which such a
transaction becomes listed.
Rule 3522(a)—Confidential Transactions
The Treasury has identified
transactions with tax-advisor imposed
conditions of confidentiality as
potentially abusive. By regulation, the
Treasury requires taxpayers to disclose
to the IRS transactions in which a tax
advisor ‘‘places a limitation on
disclosure by the taxpayer of the tax
treatment or tax structure of the
transaction and the limitation on
disclosure protects the confidentiality of
that advisor’s tax strategies.’’ 48 Taxadvisor imposed confidentiality may
also be indicative of a tax product that
a tax advisor intends to market to
multiple customers, thus necessitating
commitments by customers to treat the
tax treatment or structure of the
advisor’s product as confidential.
As discussed in the proposing release,
the Board is concerned that marketing,
planning, or opining in favor of tax
products that require confidentiality in
order that they may be offered to
multiple clients contributes to the
erosion of public confidence in the
ethics and integrity of such firms. A
reasonable investor easily could infer
that the auditor has a vested interest in
advocating to the IRS the tax treatment
it promoted, or helped to promote, to
multiple clients and perpetuating that
treatment in the audit client’s financial
statements. Based on these concerns,
Rule 3522(a) treats a registered public
accounting firm as not independent of
its audit client if the firm, or an affiliate
of the firm, provided services related to
marketing, planning, or opining in favor
of the tax treatment of a transaction for
an audit client under terms that satisfy
the definition of ‘‘confidential
transaction,’’ as defined by Rule
3501(c)(i), which is adapted from the
48 26
CFR 1.6011–4(b)(3)(ii).
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Treasury’s regulation requiring tax
advisors to report confidential
transactions.49
It should be noted that, Rule
3501(c)(i) defines confidential
transactions in terms of confidentiality
restrictions imposed by tax advisors
generally, not specifically auditors.
Therefore, whereas under Rule 3522(b)
a transaction that is initially
recommended by a tax advisor other
than the auditor or an affiliate of the
auditor unless the tax advisor has an
arrangement with the auditor does not
fall within the first prong of the rule,
Rule 3522(a) prohibits an auditor from
marketing, planning, or opining in favor
of a confidential transaction whether the
applicable terms of confidentiality are
imposed by the auditor or by another
tax advisor, acting independently of the
auditor.
Commenters generally supported the
Board’s proposed prohibition on
confidential transactions. Although
some commenters expressed the view
that tax advisors might impose
conditions of confidentiality for reasons
other than the ability to market the
proposed transaction to multiple clients,
other commenters agreed that auditors
should not become involved in
transactions subject to tax-advisor
imposed confidentiality restrictions.
49 26 CFR 1.6011–4(b)(3) (2005). The proposed
version of this rule incorporated the Treasury’s
definition of the term ‘‘confidential transaction’’ by
reference. A number of commenters noted generally
that incorporation of this Treasury regulation by
reference could lead to unintended changes to the
Board’s rules if the Treasury amends those
regulations (or the IRS amends its list of listed
transactions). As discussed above, the Board
intends for its prohibition on auditors’ involvement
as tax advisors in audit clients’ execution of listed
transactions to be kept current by changes to the
IRS’s list. Upon further consideration, unlike the
Board’s prohibition on listed transactions, the
Board has determined that it may not be
appropriate for any changes the Treasury may make
to its definition of ‘‘confidential transaction’’ to
automatically be reflected in the Board’s
prohibition on auditors’ involvement in such a
transaction. The definition of ‘‘confidential
transaction’’ in Rule 3501(c)(i) is intended to be the
same as the current Treasury regulation, except for
the minimum fee requirement.
The proposed version of the rule did not
incorporate the Treasury’s minimum fee exception
to its regulation on confidential transactions. That
is, Treasury Regulation 1.6011–4(b)(3)(i) provides
that ‘‘a confidential transaction is a transaction that
is offered to a taxpayer under conditions of
confidentiality and for which the taxpayer has paid
an advisor a minimum fee.’’ 26 CFR 1.6011–4(b)(3)
(2005). Under the regulation, the ‘‘minimum fee’’ is
$250,000 for corporate taxpayers (and partnerships
and trusts in which all of the owners or
beneficiaries are corporations) and $50,000 for all
other transactions. Id. 26 CFR 1.6011–4(b)(3)(iii).
Although some commenters suggested that the
Board should adopt the minimum fee exception, the
Board understands the IRS disclosure rules to serve
a different purpose than Rule 3522(a). Accordingly,
the Board has not adopted a minimum fee
exception in its final rule either.
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One accounting firm commenter also
noted that, even if a transaction were
not potentially abusive, the fact that
there is a disclosure limitation is likely
to create a negative impression
concerning the objectivity of the
auditor.
In addition, a few commenters
suggested that the rule be limited to
circumstances in which terms of
confidentiality are imposed with respect
to the U.S. tax treatment of a
transaction. After carefully considering
these comments, the Board has
determined not to modify the scope of
the rule. Tax-advisor imposed
conditions of confidentiality facilitate
aggressive selling of novel tax ideas that
pose too great a risk of impairing the
objectivity of auditors who market, plan,
or opine in favor of them. Further, the
rule continues to permit audit clients
themselves to impose conditions of
confidentiality in connection with
transactions on which auditors may
provide tax advice, and this fact appears
to adequately serve audit clients’ needs
to maintain appropriate confidentiality.
Finally, there does not appear to be a
reasoned basis to limit the prohibition
on confidential transactions to proposed
tax treatments under U.S. tax laws.
Rule 3523—Tax Services for Persons in
Financial Reporting Oversight Roles
Rule 3523 provides that a registered
public accounting firm is not
independent of an audit client if the
firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during
the audit and professional engagement
period, provides any tax service to a
member of management in a financial
reporting oversight role at the audit
client.50 As discussed in the Board’s
proposing release, this rule addresses
concerns that performing tax services
for certain individuals involved in the
financial reporting processes of an audit
client creates an appearance of a mutual
50 The rule’s use of the term ‘‘financial reporting
oversight role’’ is based on the Commission’s
definition of ‘‘financial reporting oversight role,’’
which includes any person who has direct
responsibility for oversight over those who prepare
the issuer’s financial statements and related
information (for example, management’s discussion
and analysis) that are included in filings with the
Commission. See Strengthening the Commission’s
Requirements Regarding Auditor Independence, at
§ II.A. The Commission uses the term ‘‘financial
reporting oversight role’’ to describe those positions
that are covered by the Act’s ‘‘cooling off’’ period,
during which a public company would not be
independent from its audit firm if a member of the
engagement team for the audit of that company
assumed such a position. See Sarbanes-Oxley Act
of 2002, § 206, 17 CFR 210.2–01(f)(3)(ii). The term
‘‘financial reporting oversight role’’ as defined in
Rule 3501(f)(i) mirrors verbatim the SEC’s
definition of the same term in Rule 2–01 of
Regulation S–X. 17 CFR 210.2–01(f)(3)(ii).
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interest between the auditor and those
individuals.
The Board received varied comments
on Rule 3523. Some commenters,
including groups representing investors
and issuers, as well as several large
accounting firms, supported the
proposed rule on the ground that it is
necessary to preserve the objectivity,
and the appearance of objectivity, of
auditors. Other commenters, however,
including a number of smaller
accounting firms, accounting
associations, and a few issuers, claimed
that the rule is not necessary, that these
services have long been provided, and
that auditors should be allowed to
provide senior financial management of
issuers with the same types of tax
services the auditor may provide the
issuer. After carefully considering these
comments, the Board has determined to
adopt the rule, with a few
modifications. The Board continues to
believe that the provision of tax services
by the auditor to the senior management
responsible for the audit client’s
financial reporting creates an
unacceptable appearance of the auditor
and such senior management having a
mutual interest.
The Board also received a number of
comments on specific aspects of the
proposed rule. For example, some
commenters expressed confusion as to
whether Rule 3523 is intended to apply
to directors, in part because the
definition of ‘‘financial reporting
oversight role’’ includes directors. In
response to these comments, the Board
has modified the rule to exclude
directors more explicitly. Thus, the rule
no longer uses the term ‘‘officer’’—
which is how the proposed rule
narrowed the scope to exclude
directors—and instead includes an
explicit exception for any person who
serves in a financial reporting oversight
role ‘‘only because he or she serves as
a member of the board of directors or
similar management or governing body
of the audit client.’’ 51
The Board also included a second
exception in Rule 3523(b) in response to
comments regarding whether the rule
should apply to persons who serve in a
financial reporting oversight role at an
affiliate of an issuer. After considering
these comments, the Board has
determined not to restrict auditors’
provision of tax services to employees
in a financial reporting oversight role at
an affiliate of an audit client, so long as
the financial statements of the affiliate
are not material to the financial
statements of the audit client or are
audited by an auditor other than the
51 Rule
3523(a).
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firm or an associated person of the firm.
This exception is intended to exclude
executives of affiliates that do not
contribute to the consolidated financial
statements of the audit client. The Board
does not believe that auditors’
relationships with executives of
immaterial affiliates, or affiliates whose
financial statements are audited by an
auditor other than the firm or an
associated person of the firm, pose as
great a risk to auditors’ impartiality
regarding an audit clients’ consolidated
financial statements as do auditors’
provision of tax services to executives
involved in the consolidated financial
reporting of the client.
The first part of this exception, Rule
3523(b)(i), excludes persons in a
financial reporting oversight role at
immaterial affiliates of the entity being
audited. This exception would
encompass, among others, executives of
most affiliates within the same
investment company complex as the
audited entity and executives of upstream affiliates of the audited entity.
The second part of this exception, Rule
3523(b)(ii), excludes executives in
financial reporting oversight roles of a
subsidiary of an audit client that is not
audited by the firm or any firm that is
an associated person of the firm, as
defined by PCAOB Rule 1001. On the
other hand, executives in financial
reporting oversight roles at a material
subsidiary whose financial statements
are audited by a firm that is an
associated person of the registered firm
would be subject to Rule 3523. For
purposes of Rule 3523(b)(ii), the term
‘‘audited’’ should be understood to
include audit procedures that contribute
to the firm’s preparation or issuance of
an audit report on an audit client’s
consolidated financial statements,
whether or not such procedures result
in an audit opinion on the affiliate’s
financial statements.
Some commenters also expressed
concern that the rule could impose an
undue hardship on persons who become
subject to the rule because they are
hired or promoted into a financial
reporting oversight role at an audit
client. To address that concern, the
Board determined to create a timelimited exception to the rule to cover
such situations. Specifically, the Board
has determined to add a new exception
to the rule that applies to a person who
was not in a financial reporting
oversight role at the audit client before
a hiring, promotion, or other change in
employment event, when the tax
services are both: (1) Provided pursuant
to an engagement that was in process
before the hiring, promotion, or other
change in employment event; and (2)
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completed on or before 180 days after
the hiring or promotion event.52 The
Board will treat engagements as ‘‘in
process’’ if an engagement letter has
been executed and substantive work on
the engagement has commenced; the
Board will not treat engagements as ‘‘in
process’’ during negotiations on the
scope and fee for a service.
Some commenters also suggested that,
as proposed, Rule 3523 could invite
persons subject to the rule to evade the
rule by using the auditor’s tax services
through an immediate family member or
through an entity controlled by the
person. In response to this comment, the
Board has added to the scope of the rule
immediate family members of persons
who are covered by the rule.53
In addition, some commenters
suggested that the rule be expanded to
cover all non-audit services, such as
services involving investment, personal
financial planning, and executive
compensation, on the ground that any
such services provided to those in a
financial reporting oversight role create
a perception of a mutuality of interest
between auditors and those members of
management who receive such
services.54 Other commenters suggested
that the rule be expanded to include
persons who do not play a financial
reporting oversight role but nevertheless
play a key role in operations, such as
vice presidents of sales.55 Other
52 Rule
3523(c).
Board also has added a definition of
‘‘immediate family member,’’ adapted from the
SEC’s definition in its independence rules.
Compare Rule 3501(i)(i) with 17 CFR 210.2–
01(f)(13). The Board has not included entities
controlled by persons in financial reporting
oversight roles, such as trusts and investment
partnerships. The Board notes, however, that an
auditor who provides services to an entity
controlled by a person in a financial reporting
oversight role of an audit client should consider
whether, under ISB Standard No. 1, it is necessary
to notify the client’s audit committee of such
services.
54 Some commenters asked for clarification of
whether persons in a financial reporting oversight
role could seek the assistance of the registered
public accounting firm that prepared the original
tax return to assist them in responding to an IRS
or other governmental agency examination
regarding that specific tax return after Rule 3523
becomes effective. If a registered firm prepared such
a tax return before the rule’s effective date, the rule
does not operate to prohibit that person from
answering questions and providing assistance when
that tax return is under examination by a taxing
authority after the rule’s effective date, Such
assistance, of course, must be otherwise consistent
with Board and SEC auditor independence rules,
including the requirement the auditor not become
an advocate for its audit client.
55 A few commenters suggested that the Board use
the list of officers in section 16 of the Exchange Act,
rather than relying on the defined term ‘‘financial
reporting oversight role.’’ The ‘‘financial reporting
oversight role’’ term, however, includes those
individuals at an audit client that, because of their
53 The
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commenters recommended the rule
cover audit committee members. Still
other commenters, however, disagreed
with these commenters and noted that
applying the rule to audit committee
members might serve as a practical
disincentive to audit committee service.
The Board has determined not to
expand the final rule to include all nonaudit services, directors or persons
outside the definition of ‘‘financial
reporting oversight role.’’ To date, the
concerns that have arisen in this area
have related to auditors’ provision of tax
services to executives of public
companies. Accordingly, the Board
believes it is appropriate, at this time, to
limit the rule to address this problem.
The Board intends to monitor
implementation of the rule, however. In
addition, to the extent that issuers pay
for non-audit services provided to any
individuals, audit committees can and
should be scrutinizing the potential
effects on the auditor’s independence
due to such services. Further, as
discussed in the proposing release,
although accounting firms are not now
required to seek pre-approval for
executive tax services paid directly by
the employee, auditors should consider
under Independence Standards Board
(‘‘ISB’’) Standard No. 1 whether it is
necessary to notify the audit committee
of these services 56 or whether it is
otherwise advisable to inform audit
committees of such services.57 In this
regard, while the Board is reluctant to
establish a per se prohibition on
auditors’ provision of tax services to
directors of their audit clients, the Board
notes that firms can—and some have—
adopted procedures to notify the audit
committee of such services so it may
oversight of the company’s financial reporting
process, raise special concerns when they have
certain relationships with the auditor. For this
reason, the Board continues to believe this is the
appropriate group to include in this rule.
56 See ISB Standard No. 1; see also Memorandum
from Scott A. Taub, Deputy Chief Accountant,
Office of the Chief Accountant, U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission to William H. Donaldson,
Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission at
5 (June 24, 2003) (attached to letter from Chairman
William H. Donaldson, U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission, to Five Consumer Groups)
(July 11, 2003), available at https://www.sec.gov/
info/accountants/staffletters/taub071103.pdf
(hereinafter ‘‘Taub Memo’’).
57 For example, the SEC staff has recommended
that audit committees scrutinize audit firms’
provision of these services—The provision of tax
services to the executives of an audit client is not
expressly addressed in the Act or in the
Commission’s rules. Nonetheless, an audit
committee should review the provision of those
services to assure that reasonable investors would
conclude that the auditor, when providing such
services, is capable of exercising objective and
impartial judgment on all issues within the audit
engagement.
Taub Memo, supra note 55, at 5.
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evaluate the potential effect of such
services on the auditor’s
independence.58
Rule 3524—The Auditor’s
Responsibilities in Connection With
Audit Committee Pre-approval of Tax
Services
Under Section 10A(h) of the Exchange
Act, as amended by Section 202 of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act, all non-audit
services that the auditor proposes to
perform for an issuer client ‘‘shall be
pre-approved by the audit committee of
the issuer.’’ The SEC’s 2003
independence rules implemented the
Act’s pre-approval requirement by
adopting a provision on audit
committee administration of the
engagement.59 Rule 3524 implements
the Act’s pre-approval requirement
further by strengthening the auditor’s
responsibilities in seeking audit
committee pre-approval of tax services.
Specifically, Rule 3524 requires a
registered public accounting firm that
seeks pre-approval of an issuer audit
client’s audit committee 60 to perform
tax services that are not otherwise
prohibited by the Act or the rules of the
SEC or the Board to—
• Describe, in writing, to the audit
committee the nature and scope of the
proposed tax service;
• Discuss with the audit committee
the potential effects on the firm’s
independence that could be caused by
58 See, e.g., Remarks of Scott Bayless, Deloitte &
Touche LLP, Auditor Independence Roundtable on
Tax Services (July 14, 2004) at 152 (indicating that
even when ‘‘the company does not pay for those
services * * * there is a notification procedure to
ensure that the audit committee has the ability to
take control of that relationship if they so desire’’).
59 See 17 CFR 210.2–01(c)(7).
60 Proposed Rule 3524 used the term ‘‘audit
committee of the audit client,’’ which some
commenters interpreted to mean that the rule
would require auditors to make the required
communications in connection with proposed tax
services for affiliates of an audit client that are not
consolidated as subsidiaries with the audit client
for financial statement purposes. One commenter
noted that the Commission’s Rule 2–01(c)(7)
requires only that ‘‘[b]efore the accountant is
engaged by the issuer or its subsidiaries, or the
registered investment company or its subsidiaries,
to render audit or non-audit services, the
engagement [be] approved by the issuer’s or
registered investment company’s audit committee.’’
By using the phrase ‘‘in connection with seeking
audit committee pre-approval,’’ the Board intends
Rule 3524 to apply only when the SEC’s Rule 2–
01(c)(7) requires such approval. Accordingly, the
rule does not require registered firms to make the
specified communications or to seek audit
committee pre-approval in any situations in which
audit committee pre-approval is not already
required by the SEC’s rules. Nor should the rule be
understood to require pre-approval by any
committee other than the committee required to
provide pre-approval by the SEC’s rules. To clarify
this issue, the Board has also modified Rule 3524
to more clearly track the language of section 10A(h)
of the Exchange Act and the SEC’s Rule 2–01(c)(7).
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the firm’s performance of the proposed
tax service; and
• Document the firm’s discussion
with the audit committee.
These requirements are intended to
buttress the pre-approval processes
established by the Act and the
Commission’s rules. Whether an audit
committee pre-approves a non-audit
service on an ad hoc basis or on the
basis of policies and procedures, the
Commission staff has stated that
‘‘detailed backup documentation that
spells out the terms of each non-audit
service to be provided by the auditor’’
should be provided to the audit
committee.61 Indeed, the SEC staff has
indicated ‘‘[s]uch documentation should
be so detailed that there should never be
any doubt as to whether any particular
service was brought to the audit
committee’s attention and was
considered and pre-approved by that
committee.’’ 62
Rule 3524 implements the Act’s preapproval requirement further by
requiring that registered firms provide
the audit committee of an issuer audit
client a description of proposed tax
services engagements that includes
descriptions of the scope of any tax
service under review and the fee
structure for the engagement.63 Some
commenters suggested significant
changes to the scope of the proposed
rule. One group of commenters
recommended that the rule be
broadened to apply to all non-audit
services, rather than only tax services.
Other commenters expressed concern
that the rule appeared to impose
restrictions on audit committee preapproval in excess of the SEC’s
requirements and, for that reason,
61 Taub Memo, supra note 55, at 3; see also SEC
Office of the Chief Accountant: Application of
Commission’s Rules on Auditor Independence
Frequently Asked Questions, Audit Committee Preapproval, Question 5, (issued August 13, 2003),
available at https://www.sec.gov/info/accountants/
ocafaqaudind121304.htm (hereinafter ‘‘FAQs’’).
62 Taub Memo, supra note 55, at 3; see also FAQs,
supra note 60, Audit Committee Pre-approval,
Question 5 (issued August 13, 2003). The SEC staff
FAQ answer states that (‘‘[p]re-approval policies
must be designed to ensure that the audit
committee knows precisely what services it is being
asked to pre-approve so that it can make a wellreasoned assessment of the impact of the service on
the auditor’s independence. For example, if the
audit committee is presented with a schedule or
cover sheet describing services to be pre-approved,
that schedule or cover sheet must be accompanied
by detailed back-up documentation regarding the
specific services to be provided’’).
63 See Rule 3524(a)(1). Audit committees may ask
auditors for other materials not identified in the
rule, to assist them in their determinations whether
to pre-approve proposed tax services. Rule 3524
should not be understood to limit the information
or materials that an audit committee may request,
or that a registered firm may decide to provide, in
connection with the pre-approval of tax services.
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recommended that the Board narrow or
eliminate the rule. The Board has
determined not to change the scope of
the rule in response to these comments.
While auditors and audit committees
may find the procedures in Rule 3524 to
be useful for purposes of considering
non-audit services generally, the Board
adopts these rules only after having
engaged in a substantial effort to obtain
facts and views of interested persons on
appropriate procedures for considering
proposed tax services. Before
considering broadening the rule, the
Board would seek additional
information, based, among other things,
on experience with this rule,
inspections of registered firms, and
additional public input. On the other
hand, notwithstanding the concerns of
some commenters that Rule 3524
requires more than the parallel SEC
rule, the Board has determined not to
narrow or eliminate the rule. The Board
continues to believe that the rule is an
appropriate complement to the SEC’s
pre-approval rule. Rule 3524 supports
the procedure under the SEC rule, by
requiring the auditor—who is in the best
position to describe a proposed
engagement—to gather the information
required to be presented to the audit
committee by the SEC rule. Indeed, it is
the SEC rule and staff interpretations of
what information audit committees
need that have informed the Board’s
development of the rule.
The Board has made certain
modifications to the proposed rule,
however. As proposed, the rule would
have required auditors to provide audit
committees copies of all engagement
letters for proposed tax services. While
some commenters supported this
proposal as a way to ensure that audit
committees received adequate
information on which to base their
judgments, other commenters expressed
concern that the rule could result in
audit committees being provided
voluminous stacks of engagement
letters—some in foreign languages—that
would obscure rather than elucidate the
nature of the tax services proposed. On
the basis of this information, and
because the underlying purpose of the
proposed requirement was to establish a
manageable collection of information on
which audit committees could make
their determinations to pre-approve tax
services, the Board has determined to
eliminate the proposed rule’s
requirement to supply the audit
committee a copy of each tax service
engagement letter. Instead, the rule
requires auditors to describe for audit
committees, in writing, the scope of the
proposed service, the proposed fee
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structure for the service, and the
potential effect of the service on the
auditor’s independence. The Board
believes requiring such a description of
a proposed service better meets the
Board’s goal to improve the quality of
information auditors provide audit
committees about proposed tax services.
The rule also requires the auditor to
describe for the audit committee any
amendment to the engagement letter or
any other agreement relating to the
service (whether oral, written, or
otherwise) between the firm and the
audit client.64 While the Board does not
expect or encourage auditors to enter
into side agreements relating to tax
services, the Board understands that, in
the past, some accounting firms have
entered into such agreements.65 To the
extent firms do so, they must disclose
those agreements to the audit
committee.
In addition, to the extent that a firm
receives fees or other consideration from
a third party in connection with
promoting, marketing, or recommending
a tax transaction, Rule 3524 requires the
firm to disclose those fees or other
consideration to the audit committee.
Specifically, Rule 3524(a)(2) requires
that the firm disclose to the audit
committee ‘‘any compensation
arrangement or other agreement, such as
a referral agreement, a referral fee or feesharing arrangement, between the
registered public accounting firm (or an
affiliate of the firm) and any person
(other than the audit client) with respect
to the promoting, marketing or
recommending of a transaction covered
by the service.’’ This provision is
adapted from the IRS’s rules of practice,
64 Id. One commenter expressed concern that
Rule 3524(a)’s requirement to describe an ‘‘other
agreement’’ could be understood to require the
auditor to submit to the audit committee
documentation concerning ‘‘essentially every
communication with the audit client.’’ The Board
believes this comment is misplaced. Rule 3524 does
not require that the auditor describe all
communications with the audit client, but rather all
agreements with the audit client that relate to the
proposed service.
65 See, e.g., In re PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, &
PricewaterhouseCoopers Securities LLC, supra note
27 (‘‘through side letters or oral understandings, the
parties created contingent fee arrangements’’). In
addition, some commenters have expressed concern
that Rule 3524 requires disclosure to the audit
committee of fee arrangements that are prohibited
by Rule 3521 (or by professional association
membership requirements, such as certain referral
agreements and fees). Those commenters have
asked the Board to clarify that Rule 3524 does not
operate to permit such fee structures that are
otherwise prohibited by the Board’s rules or to
endorse fee structures that are prohibited or
discouraged by professional ethics rules. It is the
case that Rule 3524 does not permit or otherwise
endorse such fees.
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which require tax advisors to disclose
such arrangements to taxpayer clients.66
Rule 3524(b) also requires registered
public accounting firms to discuss with
audit committees of their issuer audit
clients the potential effects of any
proposed tax services on the firm’s
independence. Even if a non-audit
service does not per se impair an
auditor’s independence, the
Commission’s independence rules
nevertheless deem an auditor not to be
independent if—
the accountant is not, or a reasonable
investor with knowledge of all relevant facts
and circumstances would conclude that the
accountant is not, capable of exercising
objective and impartial judgment on all
issues encompassed within the accountant’s
engagement.67
Rule 3524(b) is intended to provide
audit committees a robust foundation of
information upon which to determine
whether to pre-approve proposed tax
services. Some commenters have asked
for guidance as to the scope of the
discussions intended by the rule. The
Board intends that the scope of such
discussions remain flexible, to address
the matters that are pertinent in the
judgment of the audit committee, as
informed by Commission requirements.
While the Act’s legislative history
makes clear that the Act ‘‘does not
require the audit committee to make a
particular finding in order to preapprove an activity,’’ 68 the
Commission’s staff expects a robust
review of proposed non-audit services—
The audit committee must take its role
seriously and perform diligent analyses and
reviews that allow the committee to conclude
that reasonable investors would view the
auditor as capable of exercising objective and
impartial judgment on all matters brought to
the auditor’s attention.69
To be clear, the rule does not
prescribe any test for audit committees
or require audit committees to make
legal assessments as to whether
proposed services are prohibited or
permissible. Nor is the rule intended to
limit an audit committee’s discretion to
establish its own more stringent preapproval procedures. Rather, the rule
directs registered firms to present
detailed information and analysis to
audit committees for audit committees’
consideration, in their own judgment, of
66 See 31 CFR 10.35(e)(1) (2005), available at
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/pcir230.pdf.
67 17 CFR 210.2–01(b).
68 S.
Rep. No. 107–205, at 19 (2002).
69 Taub
Memo, supra note 55, at 7–8; see also
FAQs, supra note 60, Audit Committee Preapproval, Question 5 (issued August 13, 2003).
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the best interests of the issuer and its
shareholders.
In addition, through the discussion
required by Rule 3524(b), the Board
expects registered firms to convey to the
audit committee information sufficient
to distinguish between tax services that
could have a detrimental effect on the
firm’s independence and those that
would be unlikely to have a detrimental
effect. Some commenters expressed
concern that an example of such a
distinction that the Board provided in
the proposing release could be
understood to suggest that audit
committees should not permit an
auditor to provide any tax services
unless the company had an internal tax
department and/or a tax director who
could make sound management
decision in the best interest of the
company. The Board did not intend to
suggest that particular functional
departments or managers must exist at
a company before its auditor may
provide it tax services. Rather, the
inquiry the auditor should engage in
when proposing to provide tax services
to an audit client is whether, in the
particular case, the company has the
capacity to make its own decisions
regarding the proposed tax matter, such
that the auditor would not be in the
position of performing management
functions or making management
decisions for the company.70 The
resolution of this inquiry will vary
depending on the nature of the tax
matter at issue and the sophistication of
the company, among other things.
Rule 3524, both as proposed and as
adopted, is intentionally silent as to
when a registered public accounting
firm should provide the required
information about a proposed tax
service to an audit committee. This is
because, under the SEC’s 2003
independence rules, audit committees
themselves may have policies that
establish a procedure and schedule for
audit committee review of non-audit
services, including tax services.71 Some
commenters expressed concern that the
rule might favor one approval method
(ad hoc) over another (approval
pursuant to policies and procedures).
This is not the case. Similar to the SEC’s
2003 independence rules, Rule 3524
does not dictate, or even express a
70 See PCAOB Rule 3600T (adopting AICPA Code
of Professional Conduct, paragraph .05 of ET sec.
101, ‘‘Independence’’, Interpretation No. 101–3,
‘‘Performance of Other Services,’’ as of April 16,
2003) (‘‘care should be taken not to perform
management functions or make management
decisions for attest clients the responsibility for
which remains with the client’s board of directors
and management.’’) (Interpretation No. 101–3 was
later amended by the AICPA in December 2003).
71 17 CFR 210.2–01(c)(7)(i)(B).
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preference as to, whether the
documentation and discussions
required under Rule 3524 should take
place pursuant to an audit committee’s
policies and procedures on pre-approval
or on an ad hoc basis. Many issuers
have adopted policies that provide for
pre-approval in annual audit committee
meetings. The Board understands that
such an annual planning process can
include as robust a presentation to the
audit committee as a case-by-case preapproval process, and Rule 3524 is
designed to be flexible enough to
accommodate either system and to
encourage auditors and audit
committees to develop systems tailored
to the needs and attributes of the issuer.
The timing and method by which
auditors describe for, and discuss with,
audit committees proposed tax services
will necessarily vary depending on
different audit committees procedures.
For those audit committees that hold an
annual meeting to consider proposed
non-audit services for the upcoming
year, often by reviewing a proposed
annual budget for non-audit services, it
would be appropriate for auditors to
provide their disclosures pursuant to
Rule 3524(a), and hold their discussions
pursuant to Rule 3524(b), about
proposed tax services that are known at
the time of the meeting in connection
with or at that meeting. In addition,
some audit committees’ policies
delegate authority to pre-approve nonaudit services to one committee member
and require reporting of any services
approved by delegated authority at the
next scheduled audit committee
meeting, on a quarterly basis, or
otherwise, in order for the audit
committee to review an updated forecast
or other summary of non-audit services.
In such cases, it would be appropriate
for auditors to provide the member
holding delegated authority to approve
a tax service a description of the service
that complies with Rule 3524(a). Also,
although the auditor may discuss the
service with the member holding
delegated authority when the member is
considering the service, in order to
comply with Rule 3524(b), the auditor
ought to discuss the service with the
audit committee as a whole when the
audit committee considers the updated
forecast or other summary.
Finally, Rule 3524(c) requires a
registered public accounting firm to
document the substance of its
discussion with the audit committee
under subparagraph (b). The few
commenters who addressed this
provision supported it.72
72 One commenting auditor suggested that the
Board consider requiring specific forms or
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Effective and Transition Dates
The Board intends that the rules
become effective at varying times.
In light of pre-existing legal and
regulatory requirements, Rules 3502 and
3520 do not, in any practical sense,
create new criteria for appropriate
conduct. Accordingly, no transition
period is called for, and therefore the
Board intends that Rules 3502 and 3520,
as well as the definitions in Rule 3501,
become effective 10 days after the date
that the SEC approves the rules.
Rule 3521 is based on the SEC’s
existing contingent fee rule, although it
differs from that rule in certain respects.
Accordingly, the Board will not apply
Rule 3521 to contingent fee
arrangements that were paid in their
entirety, converted to fixed fee
arrangements, or otherwise unwound
before the later of December 31, 2005, or
10 days after the date that the SEC
approves the rules. Of course, as noted
above, the Commission’s Rule 2–01 on
auditor independence treats an auditor
as not independent if it enters into a
contingent fee arrangement with an
audit client today.73
Rules 3522, 3523, and 3524 establish
new criteria for appropriate conduct by
registered public accounting firms and
their associated persons. The Board
believes it is appropriate to allow a
reasonable period of time for such firms
to prepare internal policies and
procedures, and train their employees to
ensure compliance with these new
requirements. In addition, the Board
understands that engagements covered
by these rules may be in progress and
that firms will need to terminate or
complete these engagements in a
professional manner. Accordingly, the
Board believes it is appropriate to allow
transition periods for these rules.
The Board understands that Rule 3523
will, in practical effect, lead to some
registered firms terminating recurring
engagements to provide tax services and
may require certain members of public
companies’ senior management to find
other tax preparers. Accordingly, the
Board has determined that it will not
apply Rule 3523 to tax services being
provided pursuant to an engagement in
process at the time the SEC approves the
rules, provided that such services are
completed on or before the later of June
30, 2006 or 10 days after the date that
the SEC approves the rules. As
occasions for auditor documentation of audit
committee discussion. After considering this
suggestion, the Board has determined that such
forms or required timing of discussions could
unnecessarily limit the scope of the discussions
that, in the judgment of the auditor and audit
committee, are appropriate.
73 17 CFR 210.2–01(c)(5).
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discussed above, the Board will treat
engagements as ‘‘in process’’ if an
engagement letter has been executed
and work of substance has commenced;
the Board will not treat engagements as
‘‘in process’’ during negotiations on the
scope and fee for a service.
Although the Board does not expect
them to require the same transition as
Rule 3523, Rules 3522 and 3524 also
impose new legal requirements.
Accordingly, the Board has determined
that it will not apply Rule 3522 to tax
services that were completed by a
registered public accounting firm no
later than the later of December 31,
2005, or 10 days after the date that the
SEC approves the rules. Rule 3524 will
not apply to any tax service preapproved before the later of December
31, 2005, or 10 days after the date that
the SEC approves the rules, or, in the
case of an issuer that pre-approves nonaudit services by policies and
procedures, the rule will not apply to
any tax service provided by March 31,
2006.
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
The Technical Amendments
On November 22, 2005, the Board
adopted technical amendments to Rules
3502 and 3522 and revised the effective
dates for certain of the rules. The Board
described these amendments as follows:
After discussions with the SEC staff,
the Board has decided to remove the
word ‘‘cause’’ from the title and text of
Rule 3502. This amendment is intended
to avoid any misperception that the rule
affects the interpretation of any
provision of the federal securities laws.
The rule, as amended, should be
interpreted and understood to be the
same as the rule adopted by the Board
in July, however.74 In particular, under
the amended rule, the person’s conduct
must have the same relation to the
violation and the person must act with
the same mental state as under the rule
the Board adopted in July.
The Board is also amending Note 1 to
Rule 3522(b) to correct a typographical
error in the citation of the provision of
the Internal Revenue Code cited in that
note.
In light of the time that has elapsed
since their adoption, the Board has also
decided to revise the effective dates for
certain of the rules. Three of those rules
‘‘ Rules 3521, 3522 and 3524 ‘‘ had
effective dates of the later of December
31, 2005 or 10 days after the date the
SEC approves the rules.75 The Board has
decided to revise the effective dates of
74 See PCAOB Release No. 2005–014 (July 26,
2005), at 9–14 (discussing Rule 3502).
75 See id., at 47–48.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:58 Mar 10, 2006
Jkt 208001
those three rules to 60 days after the
date the SEC approves the rules.76
Specifically, the Board will not apply
Rule 3521 to contingent fee
arrangements that were paid in their
entirety, converted to fixed fee
arrangements, or otherwise unwound
before 60 days after the date that the
SEC approves the rules.77 The Board
will not apply Rule 3522 to tax services
that were completed by a registered
public accounting firm no later than 60
days after the date that the SEC
approves the rules. Rule 3524 will not
apply to any tax service pre-approved
before 60 days after the date that the
SEC approves the rules, or, in the case
of an issuer that pre-approves non-audit
services by policies and procedures, the
rule will not apply to any tax service
provided by March 31, 2006. Combined
with the time period since the rules’
adoption, the extension of the effective
dates for these rules should allow
reasonable time for affected firms to
prepare internal policies and
procedures, train their employees to
ensure compliance with the new
requirements, and, if necessary,
terminate or complete any ongoing
engagements covered by the rules in a
professional manner.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 35 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the Board consents, the
Commission will:
(a) By order approve such proposed
rule; or
(b) Institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule should be
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rules
are consistent with the requirements of
Title I of the Act. The Commission also
requests specific comment on the
following:
76 The
effective dates of Rules 3501, 3502, 3520
and 3523 are not changed by this release and
remain as set forth in the Board’s adopting release.
Id.
77 Of course, the Commission’s Rule 2–01 on
auditor independence treats an auditor as not
independent if it enters into a contingent fee
arrangement with an audit client today. 17 CFR
210.2–01(c)(5).
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12735
Regarding proposed Rule 3522, the
Board indicates that while an auditor’s
independence is not impaired per se
upon a subsequent listing of a
transaction under the regulations of the
Department of Treasury or the Internal
Revenue Service, ‘‘firms should
nevertheless be cautious in participating
in transactions that they believe could
become listed.’’ The Board further states
that, if a transaction later becomes
listed, the auditor ‘‘should carefully
consider the potential impairment of its
independence with the audit committee
of its client.’’ For example, the Board
states that the ‘‘auditor’s judgment
regarding appropriate financial
reporting and disclosure concerning a
transaction that becomes listed could
become biased by the auditor’s vested
interests in defending its tax advice.’’
The Board also declined to adopt a
bright-line rule providing that, so long
as a transaction recommended by the
firm was not listed at the time it was
executed, subsequent listing could not
impair an auditor’s independence at the
later date. Instead, the Board notes that
the requirement for the auditor to
consider, on a forward-looking basis,
whether such a situation may
reasonably be thought to bear on its
independence is addressed in existing
independence requirements. As such,
the Board determined not to expand
proposed Rule 3522(b) to specifically
address this issue. We request comment
on this discussion. Is it clear from the
Board’s discussion that a subsequent
listing of a transaction, while not in and
of itself impairing the auditor’s
independence prior to the listing of the
transaction, may impact independence
from the date of the listing forward? Is
additional guidance necessary regarding
the consideration of an auditor’s
independence when a transaction
planned or opined on by the auditor
subsequently becomes listed?
Comments may be submitted by any
of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/pcaob.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number PCAOB–2006–01 on the subject
line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Nancy M. Morris, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File No.
PCAOB–2006–01. This file number
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 48 / Monday, March 13, 2006 / Notices
should be included on the subject line
if e-mail is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule that
are filed with the Commission, and all
written communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for inspection and copying in
the Commission’s Public Reference
Section, 100 F Street, NE., Washington,
DC 20549–1090. Copies of such filing
also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of
PCAOB. All comments received will be
posted without change; we do not edit
personal identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should be submitted on or before April
3, 2006.
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[File No. 500–1]
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
In the Matter of Gary Player Direct, Inc.,
First Chesapeake Financial Corp., and
North Lily Mining Co.; Order of
Suspension of Trading
It appears to the Securities and
Exchange Commission that there is a
lack of current and accurate information
concerning the securities of Gary Player
Direct, Inc. because it has not filed a
periodic report since the period ending
December 31, 1999.
It appears to the Securities and
Exchange Commission that there is a
lack of current and accurate information
concerning the securities of First
Chesapeake Financial Corp. because it
has not filed a periodic report since the
period ending September 30, 2003.
It appears to the Securities and
Exchange Commission that there is a
lack of current and accurate information
concerning the securities of North Lily
Mining Co. because it has not filed a
periodic report since the period ending
September 30, 2000.
17:58 Mar 10, 2006
Jkt 208001
By the Commission.
Nancy M. Morris,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06–2412 Filed 3–9–06; 11:40 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–53403; File No. SR–Amex–
2006–04]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
American Stock Exchange LLC; Notice
of Filing of Proposed Rule Change and
Amendment No. 1 Thereto Relating to
Procedures for Denying Initial and
Continued Listing
March 2, 2006.
By the Commission.
Nancy M. Morris,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06–2365 Filed 3–10–06; 8:45 am]
VerDate Aug<31>2005
The Commission is of the opinion that
the public interest and the protection of
investors require a suspension of trading
in the securities of the above-listed
companies.
Therefore, it is ordered, pursuant to
Section 12(k) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, that trading in the abovelisted companies is suspended for the
period from 9:30 a.m. EST on March 9,
2006, through 11:59 p.m. EST on March
22, 2006.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on January
23, 2006, the American Stock Exchange
LLC (‘‘Amex’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared by the Amex. On
February 22, 2006, Amex filed
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change.3 The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change, as amended, from
interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to add new
Section 127 and amend Sections 101,
401, 402, 710, 1002, and 1009 of the
Amex Company Guide to increase the
transparency of the process associated
with staff determinations to deny the
initial or continued listing of a
company’s securities on the Amex.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Amex’s Web site at
https://www.amex.com, at the Amex’s
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 Amendment No. 1 made technical changes to
the rule text submitted in Exhibit 5.
2 17
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principal office, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Amex included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Amex has prepared summaries, set forth
in Sections A, B, and C below, of the
most significant aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
Sections 101 and 1002 of the Amex
Company Guide provide broad
discretionary authority to the Exchange
to deny initial or continued listing to a
company, the condition or business of
which raises public interest or other
qualitative concerns that could
undermine investor confidence in Amex
listed securities. The Exchange proposes
to add new Section 127 and amend
Sections 101 and 1002 of the Amex
Company Guide to clarify the
circumstances in which the Exchange
generally uses this authority and
provide greater transparency to listed
companies and applicants.4
The proposed rule and rule
amendments would specify that the
Exchange has authority to deny initial
listing to an applicant, impose
additional or more stringent criteria on
initial or continued listing of a
company’s securities, or delist a
company’s securities under the
following circumstances:
• The listed company or applicant, or
an individual associated with the listed
company or applicant, has a history of
regulatory misconduct; 5
4 The Commission notes that this proposed rule
change is substantially similar to a proposal
submitted by the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. and approved by the Commission. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 52342 (August
26, 2005), 70 FR 52456 (September 2, 2005) (SR–
NASD–2004–125).
5 Such individuals would typically be an officer,
director, substantial security holder or consultant to
the issuer. The Exchange proposes in new Section
127, Commentary .01 that an interest consisting of
more than either 5% of the number of shares of
common stock or 5% of the voting power
outstanding of an issuer or party shall be
considered a substantial interest and cause the
holder of such an interest to be regarded as a
substantial security holder. Telephone conversation
between Jan Woo, Attorney, Division of Market
Regulation, Commission, and Courtney McBride,
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 48 (Monday, March 13, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12720-12736]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-2365]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-53427; File No. PCAOB-2006-01]
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; Notice of Filing of
Proposed Ethics and Independence Rules Concerning Independence, Tax
Services, and Contingent Fees
March 7, 2006.
Pursuant to Section 107(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the
``Act''), notice is hereby given that on August 2, 2005, the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board (the ``Board'' or the ``PCAOB'')
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the ``Commission''
or ``SEC'') the proposed rule described in Items I, and II below, which
items have been prepared by the Board. On November 22, 2005, the Board
adopted certain technical amendments to the rule and amended its filing
on November 23, 2005. The Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule from interested persons.
I. Board's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the Proposed Rule
On July 26, 2005, the Board adopted Rules 3501--Definitions of
Terms Employed in Section 3, Part 5 of the Rules; 3502--Responsibility
Not to Cause Violations; 3520--Auditor Independence; 3521--Contingent
Fees; 3522--Tax Transactions; 3523--Tax Services for Persons in
Financial Reporting Oversight Roles; and 3524--Audit Committee Pre-
approval of Certain Tax Services (``the proposed rules''). On November
22, 2005, the Board adopted certain technical amendments to Rule 3502,
including its title, and Rule 3522. The proposed rule text is set out
below.
SECTION 3. PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS--Part 5--Ethics
Rule 3501. Definitions of Terms Employed in Section 3, Part 5 of the
Rules
When used in Section 3, Part 5 of the Rules, unless the context
otherwise requires:
(a)(i) Affiliate of the Accounting Firm
The term ``affiliate of the accounting firm'' (or ``affiliate of
the registered public accounting firm'' or ``affiliate of the firm'')
includes the accounting firm's parents; subsidiaries; pension,
retirement, investment or similar plans; and any associated entities of
the firm, as that term is used in Rule 2-01 of the Commission's
Regulation S-X, 17 CFR 210.2-01(f)(2).
(a)(ii) Affiliate of the Audit Client
The term ``affiliate of the audit client'' means--
(1) An entity that has control over the audit client, or over which
the audit client has control, or which is under common control with the
audit client, including the audit client's parents and subsidiaries;
(2) An entity over which the audit client has significant
influence, unless the entity is not material to the audit client;
(3) An entity that has significant influence over the audit client,
unless the audit client is not material to the entity; and
(4) Each entity in the investment company complex when the audit
client is an entity that is part of an investment company complex.
(a)(iii) Audit and Professional Engagement Period
The term ``audit and professional engagement period'' includes
both--
(1) The period covered by any financial statements being audited or
reviewed (the ``audit period''); and
(2) The period of the engagement to audit or review the audit
client's financial statements or to prepare a report filed with the
Commission (the ``professional engagement period'')--
(A) The professional engagement period begins when the registered
public accounting firm either signs an initial engagement letter (or
other agreement to review or audit a client's financial statements) or
begins audit, review, or attest procedures, whichever is earlier; and
(B) The professional engagement period ends when the audit client
or the registered public accounting firm notifies the Commission that
the client is no longer that firm's audit client.
(3) For audits of the financial statements of foreign private
issuers, the ``audit and professional engagement period'' does not
include periods ended prior to the first day of the last fiscal year
before the foreign private issuer first filed, or was required to file,
a registration statement or report with the Commission, provided there
has been full compliance with home country independence standards in
all prior periods covered by any registration statement or report filed
with the Commission.
(a)(iv) Audit Client
The term ``audit client'' means the entity whose financial
statements or other information is being audited, reviewed, or attested
and any affiliates of the audit client.
(c)(i) Confidential Transaction
The term ``confidential transaction'' means--
(1) In general. A confidential transaction is a transaction that is
offered to a taxpayer under conditions of confidentiality and for which
the taxpayer has paid an advisor a fee.
(2) Conditions of confidentiality. A transaction is considered to
be offered to a taxpayer under conditions of confidentiality if the
advisor who is paid the fee places a limitation on disclosure by the
taxpayer of the tax treatment or tax structure of the transaction and
the limitation on disclosure protects the confidentiality of that
advisor's tax strategies. A transaction is treated as confidential even
if the conditions of confidentiality are not legally binding on the
taxpayer.
[[Page 12721]]
A claim that a transaction is proprietary or exclusive is not treated
as a limitation on disclosure if the advisor confirms to the taxpayer
that there is no limitation on disclosure of the tax treatment or tax
structure of the transaction.
(3) Determination of fee. For purposes of this definition, a fee
includes all fees for a tax strategy or for services for advice
(whether or not tax advice) or for the implementation of a transaction.
These fees include consideration in whatever form paid, whether in cash
or in kind, for services to analyze the transaction (whether or not
related to the tax consequences of the transaction), for services to
implement the transaction, for services to document the transaction,
and for services to prepare tax returns to the extent that the fees
exceed the fees customary for return preparation. For purposes of this
definition, a taxpayer also is treated as paying fees to an advisor if
the taxpayer knows or should know that the amount it pays will be paid
indirectly to the advisor, such as through a referral fee or fee-
sharing arrangement. A fee does not include amounts paid to a person,
including an advisor, in that person's capacity as a party to the
transaction. For example, a fee does not include reasonable charges for
the use of capital or the sale or use of property.
(4) Related parties. For purposes of this definition, persons who
bear a relationship to each other as described in section 267(b) or
707(b) of the Internal Revenue Code will be treated as the same person.
(c)(ii) Contingent Fee
The term ``contingent fee'' means--
(1) Except as stated in paragraph (2) below, any fee established
for the sale of a product or the performance of any service pursuant to
an arrangement in which no fee will be charged unless a specified
finding or result is attained, or in which the amount of the fee is
otherwise dependent upon the finding or result of such product or
service.
(2) Solely for the purposes of this definition, a fee is not a
``contingent fee'' if the amount is fixed by courts or other public
authorities and not dependent on a finding or result.
(f)(i) Financial Reporting Oversight Role
The term ``financial reporting oversight role'' means a role in
which a person is in a position to or does exercise influence over the
contents of the financial statements or anyone who prepares them, such
as when the person is a member of the board of directors or similar
management or governing body, chief executive officer, president, chief
financial officer, chief operating officer, general counsel, chief
accounting officer, controller, director of internal audit, director of
financial reporting, treasurer, or any equivalent position.
(i)(i) Immediate Family Member
The term ``immediate family member'' means a person's spouse,
spousal equivalent, and dependents.
(i)(ii) Investment Company Complex
(1) The term ``investment company complex'' includes--
(i) An investment company and its investment adviser or sponsor;
(ii) Any entity controlled by or controlling an investment adviser
or sponsor in paragraph (i) of this definition, or any entity under
common control with an investment adviser or sponsor in paragraph (i)
of this definition if the entity--
(A) Is an investment adviser or sponsor; or
(B) Is engaged in the business of providing administrative,
custodian, underwriting, or transfer agent services to any investment
company, investment adviser, or sponsor; and
(iii) Any investment company or entity that would be an investment
company but for the exclusions provided by section 3(c) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-3(c)) that has an
investment adviser or sponsor included in this definition by either
paragraph (i) or (ii) of this definition.
(2) An investment adviser, for purposes of this definition, does
not include a sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management
and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser.
(3) A sponsor, for purposes of this definition, is an entity that
establishes a unit investment trust.
Rule 3502. Responsibility Not To Knowingly or Recklessly Contribute to
Violations
A person associated with a registered public accounting firm shall
not take or omit to take an action knowing, or recklessly not knowing,
that the act or omission would directly and substantially contribute to
a violation by that registered public accounting firm of the Act, the
Rules of the Board, the provisions of the securities laws relating to
the preparation and issuance of audit reports and the obligations and
liabilities of accountants with respect thereto, including the rules of
the Commission issued under the Act, or professional standards.
Subpart 1--Independence
Rule 3520. Auditor Independence
A registered public accounting firm and its associated persons must
be independent of the firm's audit client throughout the audit and
professional engagement period.
Note 1: Under Rule 3520, a registered public accounting firm or
associated person's independence obligation with respect to an audit
client that is an issuer encompasses not only an obligation to
satisfy the independence criteria set out in the rules and standards
of the PCAOB, but also an obligation to satisfy all other
independence criteria applicable to the engagement, including the
independence criteria set out in the rules and regulations of the
Commission under the federal securities laws.
Note 2: Rule 3520 applies only to those associated persons of a
registered public accounting firm required to be independent of the
firm's audit client by standards, rules or regulations of the
Commission or other applicable independence criteria.
Rule 3521. Contingent Fees
A registered public accounting firm is not independent of its audit
client if the firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during the audit and
professional engagement period, provides any service or product to the
audit client for a contingent fee or a commission, or receives from the
audit client, directly or indirectly, a contingent fee or commission.
Rule 3522. Tax Transactions
A registered public accounting firm is not independent of its audit
client if the firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during the audit and
professional engagement period, provides any non-audit service to the
audit client related to marketing, planning, or opining in favor of the
tax treatment of, a transaction--
(a) Confidential Transactions--that is a confidential transaction;
or
(b) Aggressive Tax Position Transactions--that was initially
recommended, directly or indirectly, by the registered public
accounting firm and a significant purpose of which is tax avoidance,
unless the proposed tax treatment is at least more likely than not to
be allowable under applicable tax laws.
Note 1: With respect to transactions subject to the United
States tax laws, paragraph (b) of this rule includes, but is not
limited to, any transaction that is a listed transaction within the
meaning of 26 CFR 1.6011-4(b)(2).
Note 2: A registered public accounting firm indirectly
recommends a transaction when an affiliate of the firm or another
tax advisor, with which the firm has a formal agreement or other
arrangement related to the
[[Page 12722]]
promotion of such transactions, recommends engaging in the
transaction.
Rule 3523. Tax Services for Persons in Financial Reporting Oversight
Roles
A registered public accounting firm is not independent of its audit
client if the firm, or any affiliate of the firm, during the audit and
professional engagement period provides any tax service to a person in
a financial reporting oversight role at the audit client, or an
immediate family member of such person, unless--
(a) The person is in a financial reporting oversight role at the
audit client only because he or she serves as a member of the board of
directors or similar management or governing body of the audit client;
(b) The person is in a financial reporting oversight role at the
audit client only because of the person's relationship to an affiliate
of the entity being audited--
(1) Whose financial statements are not material to the consolidated
financial statements of the entity being audited; or
(2) Whose financial statements are audited by an auditor other than
the firm or an associated person of the firm; or
(c) The person was not in a financial reporting oversight role at
the audit client before a hiring, promotion, or other change in
employment event and the tax services are
(1) Provided pursuant to an engagement in process before the
hiring, promotion, or other change in employment event; and
(2) Completed on or before 180 days after the hiring or promotion
event.
Rule 3524. Audit Committee Pre-Approval of Certain Tax Services
In connection with seeking audit committee pre-approval to perform
for an audit client any permissible tax service, a registered public
accounting firm shall--
(a) Describe, in writing, to the audit committee of the issuer--
(1) The scope of the service, the fee structure for the engagement,
and any side letter or other amendment to the engagement letter, or any
other agreement (whether oral, written, or otherwise) between the firm
and the audit client, relating to the service; and
(2) Any compensation arrangement or other agreement, such as a
referral agreement, a referral fee or fee-sharing arrangement, between
the registered public accounting firm (or an affiliate of the firm) and
any person (other than the audit client) with respect to the promoting,
marketing, or recommending of a transaction covered by the service;
(b) Discuss with the audit committee of the issuer the potential
effects of the services on the independence of the firm; and
(c) Document the substance of its discussion with the audit
committee of the issuer.
* * * * *
II. Board's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule
In its filing with the Commission, the Board included statements
concerning the purpose of, and basis for, the proposed rule and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule. The text of
these statements may be examined at the places specified in Item IV
below. The Board has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Board's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule
(a) Purpose
Section 103(a) of the Act directs the Board, by rule, to establish
``ethics standards to be used by registered public accounting firms in
the preparation and issuance of audit reports, as required by th[e] Act
or the rules of the Commission, or as may be necessary or appropriate
in the public interest or for the protection of investors.'' Moreover,
Section 103(b) of the Act directs the Board to establish such rules on
auditor independence ``as may be necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors, to implement, or as
authorized under, Title II of th[e] Act.''
As discussed more fully in Exhibit 3, two types of tax services
have raised serious concerns among investors, auditors, lawmakers, and
others relating to the ethics and independence of accounting firms that
provide both auditing and tax services--
1. The marketing to public company audit clients of questionable
tax transactions used improperly to avoid paying taxes or to manipulate
financial statements in order to make such statements appear more
favorable to investors, and
2. The provision of tax services, including tax shelter products,
to executives of public company audit clients who are involved in the
financial reporting process at such companies.
Accordingly, the Board adopted a set of rules designed to establish
a framework for addressing the concerns that have arisen in connection
with auditors' provision of tax services to their public company audit
clients. Specifically, the proposed rules are designed, among other
things, to prevent auditors from providing (1) certain aggressive tax
shelter services to public company audit clients, (2) any other service
to a public company audit client for a contingent fee, which is a fee
arrangement often used in tax work, and (3) any tax service to certain
persons who serve in financial reporting oversight roles at a public
company audit client. The rules also codify, in an ethics rule, the
principle that persons associated with a registered public accounting
firm should not cause the firm to violate relevant laws, rules, and
standards, and introduce a foundation for the independence component of
the Board's ethics rules. Finally, the rules implement the requirements
of the Act and the SEC's independence rules when an auditor seeks audit
committee pre-approval to provide tax services that are not prohibited
by the Board's or the SEC's rules.
(b) Statutory Basis
The statutory basis for the proposed rule is Title I of the Act.
B. Board's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Board does not believe that the proposed rules will result in
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The proposed rules would apply
equally to all registered public accounting firms and their associated
persons. Although some of the proposed rules would prohibit a
registered public accounting firm from providing certain non-audit
services to its audit clients, they would not restrict the provision of
these same services to other companies.
C. Board's Statement on Comments on the Proposed Rule Received From
Members, Participants or Others
The Board released the proposed rules for public comment in PCAOB
Release No. 2004-015 (December 14, 2004). A copy of PCAOB Release No.
2004-015 and the comment letters received in response to the PCAOB's
request for comment are available on the PCAOB's Web site at https://
www.pcaobus.org. The Board received 807 written comments. The Board has
modified certain aspects of the proposed rules in response to comments
it received, as discussed below.
When the Board adopted the rules on July 26, 2005, it stated the
following: \1\
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\1\ As discussed above, the Board adopted technical amendments
to the rules on November 22, 2005. These amendments are discussed
under The Technical Amendments, below.
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[[Page 12723]]
Rule 3502--Responsibility Not to Cause Violations
Rule 3502, as proposed, provided that a person associated with a
registered public accounting firm shall not cause that firm to violate
the Act, the Rules of the Board, the provisions of the securities laws
relating to the preparation and issuance of audit reports and the
obligations and liabilities of accountants with respect thereto,
including the rules of the Commission issued under the Act, or
professional standards, due to an act or omission the person knew or
should have known would contribute to such violation. The Board
proposed the rule to codify the ethical obligation of associated
persons of registered firms not to cause registered firms to commit
such violations. Proposed Rule 3502 also made clear that an associated
person's ethical obligation is not merely to refrain from knowingly
causing a violation but also to act with sufficient care to avoid
negligently causing a violation.
The Board received a number of comments on proposed Rule 3502.
Several commenters supported the rule as proposed and noted that they
saw the rule as essential to the Board's ability to carry out its
disciplinary responsibilities under the Act. Other commenters, however,
including the largest accounting firms and an accounting trade
association, did not support the rule as proposed. In general, these
commenters objected to the proposed rule's use of a negligence standard
in light of the complex regulatory requirements with which auditors
must comply. Some of these commenters also questioned the Board's
authority to adopt the proposed rule, or at least the proposed rule
with a negligence standard.
The Board has carefully considered these comments and determined to
adopt Rule 3502, with some modifications. The Board continues to
believe that it is authorized to adopt the rule. Section 103(a) of the
Act directs the Board to, ``by rule, establish * * * such ethics
standards to be used by registered public accounting firms in the
preparation and issuance of audit reports, as required by this Act or
the rules of the Commission, or as may be necessary or appropriate in
the public interest or for the protection of investors.'' The Board
believes that the rule is an appropriate exercise of this authority to
set ethical standards for accountants subject to the Board's
jurisdiction.
Under the Act and Board rules, both registered firms and their
associated persons must comply with PCAOB rules and standards, as well
as related laws. When an associated person with such a responsibility
causes the firm with which he or she is associated to violate such
rules, standards or laws, this conduct operates to the detriment of the
protection of investors and the public interest and may bear on the
ethics of the responsible associated person. When such a person engages
in this conduct with knowledge that, or in reckless disregard of
whether, it would directly and substantially contribute to the firm's
violation, the Board believes this conduct plainly reflects an ethical
lapse by the responsible person and, therefore, is within the Board's
authority--and indeed responsibility--to proscribe.
At least one commenter asserted that the proposed rule was not a
proper exercise of the Board's ethics standards-setting authority
because it reached a range of conduct, rather than delineating
``particular impermissible conduct.'' The Board disagrees and believes
the type of conduct addressed by the rule is plainly the type of
conduct the Board's ethics rules can and should address. In fact, the
accounting profession's existing ethical code at the time of enactment
of the Act reaches any act that may ``discredit[]'' the profession--
thereby reaching ranges of conduct, including violations of certain
laws, rather than just specifying ``particular impermissible conduct.''
\2\ When Congress vested the authority to set ethics standards in the
Board, the Board believes it intended for this authority to be at least
as broad as the scope of the existing ethics rules, at least as to
matters within the Board's jurisdiction. This authority, in the Board's
view, plainly includes the ability to require that persons subject to
the Board's jurisdiction, as an ethical obligation, not cause a
violation of relevant laws.
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\2\ See AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, ET section
(``sec.'') 501, ``Acts Discreditable'' (``A member shall not commit
an act discreditable to the profession.''). Interpretations of this
part of the ethical code provide that an accountant member will be
considered to have committed a discreditable act if, among other
things, he or she: ``fails to comply with applicable federal, state
or local [tax] laws or regulations,'' ET sec. 501.08, Interpretation
501-7; fails to follow applicable requirements of a governmental
body, such as the SEC, in performing accounting services, ET sec.
501.06, Interpretation 501-5; or fails to follow government audit
standards and rules in conducting a governmental audit, ET sec.
501.04, Interpretation 501-3.
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Commenters opposed to the proposed rule also sought to analogize
the rule to a theory of liability that the Supreme Court rejected in
Central Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver,
N.A.\3\ In Central Bank, the Supreme Court held that that there is no
private right of action for aiding and abetting a violation of Section
10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act''). That
decision turned on the fact that the text of Section 10(b) does not
provide for aiding-and-abetting liability.\4\ The Board does not
believe this decision affects the scope of the Board's explicit
authority to set ethics standards under Section 103 of the Act.\5\
Again, the Board notes that the profession's existing ethics code also
reaches what can be characterized as ``secondary'' conduct contributing
to a violation.\6\
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\3\ 511 U.S. 164 (1994).
\4\ See id. at 190 (``Because the text of Sec. 10(b) does not
prohibit aiding and abetting, we hold that a private plaintiff may
not maintain an aiding and abetting suit under Sec. 10(b).'').
\5\ Rule 3502, of course, differs from an aiding-and-abetting
cause of action in important respects. Among other things, the rule
does not apply whenever an associated person causes another to
violate relevant laws, rules and standards. Rather, Rule 3502
applies only when an associated person causes a violation by the
registered firm with which the person is associated.
\6\ See AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, paragraph .02(2) of
ET sec. 91, ``Applicability'' (``A member shall not knowingly permit
a person, whom the member has the authority or capacity to control,
to carry out on his or her behalf, either with or without
compensation, acts which, if carried out by the member, would place
the member in violation of the rules. Further, a member may be held
responsible for the acts of all persons associated with him or her
in the practice of public accounting whom the member has the
authority or capacity to control.''); see also ET sec. 102.02,
Interpretation 102-1(c) (violation of ethics rules not just to sign,
but to ``permit[] or direct[] another to sign a document containing
materially false and misleading information'') (adopted as a Board
interim ethics rule in Rule 3500T).
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The power to adopt Rule 3502 also is inherent in, and necessary to,
the Board's authority to enforce PCAOB standards, rules, and related
laws against both registered firms and their associated persons.
Section 105 authorizes the Board to investigate and, when appropriate,
discipline registered firms and their associated persons. Certain types
of violations, by their nature, may give rise to direct liability only
for a registered public accounting firm. Such firms, however, can only
act through the natural persons that comprise them, many of whom are
``associated persons'' subject to the Board's ethics standards and
disciplinary authority. When one or more of those associated persons
has caused that firm to violate PCAOB standards, rules, or related laws
with the requisite state of mind, it is appropriate, and consistent
with the Board's duty to discipline registered
[[Page 12724]]
firms and their associated persons under Section 101(c)(4) of the Act,
that the Board be able to discipline the associated person for that
misconduct.\7\
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\7\ Some commenters suggested that the reference to ``any act,
or practice * * * in violation of this Act'' in Section 105(c)(4)--
the part of the Act authorizing the Board to impose certain
sanctions--was inconsistent with the proposed rule. The Board notes,
however, as it did in the proposing release, that Section 105(c)(5)
expressly provides that the more severe of these sanctions may be
imposed when intentional, knowing, or reckless conduct, or repeated
instances of negligent conduct, ``results in'' violation of law,
regulations, or professional standards.
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After carefully considering the comments received, the Board has
determined, however, to modify the scope of Rule 3502 to apply only
when an associated person causes the registered firm's violation due to
an act or omission the person ``knew, or was reckless in not knowing,
would directly and substantially contribute to such violation.'' This
revised formulation reflects two changes to the rule as proposed.
First, the Board has determined to change the state-of-mind
requirement in the rule. Specifically, Rule 3502, as adopted, will
apply to ``an act or omission the [associated] person knew, or was
reckless in not knowing,'' would cause the violation. While the Board
believes it has the authority to adopt a negligence standard,\8\ the
Board believes the revised standard strikes the right balance in the
context of this rule. The Board believes that the phrase ``knew, or was
reckless in not knowing'' is a well-understood legal concept, and the
Board intends for the phrase to be given its normal meaning.
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\8\ A number of commenters argued that Section 105(c) of the Act
prevents the Board from imposing discipline based on a negligence
standard. The Board's determination to change the rule's state-of-
mind requirement to recklessness moots these comments. The Board
notes, however, that Section 105(c)(5) identifies a range of
sanctions that the Board may not impose in the absence of knowing
conduct, reckless conduct, or repeated instances of negligent
conduct. The Act does not similarly limit the Board's authority to
impose certain other sanctions.
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Second, the Board has determined to modify the phrase used to
describe the connection between the associated person's conduct and the
violation. Specifically, Rule 3502, as adopted, provides that the
associated person's act or omission must ``directly and substantially
contribute to [the firm's] violation.'' In particular,
``substantially'' in this context means that the associated person's
conduct (i.e., an act or omission) contributed to the violation in a
material or significant way. The term ``substantially'' also means,
however, that the associated person's conduct does not need to have
been the sole cause of the violation. ``Directly'' means that the
associated person's conduct either essentially constitutes the
violation--even though it is the firm and not the individual that
actually commits the violation--or is a reasonably proximate
facilitating event of, or a reasonably proximate stimulus for, the
violation. ``Directly and substantially'' does not mean that the
associated person's conduct must be the sole cause of the violation,
nor that it must be the final step in a chain of actions leading to the
violation. In addition, the term ``directly'' should not be
misunderstood to excuse someone who knowingly or recklessly engages in
conduct that substantially contributes to a violation, just because
others also contributed to the violation, or because others could have
stopped the violation and did not. At the same time, the term does not
reach an associated person's conduct that, while contributing to the
violation in some way, is remote from, or tangential to, the firm's
violation.
A number of commenters expressed concern that adoption of a
negligence standard would allow the Board, or the SEC, to proceed
against associated persons who in good faith, albeit negligently, have
caused a registered firm to violate applicable laws or standards. For
example, commenters suggested that the proposed rule could be used
against compliance personnel within a firm who inadvertently design a
firm's compliance system in a flawed manner. Commenters also expressed
concern that, because the SEC can enforce PCAOB rules under Section 3
of the Act, the Board's rule could have the practical effect of
altering the state-of-mind requirement applicable in SEC enforcement
proceedings against accountants.
It was not the Board's intention to establish a new standard for
SEC enforcement of the securities laws and related applicable rules.
The Board also recognizes that persons subject to its jurisdiction must
comply with complex professional and regulatory requirements in
performing their jobs. The Board does not seek to create through this
rule a vehicle to pursue compliance personnel who act in an
appropriate, reasonable manner that, in hindsight, turns out to have
not been successful. Nor does the Board seek to reach those whose
conduct, unbeknownst to them, remotely contributes to a firm's
violation. At the same time, the Board continues to believe that it is
necessary and appropriate for its ethics rules to apply when an
associated person has engaged in an act or omission with knowledge
that, or in reckless disregard of whether, it would directly and
substantially contribute to a violation.\9\
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\9\ While the Board's proposed rule tracked some of the language
of Section 21C of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange
Act''), the rule, as adopted, differs significantly from, and should
not be interpreted in pari material with, that statutory provision.
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The Board also believes that, because the rule is essential to the
functioning of the Board's independence rules, this rulemaking provides
the appropriate forum to adopt the rule. For example, Rule 3521
provides, in part, that a registered firm is not independent of its
audit client if the firm provides that audit client with a service for
a contingent fee. When an associated person causes, in a manner
consistent with the discussion above, the registered firm to provide
that service for a contingent fee, Rule 3502 would allow the Board to
discipline the associated person for that conduct.\10\
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\10\ Rule 3502, of course, is not the exclusive means for the
Board to enforce applicable Board rules and standards against
associated persons. Among other provisions, Rules 3100 and 3200T
through 3600T directly require associated persons to comply with
certain auditing and related professional practice standards. In
addition, PCAOB standards generally contain directives to the
``auditor.'' The term ``auditor'' is defined in PCAOB Rule
1001(a)(xii) to include both registered firms and their associated
persons. Accordingly, an associated person of a registered firm that
does not comply with such a directive may be charged with violations
of such other standards, independent of any charges under Rule 3502.
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Rule 3520--The Fundamental Independence Requirement
Rule 3520 sets forth the fundamental ethical obligation of
independence: a registered public accounting firm and its associated
persons must be independent of the firm's audit client throughout the
audit and professional engagement period. This requirement encompasses
the independence requirements set out in PCAOB Rule 3600T and goes
further, as a matter of the auditor's ethical obligation, to encompass
any other independence requirement applicable to the audit in the
particular circumstances. Accordingly, in the case of an audit client
subject to the financial reporting requirements of the securities laws
and the SEC's rules, the ethical obligation under Rule 3520 requires
the firm and its associated persons to maintain independence consistent
with the SEC's requirements.\11\
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\11\ 17 CFR 210.2-01.
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By giving this scope to Rule 3520, the Board is not promulgating
any new independence requirement. The Commission's independence
requirements exist independently of Rule 3520 and are subject to change
at the discretion of the Commission, without Rule 3520 purporting
separately
[[Page 12725]]
to lock in place any aspect of those requirements. Instead, Rule 3520
is based on the simple premise that ethical standards for auditors can
and should encompass a duty by the auditor to maintain independence
necessary to ensure compliance with independence requirements in the
circumstances of the particular engagement.
A note to the rule emphasizes the scope of the obligation in the
rule by pointing out that, even in circumstances to which the
Commission's Rule 2-01 applies, a registered public accounting firm and
its associated persons still may need to comply with other independence
requirements, including those requirements separately established by
the Board. Using this foundation, the Board may adopt additional rules
in the ``Independence'' subpart of the ethics rules that effectively
set out additional requirements. As described below, with the new rules
adopted today, the Board's independence rules include contingent fee
arrangements and tax services.
After carefully considering the comments on proposed Rule 3520, the
Board has determined to adopt the rule, with only one change. Most
commenters supported the scope and content of the proposed rule. A few
commenters, however, asked the Board to add text to the proposed rule
to clarify or emphasize that the rule incorporates certain concepts in
the existing independence requirements. While these comments are
discussed in more detail below, the Board did not adopt these
suggestions, as a general matter, because of the purpose of Rule 3520.
Rule 3520 was simply intended to require, by Board rule, compliance
with applicable independence requirements. The rule was not intended
to, and does not, add to--or subtract from--these existing
requirements. Nor is it intended to reflect the Board's conceptual
approach to independence issues. Accordingly, while the Board does not
necessarily disagree with the intent of the commenters who suggested
adding text to the proposed rule, it does not believe it is necessary
or appropriate to modify the rule to reflect their specific
suggestions.
Three commenters suggested that Rule 3520 expressly require that
auditors maintain independence from their audit client ``both in fact
and appearance.'' As proposed, the rule already requires auditors to
maintain independence both in fact and appearance, because the SEC's
independence rules--which are incorporated in Rule 3520, as discussed
above--are``designed to ensure that auditors are qualified and
independent of their audit clients both in fact and in appearance.''
\12\ In addition, Statement on Auditing Standard (``SAS'') No. 1,
Codification of Auditing Standards and Procedures, adopted by the Board
as an interim standard, requires that auditors ``not only be
independent in fact; [but also] avoid situations that may lead
outsiders to doubt their independence.'' \13\ Therefore, the Board does
not believe it is necessary to include this additional language in Rule
3520 to preserve these existing principles.
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\12\ 17 CFR 210.2-01, Preliminary Note 1; accord United States
v. Arthur Young & Co., 465 U.S. 805, 819 n.15 (1984).
\13\ SAS No. 1, Codification of Auditing Standards and
Procedures, paragraph .03 of AU sec. 220. The standard further
states that ``[p]ublic confidence would be impaired by evidence that
independence was actually lacking, and it might also be impaired by
the existence of circumstances which reasonable people might believe
likely to influence independence.'' Id.
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Some commenters also recommended that Rule 3520 expressly include
the SEC's four overarching independence principles that it will look to
in determining whether a particular service or client relationship
impairs the auditor's independence.\14\ Other commenters asked the
Board to explicitly note in the rule that certain tax services are
consistent with the SEC's four principles. For the reasons described
above, the Board has decided not to change the rule in response to
either of these suggestions. The Board notes, however, that the SEC's
independence rules already refer to the four principles, and these
rules must be complied with under Rule 3520.
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\14\ See 17 CFR 210.2-01, Preliminary Note 2. Specifically,
under those principles, the SEC looks to whether a relationship or
the provision of a service: (a) Creates a mutual or conflicting
interest between the accountant and the audit client; (b) places the
accountant in the position of auditing his or her own work; (c)
results in the accountant acting as management or an employee of the
audit client; or (d) places the accountant in a position of being an
advocate for the audit client.
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Two commenters suggested that Rule 3520 include the text of the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' (``AICPA'') Ethics
Rule 102, which provides, in pertinent part, that members of the AICPA
should avoid any subordination of their judgment.\15\ Although the
Board shares these commenters' view about the importance of this
principle, the Board has already adopted Ethics Rule 102 as part of its
interim ethics rule, Rule 3500T. Accordingly, this rule is already part
of the Board's ethical standards and need not be separately repeated in
Rule 3520 to be enforced by the Board.
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\15\ See AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, ET sec. 102,
``Integrity and Objectivity''.
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Two firms suggested that Rule 3520, as proposed, might have the
effect of precluding use of exceptions in the SEC's existing
independence rules and asked the Board to avoid that result. Other than
creating a requirement in a Board rule to comply with existing and
applicable independence requirements, it does not add to, or detract
from, the scope and substantive effect of these existing requirements
in any respect.
The Board has, however, as suggested by a commenter, added
``associated persons'' to the rule. While the independence requirements
added to the Board's rules through this rulemaking apply to the firm,
other independence requirements covered by Rule 3520 are directed to
individual accountants within auditing firms. Most notably, certain of
the SEC's independence rules impose independence requirements directly
on individual accountants.\16\ Accordingly, the Board believes it is
appropriate for the rule to apply to associated persons, as well as
registered firms themselves. At the same time, the Board has added a
new note to the rule to make clear that the rule applies only to those
associated persons of a registered public accounting firm that are
required to be independent of the firm's audit client by standards,
rules, or regulations of the Commission or other applicable
independence criteria.\17\ Accordingly, the rule does not impose
independence requirements on persons not already subject to them, and
does not impose new independence requirements on any associated person.
Rather, Rule 3520 only requires associated persons who are otherwise
subject to independence requirements to comply, as an ethical
obligation, with those requirements.
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\16\ See, e.g., Rule 2-01(c)(1), 17 CFR 210.2-01(c)(1). See also
PCAOB Rule 3600T.
\17\ Other applicable independence criteria include any rules of
the PCAOB, other than Rule 3520, that contain independence
requirements directly applicable to associated persons of the firm,
such as Rule 3600T.
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Rule 3521--Contingent Fees
The Board also has determined to adopt Rule 3521 as proposed. There
was widespread support among commenters for the Board's view, expressed
in the proposal, that certain fee arrangements used for the provision
of tax services create per se conflicts of interest that impair
auditors' independence from their audit clients. As discussed more
fully in the proposing release, when an accounting firm provides a
service to an audit client for a contingent fee, the firm's economic
interests become
[[Page 12726]]
aligned with the interests of its audit client in a manner that is
inconsistent with the firm's role as independent auditor. The Board's
rule was adapted from the SEC's rule prohibiting contingent fee
arrangements \18\ and thus treats registered firms as not independent
if they enter into contingent fee arrangements with audit clients.
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\18\ See 17 CFR 210.2-01(c)(5).
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Specifically, Rule 3521 provides that a registered public
accounting firm is not independent of its audit client \19\ if the
firm, or any affiliate of the firm,\20\ during the audit and
professional engagement period,\21\ provides any service or product to
the audit client for a contingent fee or a commission, or receives from
the audit client, directly or indirectly, a contingent fee or
commission. The Board's definition of a contingent fee is ``any fee
established for the sale of a product or the performance of any service
pursuant to an arrangement in which no fee will be charged unless a
specified finding or result is attained, or in which the amount of the
fee is otherwise dependent upon the finding or result of such product
or service.'' \22\
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\19\ Rule 3501(a)(iv) defines ``audit client'' as ``the entity
whose financial statements or other information is being audited,
reviewed, or attested and any affiliates of the audit client.''
\20\ Rule 3501(a)(ii) defines ``affiliate of the accounting
firm'' as ``the accounting firm's parents; subsidiaries; pension,
retirement, investment or similar plans; and any associated entities
of the firm, as that term is used in Rule 2-01 of the Commission's
Regulation S-X, 17 CFR 210.2-01(f)(2).''
\21\ Rule 3501(a)(iii) adapts the definition of ``audit and
professional engagement period'' from the definition of that term in
the Rule 2-01 of the SEC's Regulation S-X, which includes both the
period covered by the financial statements under audit or review and
the period beginning when a registered public accounting firm signs
an initial engagement letter (or when such a firm begins audit,
review or attest procedures, whichever is earlier) and ends when the
audit client notifies the SEC that the engagement has ceased. See 17
CFR 210.2-01(f)(5).
\22\ Rule 3501(c)(ii). As discussed in the Board's proposing
release, the term ``contingent fee'' includes the aggregate amount
of compensation for a service, including any payment, service, or
promise of other value, taking into account any rights to
reimbursements, refunds, or other repayments that could modify the
amount received in a manner that makes it contingent on a finding or
result.
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Fees fixed by courts or other public authorities and not dependent
on a finding or result are excluded from this definition to permit
contingencies that do not pose a risk of establishing a mutual interest
between the auditor and the audit client. In the proposing release, the
Board cited, as an example of such a permissible fee, fees approved by
a bankruptcy court, as required under U.S. Federal bankruptcy law.\23\
The Board also sought comment on whether there are courts or other
public authorities that fix fees that are not dependent on a finding or
result, other than bankruptcy courts, such that the term ``courts or
other public authorities'' is necessary.
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\23\ 11 U.S.C. 328(a) (providing that, with a court's approval,
a bankruptcy trustee may employ a professional person ``on any
reasonable terms and conditions of employment, including on a
retainer, on a fixed or percentage fee basis, or on a contingent fee
basis'').
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In response to this request, several commenters noted that they are
not aware of any such authorities and encouraged the Board to eliminate
the reference to ``other public authorities'' from the proposed rule.
Other commenters suggested that the Board retain the phrase, even
though they did not identify other contexts in which fees that are not
contingent on a result of a ``product or service'' are nevertheless
subject to approval by a court or other public authority.\24\ After
considering these comments, the Board has decided to retain the
exception for fees that require approval of ``courts or other public
authorities.'' The Board envisions that there may be fee approval
schemes outside the U.S. that are analogous to U.S. bankruptcy law.
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\24\ One commenter suggested that arbitration panels should be
captured in the final rule as an example of ``courts or other public
authorities'' that may approve auditor fees. The Board is not aware,
and the commenter did not appear to suggest, that any arbitration
panels currently have authority, by contract or law, to approve the
payment of fees to accountants. Therefore, the Board has not
expanded the exception to include fees fixed by arbitration panels.
Nevertheless, if an arbitration panel were by contract given the
authority to approve accountants' fees, such fees would be
permissible under the Board's rule so long as the determination of
the fee was not contingent on the result of a product or service.
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Although Rule 3521 and the related definition of ``contingent fee''
are modeled on the SEC's independence rules, as discussed in the
Board's proposing release, they differ from those rules in that the
Board's rules do not include the SEC's exception for fees ``in tax
matters, if determined based on the results of judicial proceedings or
the findings of governmental agencies.'' \25\ As discussed in the
Board's proposing release, this exception may have been misinterpreted
in the past and is largely redundant of the exception for fees fixed by
courts or other public authorities.\26\ For these reasons, proposed
Rule 3521 would eliminate this exception. The few commenters who
addressed this issue agreed with the Board's reasoning and the
elimination of this exception. Therefore, the Board's final rule does
not include an exception for tax matters in which an auditor's fee
agreement is based on the results of judicial proceedings or the
findings of governmental agencies.
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\25\ 17 CFR 210.2-01(f)(10). By eliminating this exception from
its rule, the Board expresses no view on any firm's compliance with
Rule 2-01 of the Commission's Regulation S-X. See 17 CFR 210.2-
01(c)(5).
\26\ As the SEC Chief Accountant has stated, the SEC's ``tax
matters'' exception only permits fee arrangements where the
determination of the fee is ``taken out of the hands of the
accounting firm and its audit client * * *., with the result that
the accounting firm and client are less likely to share a mutual
financial interest in the outcome of the firm's advice or service.''
Letter from Donald T. Nicolaisen, Chief Accountant, U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission, to Bruce P. Webb, Professional Ethics
Executive Committee Chair, American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (May 21, 2004), available at https://www.sec.gov/info/
accountants/staffletters/webb052104.htm (hereinafter ``Nicolaisen
Letter'').
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In addition, Rule 3521 treats a firm as not independent of an audit
client if it receives a contingent fee or commission from that client
``directly or indirectly.'' The rule's use of the term ``indirectly''
is meant to prevent arrangements for a fee from any person that is
contingent on a finding or result attained by the audit client. The
Board's determination to include such fees within the prohibition is
based on the principle that, regardless of who pays the contingent fee,
such a contingency gives an auditor a stake in the audit client
attaining the finding or result. Accordingly, under Rule 3521, it does
not matter who pays the contingent fee, if it is contingent on a
finding or result attained by the audit client or otherwise related to
the firm's services for the audit client. That is, while use of an
intermediary to disguise an audit client's agreement to a contingent
fee is certainly prohibited, the rule is not limited to circumstances
in which a contingent fee may be traced (e.g., through an intermediary)
to an agreement or payment by an audit client.
Comparable to the SEC's independence rules, proposed Rule 3521
treats contingent fee arrangements between a registered firm's
affiliates and the registered firm's audit clients as relevant to the
firm's independence.\27\
[[Page 12727]]
The inclusion of such affiliates within the scope of those persons
whose activities may impair the independence of a firm from an audit
client is intended to prevent frustration of the rule's purpose through
the use of firm subsidiaries and other affiliates.\28\ The rule is not
intended to, and does not, impose any requirements on affiliates of
firms per se. Nonetheless, the conduct of an affiliate of the firm can
cause the registered firm not to be independent in the situations
specified in the rules.
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\27\ The rule does so by providing that the firm is not
independent if it ``or any affiliate of the firm * * * provides any
service or product to the audit client for a contingent fee or a
commission, or receives from the audit client, directly or
indirectly, a contingent fee or commission.'' The scope of the rule
is intended to be the same as the scope of the Commission's rule,
which defines the terms ``accountant'' and ``accounting firm'' to
include such affiliates. Because registration with the Board is the
basis for the Board's authority over an accountant, the rules would
treat those persons that are related to a registered public
accounting firm and satisfy the Commission's definition of
``accounting firm,'' but are not registered firms themselves, as
``affiliates of the accounting firm.'' Thus, Rule 3501(a)(i) would
adapt the Commission's definition of the term ``accounting firm'' to
define the term ``affiliate of the accounting firm'' as ``the
accounting firm's parents, subsidiaries, pension, retirement,
investment or similar plans, and any associated entities of the
firm, as that term is used in Rule 2-01 of the Commission's
Regulation S-X, 17 CFR 210.2-01(f)(2).''
\28\ See, e.g., In re PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, &
PricewaterhouseCoopers Securities LLC, Exchange Act Release No.
46216 (July 17, 2002), available at https://www.sec.gov/litigation/
admin/34-46216.htm (finding an auditing firm and an affiliate under
the control of the firm in violation of Commission requirements
because the affiliate performed investment banking services for the
firm's audit clients for contingent fees); In KPMG, LLP v.
Securities & Exch. Comm'n, 289 F.3d 109 (D.C. Cir. 2002), the D.C.
Circuit Court declined to find KPMG in violation of the AICPA's rule
against contingent fees, where KPMG only indirectly received a
contingent royalty from an audit client, through an associated
entity of the firm. The Board's rules should be understood, however,
to treat such an arrangement as an impairment of a registered firm's
independence.
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Finally, one accounting firm commented that Rule 3521 should
prohibit value-added fees because such fees could be used in lieu of
contingent fees to achieve a similar effect as contingent fees. Fees
that function as contingent fee arrangements are already prohibited
under the SEC's rule against contingent fees,\29\ and thus under the
Board's final rule as well, whether such fees are labeled contingent
fees, value-added fees, or otherwise. The SEC has indicated that it
will closely monitor the use of value-added fees ``to determine whether
a fee labeled a ``value added'' fee is in fact a contingent fee, such
as where there are side letters or other evidence that ties the fee to
the success of the services rendered,'' \30\ and the Board intends to
do so as well before, if necessary, considering additional rulemaking.
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\29\ See Revision of the Commission's Auditor Independence
Requirements, SEC Release No. 33-7919, Sec. IV.D.5 (Nov. 21, 2000),
17 CFR parts 210 and 240. Indeed, the SEC staff has cautioned audit
committees against approving-- any agreement `` from a direct
contract provision to ``a wink and a nod''--that provides for the
possible additional payment of a `value added' fee based on the
results of an accounting firm's performance of a tax or other
service [that] would be viewed as impairing the firm's independence.
In addition, an audit committee should consider carefully the impact
on an accounting firm's independence of the possibility of even a
completely voluntary payment of a ``value added'' fee by an audit
client to the firm.
Nicolaisen Letter, supra note 25.
\30\ See Revision of the Commission's Auditor Independence
Requirements, SEC Release No. 33-7919, Sec. IV.D.5 (Nov. 21, 2000),
17 CFR parts 210 and 240.
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Rule 3522--Aggressive Tax Positions
Rule 3522 is intended to describe a class of tax-motivated
transactions that present an unacceptable risk of impairing an
auditor's independence if the auditor markets, plans, or opines in
favor of, such a transaction. As discussed in the Board's proposing
release, such conduct has seriously damaged investors' confidence in
the judgment, objectivity, and ethics of firms that engage in such
transactions. Further, aggressive tax positions carry a high risk that
taxing authorities will not allow the position taken by the auditor and
the audit client. As the SEC Chief Accountant noted in the context of
contingent fees, ``the fact that a government agency might challenge
the amount of the client's tax savings * * * heightens * * * the
mutuality of interest between the firm and client.'' \31\
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\31\ Nicolaisen Letter, supra 25.
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As proposed, Rule 3522 treated a firm as not independent of its
audit client if the firm, or an affiliate of the firm, provided
services related to planning, or opining on the tax consequences of a
transaction that is a listed or confidential transaction under U.S.
Department of Treasury (``Treasury'') regulations or that promoted an
interpretation of applicable tax laws for which there is inadequate
support. In order to describe such transactions in a manner that is
clear and consistent with existing constructs for analyzing tax-
oriented transactions, the rule is adapted from certain Treasury
regulations and from the SEC's release accompanying its 2003
independence rules.
Commenters generally supported the notion that auditors should not
provide tax services involving aggressive tax positions to their audit
clients. They also supported the scope of Rule 3522, which as proposed
covered listed transactions, confidential transactions, and other
aggressive transactions. A number of commenters made suggestions to
make the rule text clearer, however, and after considering such
comments the Board has modified the rule in several respects.
First, several commenters suggested that the rule should make clear
that it does not prohibit auditors from advising audit clients not to
engage in an aggressive transaction. Rule 3522 was not intended to
prevent such advice, so in response to these comments the Board has
modified the rule to make clear the prohibition on opining on
aggressive transactions is limited to ``opining in favor of the tax
treatment of'' such transactions (emphasis added). Thus, auditors are
permitted to advise against an audit client's execution of an
aggressive tax transaction.\32\ However, Rule 3522 prohibits an opinion
that a transaction does not satisfy the more-likely-than-not standard
but does satisfy a lower standard of confidence. Similarly, the rule
prohibits advice that an audit client will ``probably'' lose an
argument in favor of a tax treatment, because such advice can imply up
to a 49-percent chance of success.
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\32\ In addition, a number of commenters asked for clarification
of the scope of Rule 3522's prohibition against ``opining'' on an
aggressive transaction. The Board does not intend the rule to
encompass the auditor's opinion on the fairness of financial
statements that reflect the accounting for a transaction that an
audit client has executed. Rather, Rule 3522 is intended to prevent
auditors from facilitating clients' execution of aggressive
transactions by, among other things, providing auditors' written tax
opinions that protect the audit client from the assertion of
penalties by tax authorities or courts.
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In addition, as recommended by one commenter, given recent concerns
about accounting firms establishing marketing centers to sell tax
shelter products, the Board has added the term ``marketing'' to the
list of activities that compromise an auditor's independence. That is,
under Rule 3522, as adopted, an auditor may not market an aggressive
tax transaction to an audit client, in addition to being prohibited
from ``planning, or opining in favor of the tax treatment of,'' such a
transaction.
Finally, proposed Rule 3522(a)'s prohibition on auditors'
involvement in listed transactions has been moved to become a par