Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; Order Approving Proposed Rules on Annual and Special Reporting by Registered Public Accounting Firms, 41950-41953 [E9-19838]
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41950
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 159 / Wednesday, August 19, 2009 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–60497; File No. PCAOB–
2008–04]
Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board; Order Approving Proposed
Rules on Annual and Special
Reporting by Registered Public
Accounting Firms
August 13, 2009.
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
I. Introduction
On June 10, 2008, the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board
(the ‘‘Board’’ or the ‘‘PCAOB’’) filed
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the ‘‘Commission’’ or
‘‘SEC’’) proposed rules (File No.
PCAOB–2008–04) on annual and special
reporting by registered public
accounting firms, pursuant to Section
107 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(the ‘‘Act’’). Notice of the proposed rules
was published in the Federal Register
on June 18, 2009.1 The Commission
received four comment letters relating to
this rule proposal. For the reasons
discussed below, the Commission is
granting approval of the proposed rules.
II. Description
On June 10, 2008, the Board adopted
rules and submitted to the Commission
a rule proposal consisting of eight new
rules (PCAOB Rules 2200–2207)
concerning annual and special reporting
by registered public accounting firms,
instructions to two forms to be used for
such reporting (Form 2 and Form 3),
and related amendments to existing
Board rules. The proposed rules would
establish the foundation of a reporting
and disclosure system for registered
public accounting firms pursuant to
Section 102(d) of the Act, specify the
details of certain reporting obligations,
and provide forms for such reporting.
To the extent that the Board identifies
additional reporting requirements that
are necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
investors, the Board may propose and
adopt them in the future.
According to the Board, the proposed
reporting requirements serve three
fundamental purposes. First, firms will
report information to keep the Board’s
records current about such basic matters
as the firm’s name, location, contact
information, and licenses. Second, firms
will report information reflecting the
extent and nature of the firm’s audit
practice related to issuers in order to
facilitate analysis and planning related
1 See Release No. 34–60107 (June 12, 2009); 74 FR
29091 (June 18, 2009).
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to the Board’s inspection
responsibilities and to inform other
Board functions, as well as for the value
the information may have to the public.
Third, firms will report circumstances
or events that could merit follow-up
through the Board’s inspection process
or its enforcement process, and that also
may otherwise warrant being brought to
the public’s attention (such as a firm’s
withdrawal of an audit report in
circumstances where the information is
not otherwise publicly available).
The reporting framework includes
two types of reporting obligations. First,
it requires each registered firm to
provide basic information once a year
about the firm and the firm’s issuerrelated practice over the most recent 12month period. The firm must do so by
filing an annual report on Form 2.
Second, upon the occurrence of
specified events, a firm must report
certain information by filing a special
report on Form 3.
Proposed Rule 2201 sets June 30 as
the deadline for the annual filing of
Form 2. The reporting period covered by
the report would be April 1 to March 31,
leaving each firm with three months to
prepare and file a Form 2 reflecting
information from that 12-month period.
Any firm that was registered as of March
31 of a particular year would be
required to file Form 2 by June 30 of
that year, but any firm that became
registered in the period between and
including April 1 and June 30 would
not be required to file a Form 2 until
June 30 of the following year.
Under the proposed rules, the
occurrence of specified events triggers
an obligation to file a special report on
Form 3. The proposed rules provide that
special reports must be filed within 30
days of the triggering event or a firm’s
awareness of a triggering event.
The Board expects annual and special
reports to be complete and accurate, and
inaccuracies or omissions could form
the basis for disciplinary sanctions for
failing to comply with the reporting
requirements reflected in Rules 2200
and 2203 and the instructions to Forms
2 and 3. Proposed Rule 2205 provides
for the filing of amendments to
previously filed annual or special
reports if the originally filed report
included information that was incorrect
at the time of the filing, or if the
originally filed form omitted any
information or affirmation that was, at
the time of such filing, required to be
included in that report.
Annual and special reports will be
made public on the Board’s Web site
promptly upon being filed by a firm,
subject to exceptions for information for
which a firm requests confidential
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treatment. The Board intends that as
much reported information as possible
be publicly available as soon as possible
after filing.
The proposed forms identify certain
categories of information for which a
firm may request confidential treatment.
The proposed rules include new
requirements effected through
amendments to PCAOB Rule 2300
concerning the support that a firm must
supply to support a confidential
treatment request. The proposed
amendments require that a firm support
a request with both a representation that
the information has not otherwise been
publicly disclosed and either (1) a
detailed explanation of the grounds on
which the information is considered
proprietary, or (2) a detailed explanation
of the basis for asserting that the
information is protected by law from
public disclosure and a copy of the
specific provision of law. The proposed
amendments also provide that the firm’s
failure to supply the required support
constitutes sufficient grounds for denial
of the request.
Under proposed Rule 2207, a nonU.S. firm may withhold required
information from Form 2 or Form 3 if
the firm cannot provide the information
without violating non-U.S. law. If the
firm withholds information on that
ground, it must have certain supporting
materials, including (1) a copy of the
relevant provisions of non-U.S. law, (2)
a legal opinion concluding that the firm
would violate non-U.S. law by
submitting the information to the Board,
and (3) a written explanation of the
firm’s efforts to seek consents or waivers
that would be sufficient to overcome the
conflict with respect to the information.
The firm must certify on the form that
it has the supporting materials in its
possession. The rule reserves to the
Board, and to the Director of the
Division of Registration and Inspections,
the discretion to require that a firm
submit any of those supporting
materials in a particular case. The rule
also reserves to the Board the discretion
to require that the firm provide any of
the withheld information in a particular
case.
The proposed rules include an
amendment to the Board’s inspection
rules that makes clear that the Board
may require a firm to provide additional
information. Specifically, existing Rule
4000 provides that registered firms shall
be subject to such regular and special
inspections as the Board chooses to
conduct. The proposed amendment
adds a paragraph providing that the
Board, in the exercise of its inspection
authority, may at any time request that
a registered firm provide additional
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information or documents relating to
information provided on Form 2 or
Form 3, or relating to information that
has otherwise come to the Board’s
attention. The amendment provides that
the request and response are considered
to be in connection with the firm’s next
regular or special inspection.
Accordingly, the cooperation
requirements of Rule 4006 apply, and
the request and response are subject to
the confidentiality restrictions of
Section 105(b)(5) of the Act.
The proposed amendments to Rule
2300(b)–(c), concerning the required
support, would also apply prospectively
to confidential treatment requests on
applications for registration on Form 1.
Existing Rule 2107 governs the
process by which a firm may seek to
withdraw from registration with the
Board. Under Rule 2107, a firm cannot
withdraw at will, but must request the
Board’s permission to withdraw, and
the Board may withhold that permission
under certain conditions. The proposed
rules include an amendment to Rule
2107 to change the way it addresses the
reporting obligations of a firm that has
filed Form 1–WD seeking leave to
withdraw. Existing Rule 2107(c)(2)(i)
provides that, beginning on the fifth day
after the Board receives a completed
Form 1–WD, the firm can satisfy any
annual reporting requirement by
submitting a report stating that a
completed Form 1–WD has been filed
and is pending. Under the proposed
amendment, the firm’s reporting
obligation, including both annual and
special reporting, would simply be
suspended while Form 1–WD was
pending. If a firm withdraws its Form 1–
WD and continues as a registered firm,
however, Rule 2107 would require the
filing of any annual or special reports,
and the payment of any annual fee, that
otherwise would have been required
while the Form 1–WD was pending. The
Board is also eliminating from Rule
2107 the five-day delay between receipt
of a completed Form 1–WD and the
effect of that filing on a firm’s reporting
obligation. Suspension of that obligation
would occur immediately upon the
Board’s receipt of the completed Form
1–WD.
The Board also proposed to delete
from definitions in PCAOB Rule 1001
certain provisions that ceased to apply
after December 15, 2003. Specifically,
the Board proposes to amend Rules
1001(a)(vii) (definition of ‘‘audit
services’’), 1001(o)(i) (definition of
‘‘other accounting services’’), and
1001(n)(ii) (definition of ‘‘tax services’’)
by deleting the paragraph denominated
‘‘(1)’’ from each rule.
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The proposed rules would take effect
60 days after Securities and Exchange
Commission approval.
III. Discussion
A. Comments Received
The Commission received four
comment letters relating to the rule
proposal. All four of the comment
letters came from registered public
accounting firms.2
Each of the commenters expressed
support for the overall purpose of the
Board’s rules. However, similar to the
comments made to the PCAOB during
its comment period, the commenters
raised several main concerns related to:
(1) Provisions of proposed PCAOB Rule
2107 that relate to assertions of conflicts
with non-U.S. laws; (2) Form 3
triggering events that depend on the
firm’s awareness; (3) the requirement
that registered public accounting firms
file with the PCAOB a Form 3 for
withdrawn audit reports; (4) the
reporting on Form 3 of the dates of
registered public accounting firms’
consents to the use of previously issued
audit reports; and (5) the Board’s
differing approach in Forms 2 and 3 for
reporting the engagement of consultants
or professionals subject to PCAOB/SEC
discipline.
1. Assertions of Conflicts With Non-U.S.
Laws
Some commenters expressed concerns
about the proposed requirement for nonU.S. firms to gather and maintain
certain information. Proposed Rule
2207(c)(1) would require non-U.S. firms
to gather and maintain, for a period of
seven years, the information required by
Forms 2 and 3 that the non-U.S. firm
asserts is unable to submit because of a
conflicting local law. Some commenters
observed that this requirement may
cause problems for non-U.S. firms
because in some jurisdictions there may
be privacy or other laws that would
preclude registered firms from gathering
the information necessary to complete
Form 3.3
All of the commenters expressed
concerns about the discretion afforded
the Board in proposed Rule 2207(e) that
would allow the Board to request a nonU.S. firm to file information withheld
under proposed Rule 2207(c)(1) based
on an asserted conflict with non-U.S.
law. Each commenter recognized that
although the Board stated in its
adopting release that it does not foresee
2 See comments of Deloitte and Touche LLP
(‘‘Deloitte’’), Ernst & Young LLP (‘‘E&Y’’), KPMG
International (‘‘KPMG’’), and
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (‘‘PwC’’).
3 See comments of Deloitte, E&Y, and KPMG.
PO 00000
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invoking proposed Rule 2207(e) with
any regularity, the commenters believe
that where applied, it could be of
significant concern to non-U.S. firms.
According to the commenters, the
concern rests on the fact that if the
Board invoked Rule 2207(e), a non-U.S.
firm could be put in an untenable
situation where it would have to choose
between breaching its reporting
obligations under the PCAOB’s rules
and violating its home jurisdiction’s
laws.
The Board addressed these concerns
in its adopting release. In that release,
the Board asserted that the requirement
for a firm to have in its possession a
version of Form 2 or Form 3 that
includes the information that the firm
would be required to report in absence
of a legal conflict imposes no greater
burden on a non-U.S. firm than on a
U.S. firm that actually reports the
information. The Board further stated
that the opportunity to assert a legal
conflict is an accommodation in light of
the possibility that a firm may believe
it is caught stuck between competing
legal requirements.
The Board also stated that a firm
should not assume that its mere
assertion of a conflict resolves the
matter, and that there is no reason for
the Board to provide that a firm need
not even have assembled the
information, in the form in which any
other firm would have to assemble it,
before asserting that non-U.S. law
precludes it from disclosing the
particular information it is withholding.
Lastly, and as one of the commenters
pointed out, the Board specifically
addressed this issue by adding a note to
Rule 2207(c)(1) to provide that the
materials maintained by the firm do not
need to include any information (1) that
the firm does not possess, and (2) as to
which the firm asserts that the firm
would violate non-U.S. law by requiring
another person to provide the
information to the firm.
As the commenters noted, the Board
explained at length its purpose and
intended administration of Rule 2207(e).
The Board noted that its position is not
dissimilar from the same situation it
faces in the registration context. The
Commission is not aware of any
instances or concerns in the registration
context in which the PCAOB has acted
unreasonably with regard to conflicts
with non-U.S. laws that were raised by
non-U.S. firms.
The Commission believes the Board’s
responses to these comments are not
unreasonable. The Commission
presumes that the Board will continue
to exercise reasonable judgment and
discretion in considering conflicts with
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non-U.S. laws that are raised in
connection with the completion of a
Form 2 or Form 3 as it has for the past
six years with respect to similar issues
in the registration context.4
2. Firm Awareness of Form 3 Triggering
Events
Certain items reported in Form 3
describe events that a firm must report
to the Board within 30 days after the
firm has become aware of certain facts.
The Form provides that the firm is
deemed to have become aware of the
relevant facts on the date that any
partner, shareholder, principal, owner,
or member of the firm first becomes
aware of the facts.
All commenters expressed concern
that triggering the reporting requirement
based on the awareness of any one of
the large number of people who fall into
the definition provided by the Board,
especially if they are not part of senior
management, would be burdensome.
Several of these commenters observed
that, in response to the proposed rules,
firms would put in place policies and
procedures requiring reportable
information be reported to the persons
in the organization responsible for
compliance with the rules. Because of
their view that firms would put the
necessary policies and procedures in
place, these commenters recommended
that the Commission encourage the
PCAOB to consider issuing guidance
providing that a registered firm will not
be considered out of compliance with a
reporting obligation if there is an
inadvertent failure to follow internal
procedures that are designed in good
faith to effectuate reporting.
Similar comments were originally
raised to the Board in connection with
the Board’s original proposal of the
annual and special reporting rules. After
consideration of the comments received,
the Board narrowed the Form 3
reporting requirements as to the
reportable events and clarified the
‘‘deemed aware’’ standard as to which
persons are covered. In addition, the
Board stated it believes it is reasonable
to expect a firm to have controls
designed to ensure that any such person
who becomes aware of relevant facts
understands the firm’s reporting
obligation and brings the matter to the
attention of persons responsible for
compliance with the obligation.
We agree. This matter is not
dissimilar to the need for issuers to
maintain appropriate disclosure and
4 The Commission also notes that the Board has
been willing to provide further implementation
guidance where necessary to explain its
administration of similar requirements. See https://
www.pcaob.org/Registration/2004-03-11_FAQ.pdf.
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controls and procedures to meet their
reporting obligations, including for
current reporting on Form 8–K that is on
a much shorter timeframe than Form 3
reporting. Those procedures include
those to ensure that information is
accumulated and communicated to the
appropriate personnel to allow timely
disclosure. This matter also is not
dissimilar to a registered public
accounting firm’s existing obligations
under the Commission’s and the
PCAOB’s auditor independence
requirements, which in many instances
reaches down to obligations involving
members of an engagement team below
a partner level. Lastly, as to when it
would be appropriate for the Board to
take disciplinary action for reporting
violations, the Commission assumes the
Board will continue to exercise its
discretion as to whether disciplinary
action is warranted under the particular
facts and circumstances.
3. Disclosure of the Dates of Consents of
Audit Reports
Under the proposed rules, firms
would be required to report on Form 2
the dates of any consent to an issuer’s
use of an audit report the firm
previously issued to that issuer, if such
consent constitutes the only instance of
the firm issuing an audit report for that
issuer during the reporting period.
Three commenters expressed opposition
to this proposed requirement on the
basis that it would not be sufficiently
meaningful to warrant the potential
burden of gathering and reporting it,5
with one noting that this information
would in most, if not all, cases have
already been listed in the previous
year’s public report on Form 2.6
We are not persuaded by the
arguments raised by commenters that
this requirement would be an undue
burden, and we believe that it is not
unreasonable for the Board to request
firms to provide the dates of consents
when such consent constitutes the only
instance of the firm issuing an audit
report for that issuer during the
reporting period. We acknowledge that
for the larger firms, they will likely need
to institute additional controls to
compile the information, but we do not
believe the burden to be unreasonable.
4. Reporting of Withdrawn Audit
Reports
The rules proposed by the Board
include a requirement that a firm file a
Form 3 when it withdraws an audit
report and the related issuer has failed
to comply with its requirement to file a
5 See
6 See
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comments of PwC.
Frm 00092
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Form 8–K regarding the event. Some
commenters opposed this proposal and
expressed the view that this matter
fundamentally is about issuer conduct
and, therefore, is more appropriately left
to the Commission in the context of its
disclosure framework and that such
monitoring and reporting would create
an unnecessary and duplicative burden
on registered firms.7
Commenters expressed these same
concerns during the Board’s comment
period and the Board responded to these
comments by noting the following: (1)
The point of this item is not have the
firm draw the Board’s attention to
potential problems with an issuer’s
financial statements, but that a
withdrawn audit report is a risk
indicator concerning the auditor’s
conduct preceding the withdrawal, not
merely a risk indicator concerning the
issuer’s financial statements; and (2) the
Board has a regulatory interest in being
aware of this information and possibly
following up on that information for
reasons directly related to its oversight
of auditors.
The Commission agrees with the
responses made by the PCAOB and
believes that a requirement for
registered firms to report this
information is not unreasonable. In
addition, we note the response of one
commenter who indicated that
registered firms already routinely track
such instances.
5. Differing Approach in Forms 2 and 3
to the Reporting of the Engagement of
Consultants or Professionals Subject to
PCAOB/SEC Discipline
Form 2 requires registered firms to
report information about certain types of
relationships with individuals and
entities who have specified disciplinary
and other histories. One such reporting
requirement under Part VII of Form 2
requires firms to report arrangements for
services related to the firm’s audit
practice or related to services the firm
provides to issuer audit clients. Section
II of Form 3 includes a similar reporting
trigger, however that trigger is not
limited to individuals who provide
audit services. Two commenters raised
concerns about these requirements.8
Both commenters acknowledged a
statement made by the Board in its
adopting release where the Board
expressed its view that limiting the
scope of the Form 3 reporting
requirement would negate the purpose
of the reporting requirement, ‘‘which is
generally intended to gather information
about new relationships with persons or
7 See
8 See
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entities that are effectively restricted
from providing auditing services.’’ 9
Both commenters disagreed with the
Board’s response.
The Commission believes the Board
appropriately explained its rationale for
the difference in the Form 2 and Form
3 reporting requirements and believes
that it is not unreasonable for the Board
to request this information in the
current manner in which it is requested.
6. Requests for Additional
Implementation Guidance
As noted in the above discussion, the
Commission has considered the
concerns and issues raised by
commenters and appreciates the
feedback. While the Commission
believes the aforementioned matters are
not unreasonable requirements, the
Commission does encourage the Board
to monitor implementation of its annual
and special reporting rules and to be
open to issuing timely implementation
guidance as necessary as to these and
the other comments raised, as was done
with the Board’s implementation of its
registration rules.10
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B. Recommendation as to the Annual
Fee
Section 102(f) of the Act requires the
Board to ‘‘assess and collect a
registration fee and an annual fee from
each registered firm in amounts that are
sufficient to recover the Board’s costs of
processing and reviewing applications
and annual reports.’’ 11 The PCAOB has
collected registration fees from every
firm that has registered with the Board
since 2003. However, the Board has not
assessed or collected annual fees from
any registered firms.
In our order approving the PCAOB’s
budget and accounting support fee for
2008, the Commission directed the
PCAOB to, among other things, analyze
historical and planned expenditures
related to the review and processing of
registrations and annual reports of
public accounting firms.12 We
understand from this analysis that there
are unrecovered historical costs that
need to be collected from registered
firms. In addition, the Board needs to
determine the amount of current and
future costs of reviewing and processing
registrations and annual reports and
how and over what period to recover
those costs. These matters also are
impacted due to changes to the Board’s
registration profile that may occur as a
result of the requirement for auditors of
non-public broker dealers to be
registered with the Board for fiscal
periods ending on or after January 1,
2009.
The Commission recommends that, in
setting its annual fee under PCAOB Rule
2202, Annual Fee, the Board recover all
of the unrecovered historical costs
associated with the Board’s review and
processing of registration applications
in the first annual fee billed to
registered public accounting firms and
that these costs be recovered only from
registered public accounting firms that
were registered prior to January 1, 2009,
and that such bill be separately
itemized. In addition, for consistency
and to aid transparency, the
Commission recommends that future
costs associated with reviewing and
processing registration applications,
processing annual and special reporting,
and related system maintenance and
development costs be recovered over a
time period that is consistent with the
time period the PCAOB uses for its
financial statement purposes to
depreciate long-lived assets similar to
that used by the PCAOB in processing
registration applications and annual and
special reports.
IV. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the
Commission finds that the proposed
PCAOB rules on annual and special
reporting by registered public
accounting firms are consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the
securities laws and are necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 107 of the Act and Section
19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act, that
proposed PCAOB Rules on Annual and
Special Reporting by Registered Public
Accounting Firms (File No. PCAOB–
2008–04) be and hereby are approved.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–19838 Filed 8–18–09; 8:45 am]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–60491; File No. SR–CBOE–
2009–057]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Chicago Board Options Exchange,
Incorporated; Notice of Filing of a
Proposed Rule Change Related to
Market-Maker Orders
August 12, 2009.
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 August
10, 2009, the Chicago Board Options
Exchange, Incorporated (the ‘‘Exchange’’
or ‘‘CBOE’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been
prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange is proposing to
eliminate an order identification rule for
Market-Maker and Specialist orders.
The text of the proposed rule change is
available on the Exchange’s Web site
(https://www.cboe.org/Legal), at the
Office of the Secretary, CBOE and at the
Commission.
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
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of
and basis for the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
Rule 6.73(d) currently provides that a
Floor Broker holding an order for the
account of a Market-Maker or Specialist
shall verbally identify the order as such
9 See PCAOB Release No. 2008–004, June 10,
2008 [page 22].
10 See, e.g., https://www.pcaob.org/Registration/
Registration_FAQ.pdf; and https://www.pcaob.org/
Registration/2004-03-11_FAQ.pdf.
11 15 U.S.C. 7212(f).
12 See Release No. 34–56986 (December 18, 2007).
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U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 159 (Wednesday, August 19, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41950-41953]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-19838]
[[Page 41950]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-60497; File No. PCAOB-2008-04]
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; Order Approving
Proposed Rules on Annual and Special Reporting by Registered Public
Accounting Firms
August 13, 2009.
I. Introduction
On June 10, 2008, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
(the ``Board'' or the ``PCAOB'') filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the ``Commission'' or ``SEC'') proposed rules (File No.
PCAOB-2008-04) on annual and special reporting by registered public
accounting firms, pursuant to Section 107 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 (the ``Act''). Notice of the proposed rules was published in the
Federal Register on June 18, 2009.\1\ The Commission received four
comment letters relating to this rule proposal. For the reasons
discussed below, the Commission is granting approval of the proposed
rules.
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\1\ See Release No. 34-60107 (June 12, 2009); 74 FR 29091 (June
18, 2009).
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II. Description
On June 10, 2008, the Board adopted rules and submitted to the
Commission a rule proposal consisting of eight new rules (PCAOB Rules
2200-2207) concerning annual and special reporting by registered public
accounting firms, instructions to two forms to be used for such
reporting (Form 2 and Form 3), and related amendments to existing Board
rules. The proposed rules would establish the foundation of a reporting
and disclosure system for registered public accounting firms pursuant
to Section 102(d) of the Act, specify the details of certain reporting
obligations, and provide forms for such reporting. To the extent that
the Board identifies additional reporting requirements that are
necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection
of investors, the Board may propose and adopt them in the future.
According to the Board, the proposed reporting requirements serve
three fundamental purposes. First, firms will report information to
keep the Board's records current about such basic matters as the firm's
name, location, contact information, and licenses. Second, firms will
report information reflecting the extent and nature of the firm's audit
practice related to issuers in order to facilitate analysis and
planning related to the Board's inspection responsibilities and to
inform other Board functions, as well as for the value the information
may have to the public. Third, firms will report circumstances or
events that could merit follow-up through the Board's inspection
process or its enforcement process, and that also may otherwise warrant
being brought to the public's attention (such as a firm's withdrawal of
an audit report in circumstances where the information is not otherwise
publicly available).
The reporting framework includes two types of reporting
obligations. First, it requires each registered firm to provide basic
information once a year about the firm and the firm's issuer-related
practice over the most recent 12-month period. The firm must do so by
filing an annual report on Form 2. Second, upon the occurrence of
specified events, a firm must report certain information by filing a
special report on Form 3.
Proposed Rule 2201 sets June 30 as the deadline for the annual
filing of Form 2. The reporting period covered by the report would be
April 1 to March 31, leaving each firm with three months to prepare and
file a Form 2 reflecting information from that 12-month period. Any
firm that was registered as of March 31 of a particular year would be
required to file Form 2 by June 30 of that year, but any firm that
became registered in the period between and including April 1 and June
30 would not be required to file a Form 2 until June 30 of the
following year.
Under the proposed rules, the occurrence of specified events
triggers an obligation to file a special report on Form 3. The proposed
rules provide that special reports must be filed within 30 days of the
triggering event or a firm's awareness of a triggering event.
The Board expects annual and special reports to be complete and
accurate, and inaccuracies or omissions could form the basis for
disciplinary sanctions for failing to comply with the reporting
requirements reflected in Rules 2200 and 2203 and the instructions to
Forms 2 and 3. Proposed Rule 2205 provides for the filing of amendments
to previously filed annual or special reports if the originally filed
report included information that was incorrect at the time of the
filing, or if the originally filed form omitted any information or
affirmation that was, at the time of such filing, required to be
included in that report.
Annual and special reports will be made public on the Board's Web
site promptly upon being filed by a firm, subject to exceptions for
information for which a firm requests confidential treatment. The Board
intends that as much reported information as possible be publicly
available as soon as possible after filing.
The proposed forms identify certain categories of information for
which a firm may request confidential treatment. The proposed rules
include new requirements effected through amendments to PCAOB Rule 2300
concerning the support that a firm must supply to support a
confidential treatment request. The proposed amendments require that a
firm support a request with both a representation that the information
has not otherwise been publicly disclosed and either (1) a detailed
explanation of the grounds on which the information is considered
proprietary, or (2) a detailed explanation of the basis for asserting
that the information is protected by law from public disclosure and a
copy of the specific provision of law. The proposed amendments also
provide that the firm's failure to supply the required support
constitutes sufficient grounds for denial of the request.
Under proposed Rule 2207, a non-U.S. firm may withhold required
information from Form 2 or Form 3 if the firm cannot provide the
information without violating non-U.S. law. If the firm withholds
information on that ground, it must have certain supporting materials,
including (1) a copy of the relevant provisions of non-U.S. law, (2) a
legal opinion concluding that the firm would violate non-U.S. law by
submitting the information to the Board, and (3) a written explanation
of the firm's efforts to seek consents or waivers that would be
sufficient to overcome the conflict with respect to the information.
The firm must certify on the form that it has the supporting materials
in its possession. The rule reserves to the Board, and to the Director
of the Division of Registration and Inspections, the discretion to
require that a firm submit any of those supporting materials in a
particular case. The rule also reserves to the Board the discretion to
require that the firm provide any of the withheld information in a
particular case.
The proposed rules include an amendment to the Board's inspection
rules that makes clear that the Board may require a firm to provide
additional information. Specifically, existing Rule 4000 provides that
registered firms shall be subject to such regular and special
inspections as the Board chooses to conduct. The proposed amendment
adds a paragraph providing that the Board, in the exercise of its
inspection authority, may at any time request that a registered firm
provide additional
[[Page 41951]]
information or documents relating to information provided on Form 2 or
Form 3, or relating to information that has otherwise come to the
Board's attention. The amendment provides that the request and response
are considered to be in connection with the firm's next regular or
special inspection. Accordingly, the cooperation requirements of Rule
4006 apply, and the request and response are subject to the
confidentiality restrictions of Section 105(b)(5) of the Act.
The proposed amendments to Rule 2300(b)-(c), concerning the
required support, would also apply prospectively to confidential
treatment requests on applications for registration on Form 1.
Existing Rule 2107 governs the process by which a firm may seek to
withdraw from registration with the Board. Under Rule 2107, a firm
cannot withdraw at will, but must request the Board's permission to
withdraw, and the Board may withhold that permission under certain
conditions. The proposed rules include an amendment to Rule 2107 to
change the way it addresses the reporting obligations of a firm that
has filed Form 1-WD seeking leave to withdraw. Existing Rule
2107(c)(2)(i) provides that, beginning on the fifth day after the Board
receives a completed Form 1-WD, the firm can satisfy any annual
reporting requirement by submitting a report stating that a completed
Form 1-WD has been filed and is pending. Under the proposed amendment,
the firm's reporting obligation, including both annual and special
reporting, would simply be suspended while Form 1-WD was pending. If a
firm withdraws its Form 1-WD and continues as a registered firm,
however, Rule 2107 would require the filing of any annual or special
reports, and the payment of any annual fee, that otherwise would have
been required while the Form 1-WD was pending. The Board is also
eliminating from Rule 2107 the five-day delay between receipt of a
completed Form 1-WD and the effect of that filing on a firm's reporting
obligation. Suspension of that obligation would occur immediately upon
the Board's receipt of the completed Form 1-WD.
The Board also proposed to delete from definitions in PCAOB Rule
1001 certain provisions that ceased to apply after December 15, 2003.
Specifically, the Board proposes to amend Rules 1001(a)(vii)
(definition of ``audit services''), 1001(o)(i) (definition of ``other
accounting services''), and 1001(n)(ii) (definition of ``tax
services'') by deleting the paragraph denominated ``(1)'' from each
rule.
The proposed rules would take effect 60 days after Securities and
Exchange Commission approval.
III. Discussion
A. Comments Received
The Commission received four comment letters relating to the rule
proposal. All four of the comment letters came from registered public
accounting firms.\2\
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\2\ See comments of Deloitte and Touche LLP (``Deloitte''),
Ernst & Young LLP (``E&Y''), KPMG International (``KPMG''), and
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (``PwC'').
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Each of the commenters expressed support for the overall purpose of
the Board's rules. However, similar to the comments made to the PCAOB
during its comment period, the commenters raised several main concerns
related to: (1) Provisions of proposed PCAOB Rule 2107 that relate to
assertions of conflicts with non-U.S. laws; (2) Form 3 triggering
events that depend on the firm's awareness; (3) the requirement that
registered public accounting firms file with the PCAOB a Form 3 for
withdrawn audit reports; (4) the reporting on Form 3 of the dates of
registered public accounting firms' consents to the use of previously
issued audit reports; and (5) the Board's differing approach in Forms 2
and 3 for reporting the engagement of consultants or professionals
subject to PCAOB/SEC discipline.
1. Assertions of Conflicts With Non-U.S. Laws
Some commenters expressed concerns about the proposed requirement
for non-U.S. firms to gather and maintain certain information. Proposed
Rule 2207(c)(1) would require non-U.S. firms to gather and maintain,
for a period of seven years, the information required by Forms 2 and 3
that the non-U.S. firm asserts is unable to submit because of a
conflicting local law. Some commenters observed that this requirement
may cause problems for non-U.S. firms because in some jurisdictions
there may be privacy or other laws that would preclude registered firms
from gathering the information necessary to complete Form 3.\3\
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\3\ See comments of Deloitte, E&Y, and KPMG.
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All of the commenters expressed concerns about the discretion
afforded the Board in proposed Rule 2207(e) that would allow the Board
to request a non-U.S. firm to file information withheld under proposed
Rule 2207(c)(1) based on an asserted conflict with non-U.S. law. Each
commenter recognized that although the Board stated in its adopting
release that it does not foresee invoking proposed Rule 2207(e) with
any regularity, the commenters believe that where applied, it could be
of significant concern to non-U.S. firms. According to the commenters,
the concern rests on the fact that if the Board invoked Rule 2207(e), a
non-U.S. firm could be put in an untenable situation where it would
have to choose between breaching its reporting obligations under the
PCAOB's rules and violating its home jurisdiction's laws.
The Board addressed these concerns in its adopting release. In that
release, the Board asserted that the requirement for a firm to have in
its possession a version of Form 2 or Form 3 that includes the
information that the firm would be required to report in absence of a
legal conflict imposes no greater burden on a non-U.S. firm than on a
U.S. firm that actually reports the information. The Board further
stated that the opportunity to assert a legal conflict is an
accommodation in light of the possibility that a firm may believe it is
caught stuck between competing legal requirements.
The Board also stated that a firm should not assume that its mere
assertion of a conflict resolves the matter, and that there is no
reason for the Board to provide that a firm need not even have
assembled the information, in the form in which any other firm would
have to assemble it, before asserting that non-U.S. law precludes it
from disclosing the particular information it is withholding. Lastly,
and as one of the commenters pointed out, the Board specifically
addressed this issue by adding a note to Rule 2207(c)(1) to provide
that the materials maintained by the firm do not need to include any
information (1) that the firm does not possess, and (2) as to which the
firm asserts that the firm would violate non-U.S. law by requiring
another person to provide the information to the firm.
As the commenters noted, the Board explained at length its purpose
and intended administration of Rule 2207(e). The Board noted that its
position is not dissimilar from the same situation it faces in the
registration context. The Commission is not aware of any instances or
concerns in the registration context in which the PCAOB has acted
unreasonably with regard to conflicts with non-U.S. laws that were
raised by non-U.S. firms.
The Commission believes the Board's responses to these comments are
not unreasonable. The Commission presumes that the Board will continue
to exercise reasonable judgment and discretion in considering conflicts
with
[[Page 41952]]
non-U.S. laws that are raised in connection with the completion of a
Form 2 or Form 3 as it has for the past six years with respect to
similar issues in the registration context.\4\
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\4\ The Commission also notes that the Board has been willing to
provide further implementation guidance where necessary to explain
its administration of similar requirements. See https://www.pcaob.org/Registration/2004-03-11_FAQ.pdf.
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2. Firm Awareness of Form 3 Triggering Events
Certain items reported in Form 3 describe events that a firm must
report to the Board within 30 days after the firm has become aware of
certain facts. The Form provides that the firm is deemed to have become
aware of the relevant facts on the date that any partner, shareholder,
principal, owner, or member of the firm first becomes aware of the
facts.
All commenters expressed concern that triggering the reporting
requirement based on the awareness of any one of the large number of
people who fall into the definition provided by the Board, especially
if they are not part of senior management, would be burdensome. Several
of these commenters observed that, in response to the proposed rules,
firms would put in place policies and procedures requiring reportable
information be reported to the persons in the organization responsible
for compliance with the rules. Because of their view that firms would
put the necessary policies and procedures in place, these commenters
recommended that the Commission encourage the PCAOB to consider issuing
guidance providing that a registered firm will not be considered out of
compliance with a reporting obligation if there is an inadvertent
failure to follow internal procedures that are designed in good faith
to effectuate reporting.
Similar comments were originally raised to the Board in connection
with the Board's original proposal of the annual and special reporting
rules. After consideration of the comments received, the Board narrowed
the Form 3 reporting requirements as to the reportable events and
clarified the ``deemed aware'' standard as to which persons are
covered. In addition, the Board stated it believes it is reasonable to
expect a firm to have controls designed to ensure that any such person
who becomes aware of relevant facts understands the firm's reporting
obligation and brings the matter to the attention of persons
responsible for compliance with the obligation.
We agree. This matter is not dissimilar to the need for issuers to
maintain appropriate disclosure and controls and procedures to meet
their reporting obligations, including for current reporting on Form 8-
K that is on a much shorter timeframe than Form 3 reporting. Those
procedures include those to ensure that information is accumulated and
communicated to the appropriate personnel to allow timely disclosure.
This matter also is not dissimilar to a registered public accounting
firm's existing obligations under the Commission's and the PCAOB's
auditor independence requirements, which in many instances reaches down
to obligations involving members of an engagement team below a partner
level. Lastly, as to when it would be appropriate for the Board to take
disciplinary action for reporting violations, the Commission assumes
the Board will continue to exercise its discretion as to whether
disciplinary action is warranted under the particular facts and
circumstances.
3. Disclosure of the Dates of Consents of Audit Reports
Under the proposed rules, firms would be required to report on Form
2 the dates of any consent to an issuer's use of an audit report the
firm previously issued to that issuer, if such consent constitutes the
only instance of the firm issuing an audit report for that issuer
during the reporting period. Three commenters expressed opposition to
this proposed requirement on the basis that it would not be
sufficiently meaningful to warrant the potential burden of gathering
and reporting it,\5\ with one noting that this information would in
most, if not all, cases have already been listed in the previous year's
public report on Form 2.\6\
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\5\ See comments of E&Y, KPMG, and PwC.
\6\ See comments of PwC.
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We are not persuaded by the arguments raised by commenters that
this requirement would be an undue burden, and we believe that it is
not unreasonable for the Board to request firms to provide the dates of
consents when such consent constitutes the only instance of the firm
issuing an audit report for that issuer during the reporting period. We
acknowledge that for the larger firms, they will likely need to
institute additional controls to compile the information, but we do not
believe the burden to be unreasonable.
4. Reporting of Withdrawn Audit Reports
The rules proposed by the Board include a requirement that a firm
file a Form 3 when it withdraws an audit report and the related issuer
has failed to comply with its requirement to file a Form 8-K regarding
the event. Some commenters opposed this proposal and expressed the view
that this matter fundamentally is about issuer conduct and, therefore,
is more appropriately left to the Commission in the context of its
disclosure framework and that such monitoring and reporting would
create an unnecessary and duplicative burden on registered firms.\7\
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\7\ See comments of Deloitte and PwC.
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Commenters expressed these same concerns during the Board's comment
period and the Board responded to these comments by noting the
following: (1) The point of this item is not have the firm draw the
Board's attention to potential problems with an issuer's financial
statements, but that a withdrawn audit report is a risk indicator
concerning the auditor's conduct preceding the withdrawal, not merely a
risk indicator concerning the issuer's financial statements; and (2)
the Board has a regulatory interest in being aware of this information
and possibly following up on that information for reasons directly
related to its oversight of auditors.
The Commission agrees with the responses made by the PCAOB and
believes that a requirement for registered firms to report this
information is not unreasonable. In addition, we note the response of
one commenter who indicated that registered firms already routinely
track such instances.
5. Differing Approach in Forms 2 and 3 to the Reporting of the
Engagement of Consultants or Professionals Subject to PCAOB/SEC
Discipline
Form 2 requires registered firms to report information about
certain types of relationships with individuals and entities who have
specified disciplinary and other histories. One such reporting
requirement under Part VII of Form 2 requires firms to report
arrangements for services related to the firm's audit practice or
related to services the firm provides to issuer audit clients. Section
II of Form 3 includes a similar reporting trigger, however that trigger
is not limited to individuals who provide audit services. Two
commenters raised concerns about these requirements.\8\
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\8\ See comments of KPMG and Deloitte.
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Both commenters acknowledged a statement made by the Board in its
adopting release where the Board expressed its view that limiting the
scope of the Form 3 reporting requirement would negate the purpose of
the reporting requirement, ``which is generally intended to gather
information about new relationships with persons or
[[Page 41953]]
entities that are effectively restricted from providing auditing
services.'' \9\ Both commenters disagreed with the Board's response.
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\9\ See PCAOB Release No. 2008-004, June 10, 2008 [page 22].
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The Commission believes the Board appropriately explained its
rationale for the difference in the Form 2 and Form 3 reporting
requirements and believes that it is not unreasonable for the Board to
request this information in the current manner in which it is
requested.
6. Requests for Additional Implementation Guidance
As noted in the above discussion, the Commission has considered the
concerns and issues raised by commenters and appreciates the feedback.
While the Commission believes the aforementioned matters are not
unreasonable requirements, the Commission does encourage the Board to
monitor implementation of its annual and special reporting rules and to
be open to issuing timely implementation guidance as necessary as to
these and the other comments raised, as was done with the Board's
implementation of its registration rules.\10\
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\10\ See, e.g., https://www.pcaob.org/Registration/Registration_FAQ.pdf; and https://www.pcaob.org/Registration/2004-03-11_FAQ.pdf.
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B. Recommendation as to the Annual Fee
Section 102(f) of the Act requires the Board to ``assess and
collect a registration fee and an annual fee from each registered firm
in amounts that are sufficient to recover the Board's costs of
processing and reviewing applications and annual reports.'' \11\ The
PCAOB has collected registration fees from every firm that has
registered with the Board since 2003. However, the Board has not
assessed or collected annual fees from any registered firms.
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\11\ 15 U.S.C. 7212(f).
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In our order approving the PCAOB's budget and accounting support
fee for 2008, the Commission directed the PCAOB to, among other things,
analyze historical and planned expenditures related to the review and
processing of registrations and annual reports of public accounting
firms.\12\ We understand from this analysis that there are unrecovered
historical costs that need to be collected from registered firms. In
addition, the Board needs to determine the amount of current and future
costs of reviewing and processing registrations and annual reports and
how and over what period to recover those costs. These matters also are
impacted due to changes to the Board's registration profile that may
occur as a result of the requirement for auditors of non-public broker
dealers to be registered with the Board for fiscal periods ending on or
after January 1, 2009.
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\12\ See Release No. 34-56986 (December 18, 2007).
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The Commission recommends that, in setting its annual fee under
PCAOB Rule 2202, Annual Fee, the Board recover all of the unrecovered
historical costs associated with the Board's review and processing of
registration applications in the first annual fee billed to registered
public accounting firms and that these costs be recovered only from
registered public accounting firms that were registered prior to
January 1, 2009, and that such bill be separately itemized. In
addition, for consistency and to aid transparency, the Commission
recommends that future costs associated with reviewing and processing
registration applications, processing annual and special reporting, and
related system maintenance and development costs be recovered over a
time period that is consistent with the time period the PCAOB uses for
its financial statement purposes to depreciate long-lived assets
similar to that used by the PCAOB in processing registration
applications and annual and special reports.
IV. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the Commission finds that the
proposed PCAOB rules on annual and special reporting by registered
public accounting firms are consistent with the requirements of the Act
and the securities laws and are necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 107 of the Act and
Section 19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act, that proposed PCAOB Rules on
Annual and Special Reporting by Registered Public Accounting Firms
(File No. PCAOB-2008-04) be and hereby are approved.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9-19838 Filed 8-18-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010-01-P