Why was Sarbanes Oxley Created
In the wake of the Enron
and Worldcom scandals, the Sarbanes Oxley Act
was created to
inspect and monitor companies in an attempt to
protect shareholders and investors of the
companies.
Under the final rules, management's annual
internal control report will have to contain:
a statement of management's responsibility for
establishing and maintaining adequate internal
control over financial reporting for the
company;
a statement identifying the framework used by
management to evaluate the effectiveness of this
internal control;
management's assessment of the effectiveness of
this internal control as of the end of the
company's most recent fiscal year; and
a statement that its auditor has issued an
attestation report on management's assessment.
Under the new rules, management must disclose
any material weakness and will be unable to
conclude that the company's internal control
over financial reporting is effective if there
are one or more material weaknesses in such
control. Furthermore, the framework on which
management's evaluation is based will have to be
a suitable, recognized control framework that is
established by a body or group that has followed
due-process procedures, including the broad
distribution of the framework for public
comment.
The new rules implementing Section 404 of the
Act will define the term "internal control over
financial reporting" to mean
a process designed by, or under the supervision
of, the registrant's principal executive and
principal financial officers, or persons
performing similar functions, and effected by
the registrant's board of directors, management
and other personnel, to provide reasonable
assurance regarding the reliability of financial
reporting and the preparation of financial
statements for external purposes in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles
and includes those policies and procedures that
pertain to the maintenance of records that in
reasonable detail accurately and fairly reflect
the transactions and dispositions of the assets
of the registrant;
provide reasonable assurance that transactions
are recorded as necessary to permit preparation
of financial statements in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles, and
receipts and expenditures of the registrant are
being made only in accordance with
authorizations of management and directors of
the registrant; and
provide reasonable assurance regarding
prevention or timely detection of unauthorized
acquisition, use or disposition of the
registrant's assets that could have a material
effect on the financial statements.
The Commission also voted to adopt amendments
requiring companies to perform quarterly
evaluations of changes that have materially
affected or are reasonably likely to materially
affect the company's internal control over
financial reporting.
Compliance with the rules regarding management's
report on internal controls will be required as
follows: companies, other than foreign private
issuers, meeting the definition of an
"accelerated filer" in Exchange Act Rule 12b-2
(generally, U.S. companies that have equity
market capitalization over $75 million and have
filed an annual report with the Commission) will
be required to comply with the management report
on internal control over financial reporting
requirements for fiscal years ending on or after
June 15, 2004, and all other issuers, including
small business issuers and foreign private
issuers, will be required to comply for their
fiscal years ending on or after April 15, 2005.
Certifications
The final rules will amend the exhibit
requirements for periodic reports to add the
certifications required by Sections 302 and 906
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to the list of
required exhibits to be included in reports
filed with the Commission. Under the final
rules, the specific form and content of the
Section 302 certification will be set forth in
the applicable exhibit filing requirements for a
company's periodic reports.
The amendments will permit companies to
"furnish" rather than "file" the Section 906
certifications with the Commission. Thus, the
certifications will not be subject to liability
under Section 18 of the Exchange Act. Moreover,
the certifications will not be subject to
automatic incorporation by reference into a
company's Securities Act registration
statements, which are subject to liability under
Section 11 of the Securities Act, unless the
issuer takes steps to include the certifications
in a registration statement.
The rules and form amendments concerning Section
302 and Section 906 certifications generally
will become effective sixty days after their
publication in the Federal Register.
Rule 3a-8
As adopted by the Commission, new Rule 3a-8
under the Investment Company Act will modernize
the test that R&D companies use in determining
their status under the Act.
R&D companies tend to have few tangible assets
and often hold large amounts of capital in
liquid instruments so that funds are readily
available for research and development
activities. Some R&D companies also enter into
strategic alliances that may include a strategic
investment, where one R&D company purchases a
non-controlling securities position in another
company. As a result, an R&D company may fall
within the definition of investment company. The
new rule will serve as a nonexclusive safe
harbor from the definition of investment company
in Section 3(a)(1) of the Act.
The analysis set forth in the new rule generally
will focus on an R&D company's use of its
capital and other indicia of the company's
primary engagement in a non-investment business.
Generally, a company will be eligible to rely on
the rule's nonexclusive safe harbor if it:
- has research and development expenses that are
a substantial percentage of its total expenses
for its last four fiscal quarters combined and
that equal at least half of its net income
derived from investments in securities for that
period;
- has investment-related expenses that do not
exceed five percent of its total expenses for
its last four fiscal quarters combined; makes
its investments to conserve capital and
liquidity until it uses the funds in its primary
business subject to certain exceptions; and is
primarily engaged, directly or through a company
or companies that it controls primarily, in a
non-investment business, as evidenced by the
activities of its officers, directors and
employees, its public representations of
policies, and its historical development.
The new rule will become effective sixty days
after its publication in the Federal Register.
Read the article at: sec.gov/news/press/2003-66.htm
About
Sarbanes Oxley. Com. All
rights Reserved world wide. All trademarks and
service marks are property of their respective
owners.
NOTICE
About
Sarbanes Oxley. Com nor
any agency thereof, nor any of their employees,
makes any warranty, express or implied, or
assumes any legal liability or responsibility
for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of
any information, apparatus, product, or process
disclosed, or represents that its use would not
infringe privately owned rights. Reference
herein to any specific commercial product,
process, or service by trade name, trademark,
manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily
constitute or imply its endorsement,
recommendation, or favoring by the
About Sarbanes Oxley. Com.