Impact of Sarbanes Oxley (SOX) Act on Corporate Governance Practices

Similar documents
THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 AND THE IMPACT ON PUBLIC EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT SYSTEMS

Act language and concepts. David T. Mittelman

Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson August 26, 2003

SARBANES-OXLEY: A BRIEF OVERVIEW. On July 30, 2002, the United States Congress passed, by a nearly unanimous

Legal Alert: Congress Passes The Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002

Sarbanes-Oxley Affects Your Private Company Clients

CHAPTER 29. Corporate Governance. Chapter Synopsis

2006 NON PROFIT MANAGEMENT CENTER. August 2006

What Real Estate Lawyers Need to Know About the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Corporate Governance After the Dodd-Frank Act: Recent Developments

Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX): Implementation and Assessment

Congress Passes the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

KERNS, PITROF, FROST & PEARLMAN, L.L.C.

THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 Summary of Key Provisions of Interest to Internal Auditors

Requirements for Public Company Boards

THEMATIC COMPILATION OF RELEVANT INFORMATION SUBMITTED BY UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ARTICLE 12 UNCAC PRIVATE SECTOR AND PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS

Leasing and SOX Compliance: The Big Picture Michael Keeler, Ecologic Leasing Solutions - 07 Mar 2006

Articles. SEC Proposes New Whistleblower Rules Under the Dodd-Frank Act of Eric R. Markus December 2, 2010

The Effects of Sarbanes Oxley on Publically Traded Companies. An Honors Thesis (HONR 499) Emily Chase. Th sis Advisor: Dan Boylan.

SCOPE This policy applies to all members of the University Board of Trustee and all employees and volunteers of the University.

The impact of SOX on D&O

A Thesis. Entitled. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act: Effects on Public Accounting Firms. Yun Jin. As partial fulfillment of the requirements for

Fiduciary Duty, Corporate Scandals, SOX and the Non-For-Profit

Leasing and SOX Compliance: The Big Picture

Sarbanes-Oxley: A Review of the Empirical Evidence and a Proposal for Reform

Lecture 12 Creditors and Auditors. Prof. Daniel Sungyeon Kim

Co r p o r at e a n d

Compliance & Ethics. Professional

Background COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. After reading this chapter, you will be able to:

Audit and Risk Committee Charter

CONDUCTING INTERNAL INVESTIGATIONS GATHERING EVIDENCE AND PROTECTING YOUR COMPANY

Sarbanes-Oxley Simplified

The 2004 Oversight Systems Financial Executive Report on Sarbanes-Oxley

I. Ensuring the Basis for an Effective Corporate Governance Framework

Corporate Officers & Directors Liability

8/20/2002. Changes from the Initial NYSE Proposal Morrison & Foerster LLP. All Rights Reserved.

The Role of Accountants and Accounting Information

AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

WSGR ALERT PRESIDENT TO SIGN FINANCIAL OVERHAUL BILL. Corporate Governance and Executive Compensation Update. I. Corporate Governance

CRS Report for Congress

EDGE. Who s Afraid of Sarbanes-Oxley?

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE, ETHICAL CONDUCT AND PUBLIC DISCLOSURES IN THE POST-ENRON ERA ---- CHANGING THE WAY CORPORATE AMERICA OPERATES

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Table of Contents

GAO SARBANES-OXLEY ACT. Consideration of Key Principles Needed in Addressing Implementation for Smaller Public Companies

EU Corporate Governance Report. April

SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW NOW

UPDATE ON CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: RESPONDING TO ENRON AND OTHER CORPORATE SCANDALS

PLDT Inc. CODE OF BUSINESS CONDUCT AND ETHICS

SARBANES OXLEY ACT OF 2002 (PL ) AND IMPACT ON THE IT AUDITOR

ENERGY FUELS INC. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE MANUAL

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK FOR LISTED & NON- LISTED COMPANIES

Corruption and Compliance Programs: Comparison of French and U.S. Approaches

'DYLV3RON :DUGZHOO /H[LQJWRQ$YHQXH 1HZ<RUN1< Re: The Sarbanes-Oxley Act CEO and CFO Certification Requirements

Dodd-Frank Corporate Governance

Gregory Keating. Practice Group Leader PRACTICE FOCUS. EDUCATION Boston College Law School JD, 1993, cum laude. Trinity College BA, 1987

The final rules are described in SEC Release Nos , and IC (the 302 Release ).

Legal Alert: Sarbanes-Oxley Act Certification Requirements and Best Practices September 12, I. Introduction

Code of Ethics for Directors

AMENDMENTS TO THE FEDERAL SENTENCING GUIDELINES IMPOSE NEW STANDARDS FOR COMPLIANCE AND ETHICS PROGRAMS

Insider Trading Compliance Manual

NON-AUDIT SERVICE FEES, AUDITOR CHARACTERISTICS AND EARNINGS RESTATEMENTS

Fraud, Bribery and Corruption Control Policy

LIFETIME BRANDS, INC. AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

THE SIDLEY BEST PRACTICES CALENDAR FOR CORPORATE BOARDS AND COMMITTEES SIDLEY AUSTIN LLP

Corporate Governance and Executive Compensation Provisions in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

ARNOLD & PORTER ADVISORY

Legislative Brief. The Companies Bill, Highlights of the Bill. Key Issues and Analysis

This Webcast Will Begin Shortly

Ethics in Indian Business- The Qualifying Factor

Directors of Company and their Role in fortification of Corporate Governance norms in India

MONDELĒZ INTERNATIONAL, INC. AMENDED AND RESTATED AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER. Effective January 26, 2015

Anti-fraud and Corruption Policy

Ch. 4 Financial Goals and Governance. Managing for Value. Goals of The MNEs

This memorandum updates and supersedes our similarly titled memorandum dated January 10, 2003.

Governance & Development: Views from G20 Countries

43. Major Policy Lessons from the Corporate Scandals

Audit Committee Charter

PAPA JOHN S INTERNATIONAL, INC. CODE OF ETHICS AND BUSINESS CONDUCT

CHARTER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF MINERALS TECHNOLOGIES INC.

Secure Information Destruction; A Legal Imperative

SOX, Corporate Governance and Working with the Board

Q&A on the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

Dodd-Frank: What You Don t Want to Know but

PHILLIPS EDISON GROCERY CENTER REIT II, INC.

Whistleblower Incentive Program What it Will Mean to You

Code of Ethics for Directors

PCAOB Inspections: Auditor Violations and Client Characteristics

Why the Board is Broken. Joseph Anton and Tamar Frankel

BUSINESS ENTITY COMPLIANCE & GOVERNANCE

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and Corporate Governance

Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002: 2004 Update for Non-U.S. Issuers.

AN ANALYSIS OF SMALL COMPANY FRAUDS AND IMPLICATONS FOR AUDITORS IN DETECTING FRAUDS

In an environment of heightened federal enforcement

SMART COMMUNICATIONS, INC. CODE OF BUSINESS CONDUCT AND ETHICS

The Effect of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 on Earnings Quality

April 2015 FC 158/12 E. Hundred and Fifty-eighth Session. Rome, May Anti-Fraud and Anti-Corruption Policy

UNION PACIFIC CORPORATION AUDIT COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHARTER

Asia-Pacific. Proxy Voting Guideline Updates Benchmark Policy Recommendations. Effective for Meetings on or after Feb.

NYSE, NASDAQ and AMEX Publish Final Corporate Governance Rules

Whistleblower Policy TATA MOTORS LIMITED WHISTLEBLOWER POLICY

Transcription:

Pacific Business Review International Volume 8 issue 6 December 2015 Impact of Sarbanes Oxley (SOX) Act on Corporate Governance Practices Dr. Abhishek Soni Associate Professor Department of Management Studies JIET Group of Institutions, Jodhpur Ms. Sheetal Soni Senior Research Fellow Department of Management Studies Jai Narain Vyas University, Jodhpur Abstract SOX: Creating the Public Accounting Oversight Board and Increased Corporate Responsibility The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, also known as Sarbox or SOX was passed in July 2002 in response to the rash of real and perceived failures in corporate governance and financial disclosure. Its primary emphasis was to enhance the quality and transparency of corporate disclosure and force changes in the auditing of publicly traded companies. These objectives were achieved in a number of ways by the passing of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The present paper highlights the role of different types of Board of Directors and their obligation towards the long run performance of an organization. It also highlights the reforms mandated by SOX Act to enhance corporate responsibility and financial disclosure and to combat corporate and accounting fraud. Keywords: Accounting, Disclosure, Governance, Whistleblower Introduction The term corporate governance is the set of processes, principles and systems through which a company is governed which provide the guidelines as to how the company can be controlled or directed in such a way that it can fulfill its objectives and goals in a manner which adds to the value of the company and also imparts benefits for all the stakeholders in the long run. Stakeholders here include all ranging from the board of directors to management to shareholders to customers to employees and society. Thus, the company management presumes the role of a trustee for all the others. Corporate governance is related to maintain the balance between social goals and economic goals and also between individual and communal goals. The governance framework encourages the efficient use of resources and equally requires accountability for the stewardship of those resources. The aim is to align the interests of individuals, corporations and society. Corporate governance is based on the principles for conducting the business with all integrity, fairness, and being transparent with all the transactions, making the necessary disclosures and decisions, complying with the laws of the land, accountability and responsibility towards the stakeholders and commitment of conducting the business in an ethical manner. 38

Pacific Business Review International Role of Board of Directors A corporation is a mechanism established to allow different parties to contribute capital, expertise, and labor for their mutual benefit. The investor/ shareholder participate in the profits of the enterprise without taking responsibility for the operations. Management runs the company without being responsible for personally providing the funds. To make this possible, laws have been passed that give shareholders limited liability and limited involvement in a corporation's activities. The involvement does include, however, the right to elect directors who have a legal duty to represent the shareholders and protect their interests. The board of directors therefore has an obligation to approve all decisions that might affect the long-run performance of the corporation. This means that the corporation is fundamentally governed by the board of directors overseeing top management, with the concurrence of the shareholder. The term corporate governance refers to the relationship among these three groups in determining the direction and performance of the corporation. It is the duty of the board to select, evaluate, and approve appropriate compensation for the company's Chief Executive Officer (CEO), to evaluate the attractiveness of and pay dividends, recommend stock splits, oversee share repurchase programs, approve the company's financial statements, and recommend or strongly discourage acquisitions and mergers. They are responsible for providing stewardship of not only management functions but also operations of the institution. In India, like in other countries, the principal role of the board as representatives of the shareholders is to monitor the working of the organization and to protect the interests of all stakeholders. With increase in complexity in the structure of organizations, the expectations from the board of directors have increased. Indian boards in today's competitive global era must move away from the so-called rubber stamp board to being a strategic asset for the company. However, there is a developing worldwide consensus concerning the major responsibilities of the board which falls under the order of importance as following: Ÿ Setting corporate strategy, overall direction and vision & mission of the organization Ÿ Hiring and firing of the CEO (Chief Executive Officer) and top management Ÿ Monitoring, controlling, or supervising top management resources Ÿ Caring for shareholder's interests In Indian law, the board owes a strict judiciary duty to ensure that the company runs in the long term interest of owner with key responsibilities such as: Ÿ Determination of board functions Ÿ Setting values, mission and vision statements for the organization Ÿ Responsibility to prepare strategic plan, next year operating plan, and budget Ÿ Responsibility to ensure that the company has adequate resources to meet its objectives Ÿ Responsibility to monitor progress towards achieving the agreed objectives Ÿ Responsibility to prepare work plan for the year with monthly benchmarks and time-lines Ÿ Responsibility to mentor, monitor and evaluate the chief executive office Ÿ Responsibility to ensure compliance and disclosure to various acts such as Companies Act, the SEBI Act, The Income Tax, Sales Tax, other tax and labor laws Ÿ Responsibility to communicate with the stakeholders Ÿ Responsibilities which includes setting performance objectives, monitoring corporate performance, overseeing mergers and acquisitions and other capital expenditures Board of Director's Continuum The boards of directors are involved in strategic management to the extent that it carries out the three tasks of monitoring, evaluating and influencing, and initiating and determining. The below listed chart Board of Director's continum reveals the possible degree of involvement (from low to high). Board can ranges from Phantom Boards with no real investment to Catalyst Boards with a very high degree of involvement. Active board involvement in strategic management is positively related to a corporation's credit rating and financial performance. Ÿ Reviewing and approving the use of all the available 39

Volume 8 issue 6 December 2015 Source: T.L. Wheelen and J.D. Hunger, Board of Directors Continuum Members of a Board of Directors b) Non Executive Directors are outside directors who do not hold any management position in the organization. They are The majority boards of the public corporations are the people who have been chosen to sit exclusively on the composed of both inside and outside directors. Inside board of the company. According to the Clause 49 of SEBI's directors (who are also called as management directors) are listing Agreements, independent director means non those officers or executives who are employed by the executive director of the organization who: corporation. Outside directors (who are also called as nonmanagement directors) may be the executives of some other i. does not have any material relationship with the firms but are not employees of the board's corporation. In organization apart from receiving director's India, according to the policy of Department of Public remuneration; Enterprises, the Board of Directors of Public Sector ii. not related to promoters or management at board Undertakings should consist of: level or one level below the board; i. Full time functional directors number must not iii. has not been executive of the organization in the exceed 50% of the actual strength of the board; last preceding three financial years: ii. Government directors number must not exceed iv. is not a partner or an executive of the statutory audit one-sixth of the actual strength of the board firm or the internal audit firm which is associated wherein no case the number should exceed two; with the organization; iii. Non-official part-time directors number should be v. is not a supplier, service provider or organization's at least one-third of the actual strength of the board customer; and vi. is not a substantial shareholder of the organization The board of the organization may comprise of different c) Nominee Director is third party stakeholders such type of directors which may include: as government, foreign collaborators, holding a) Executive Director who is also known as inside director. companies and financial institutions or other They are full time employees/ executives of the company. lenders. Their power and status is derived from their respective d) Representative Director is appointed to represent position in the hierarchy of the company. According to the the interest of a stakeholder group such as Clause 49 of SEBI's listing Agreements, every listed entity consumer, employees, suppliers etc. requires to reserve half the board for independent directors if the chairman is an executive director. e) Shadow Director is also known as deemed director who is not is not named or appointed as director but 40

Pacific Business Review International imparts instructions (not professional advice) f) Associate Director is titled to senior managers who are not on the board of the organization. This title is given as a sign of appreciation and recognition for work done. Indian Style of Corporate Governance The listed companies in India are by obligations of Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has to comply with corporate governance code from January 2000 which was further reviewed in 2003 by a new committee which was headed by Mr. N R Narayana Murthy, who defined a complete and good set of corporate governance system as one which attaches "a high degree of priority towards the interests of shareholders who have placed their trust in the company to use the funds wisely and effectively". But unfortunately, the reforms of the corporate governance have been on paper only. The system is still considered to quite hollow by the fact that the "independent directors" are all nominated by the controlling group whom they are supposed to supervise. A big majority of the listed companies of India have destroyed shareholder value. Whether proper attention to the shareholders' interest has been given by a company or not, would ordinarily get reflected in two indicators of shareholders' return, viz., dividends and capital appreciation. SOX (Sarbanes-Oxley) Act and Corporate Governance The legislation came into existence in 2002 and introduced major changes to the regulations of financial practice and corporate governance. This act was named after Senator Paul Sarbanes and Michael Oxley, which sets a number of deadlines for compliance. (SOX Law, 2006) Towards the corporate scandals, the U.S. Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) in June 2002. It was particularly designed to protect the shareholders from the excess and failed oversight that characterized lapses and failures at Tyco, World Com, Enron, Qwest and Global Crossing and other prominent firms. There were several key elements of SOX act which were designed to formalize greater independence on board and oversight. To quote, the act requires that all directors serving on the audit committee should be independent of the firm and receive no fees other than that of director. The board will not grant loans to corporate officers. The act has also established formal procedures for individuals (whistleblowers) to report incidents of questionable accounting or auditing. The corporation's financial information must be certified by both the CFO and CEO. The act also bans auditors to provide both internal and external audit services to the same company. The provisions of the Sarbanes Oxley Act state the criminal and the civil penalties for certification of internal auditing, non-compliance, and for increase in financial disclosures. It has also affected the public U.S. companies and a non-u.s. company with presence in U.S. SOX is all concerned about corporate governance and financial disclosure. (Sarbanes Oxley 101, 2005) The SOX Act necessitate all financial reports to be comprised of with an Internal Controls Report which confirms that a financial data of the company is accurate and adequate controls are available to safeguard the financial data. Year-end financial disclosure reports are also a needed requirement. A SOX auditor is needed to review policies, controls, and procedures during audit. SOX auditing need that internal controls and procedures can be audited by via a control framework like COBIT. Log collection and monitoring systems should provide an audit trail of all the access and activity to sensitive business information. Sarbanes-Oxley also promotes the disclosure of corporate fraud by protecting whistleblower employees of publicly traded companies or their subsidiaries who reports illegal activities. Section 806 of Sarbanes Oxley Act authorizes the U.S. Department of Labor to protect whistleblower complaints against the employers who retaliate and also authorizes the Department of Justice to criminally charge against all those who are responsible for the retaliation. Law Violation Consequences To a large extent, the Act significantly increased the consequences of violations of the securities laws, actions for fraud, and other federal offenses. Law violations are subject to longer imprisonment and increased fines. 41

Volume 8 issue 6 December 2015 An alteration, falsification, or destruction of any document with the intent to obstruct any federal investigation (whether related or not related to securities) is subject to criminal penalties. Addition to this, directors and officers, and acting persons their direction, are prohibited from manipulating, misleading, coercing, or fraudulently influencing the auditor of a public company's financial statements if that person knew or should have known that the action could cause the company's financial statements to be materially misleading. Ways SOX changed Corporate Governance With reaction to the Enron- and WorldCom accounting scandals, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) was passed and became law on 30 July, 2002. Although the sweeping legislation had unassailable goals preventing and deterring future accounting fraud, protecting the shareholders and increasing their confidence in public company financial reporting and, thus, in the U.S. capital markets it was disruptive. It imposed great number of new duties and costs on public companies and firms of accounting, and a decade later, people were still split about whether the money, time and focus lost to SOX are worth the benefits it has given. SOX reformed and re-empowered the board of directors of the corporate- The most prominent change SOX was about to produce was a shift from a perspective that the board serves management with a view point that management is working for the board. SOX also recognized that director's independence is essential for the board to serve effectively as a check on the management which allows for the director's liability if the board fails to exercise the appropriate oversight. SOX encouraged the adoption of corporate codes of ethics - SOX needed the companies to disclose whether their senior executives and financial officers followed the code of ethics. If they didn't, they had to explain why. In the same time, both the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ adopted the rules which require that the listed companies adopt and disclose a code of conduct. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board - SOX created the independent Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) in 2002 to supervise the independent auditors of public companies thereby replacing a self-regulatory scheme and mandating clear independence. The Board's inspection powers imply that the audits of companies' internal controls are subject to scrutiny. Role of in-house counsel SOX created a SEC rule which requires in-house and outside lawyers practicing before the SEC to report evidence of a material violation to the CEO of the company. Then the CEO must investigate the evidence and take rational steps to respond to the report. If the reporting attorney is not satisfied with the response, then the lawyer must report the potential misconduct to the audit or another committee. SOX laid the cultural roots of shareholder activism Shareholder activism has increased, with Dodd-Frank pushing forward shareholder proxy access and say on pay compensation advisory rules. Roots of such trends were there in SOX and the Enron like corporate scandals shoved the issues like executive compensation and the independence of the board into the spotlight. SOX made public companies more expensive to run SOX compliance is very costly and there's no doubt in that. Most of the organizations spend in the range of $100,000 to $1 million annually on compliance-related activities which doesn't include the time and focus board members and executives must spend on compliance matters. SOX empowered the SEC Among other measures, SOX extended the decree of limitations for the SEC to pursue actions and increase the penalties at their disposal. SOX changed the balance of power between companies and prosecutors, putting the prosecutors in the driver's seat. SOX has changed things for the private companies too Private companies which were not subject to SOX reforms have adopted some of its provisions as best practices, such as ensuring the director's independence and adopting audit and audit committee procedures. Conclusion Corporate governance should begin with an 42

Volume 8 issue 6 December 2015 unambiguous definition of the duties, accountability and authority, for the directors of the board and management. Special emphasis must be placed on the accountability of the board of directors towards the shareholders and their independence from management. It has been very understandable that the stockholders' annual meeting and a proxy report controlled by management are not sufficient to offer shareholders with firsthand information on the performance of the corporation and the management. The alternatives are to increase the frequency and extent of information given to the shareholders, or to include several individuals directly nominated the stockholders on the board of directors. The second alternative appears to be more cost effective which allows more efficient and timely communication with the stockholders. The presence of independent directors also improves the control mechanisms on the operation and performance of the board of directors. http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2009-0 1-1 8 / n e w s / 2 8 4 6 2 4 9 7 _ 1 _ c o r p o r a t e - governance-satyam-books-fraud-by-satyam- founder Though implementing best practices of the corporate governance would result in additional operating costs, it must be emphasized that the good corporate governance is not an option but an obligation, if shareholder's interest is to be protected. Compliance costs are very small fraction of the gargantuan losses which are suffered by stockholders who have invested in the companies whose shares became worthless because they did not comply with good corporate governance practices. Stockholders of Enron and WorldCom suffered losses of more than $100 billion, while the most aggressive estimates of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance costs amount to be less than $5 billion. References Frantz, M. A. (2008). FindLaw. Retrieved January 16, 2015, from Ccorporate.findlaw.com: http://corporate.findlaw.com/finance/corporate- governance-redefined-the-sarbanes-oxley-act- of-2002.html MALESKE, M. (2012, January 01). Retrieved January 16, 2015, from Inside Counsel: http://www.insidecounsel.com/2012/01/01/8-ways- sox-changed-corporate-governance?page=8 Thomas L. Wheelen, J. D. (2013). Concepts in Strategic Management and Business Policy Towards Global Sustainability. Pearson. Thomson, L. M. (2009, January 18). Retrieved January 15, 2015, from www.economictimes.indiatimes.com: 03 43