| Washington,
D.C., June 20, 2008 — The Securities and Exchange Commission
announced today that it has approved a one-year extension of the
compliance date for smaller public companies to meet the Section
404(b) auditor attestation requirement of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
The SEC also announced that it received Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approval yesterday to proceed with data collection
for a study of the costs and benefits of Section 404
implementation, focusing on the consequences for smaller companies
and the effects of the Section 404 auditor attestation
requirements. The results of the study are expected to become
available during the extension period.
With the extension, smaller companies will now be required to
provide the attestation reports in their annual reports for fiscal
years ending on or after Dec. 15, 2009. SEC Chairman Christopher
Cox first proposed this one-year delay for small businesses during
December 2007 testimony before the House Small Business
Committee, and the Commission formally
proposed this extension on Feb. 1, 2008.
The SEC staff's cost-benefit study, which was announced in
February, is being led by the SEC's Office of Economic Analysis
with assistance from the Office of the Chief Accountant and the
Division of Corporation Finance. The OMB's approval on June 19 is
an important milestone in the project, as the SEC staff can now
begin the collection of data through interviews and other
outreach. The staff submitted the study design for OMB review and
approval in compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
With OMB approval, and the key financial data for annual reports
becoming available to companies this spring, the SEC staff will be
moving forward with interviews and a web-based survey as part of
its effort to collect real-world data from a broad array of
companies and analyzing what drives costs, particularly for
smaller companies, and where companies and investors derive the
benefits from Section 404.
John W. White, Director of the SEC's Division of Corporation
Finance, said, "Over the past few years, the Commission and
PCAOB have committed extensive resources to improving the
efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the implementation of Section
404's requirements, particularly for smaller companies. I am
optimistic that this study of real-world data will help further
inform our efforts to improve the implementation of SOX 404."
The SEC staff's cost-benefit study will help determine whether
the new management guidance on evaluating the internal controls
over financial reporting issued by the Commission in June 2007 and
the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's (PCAOB) Auditing
Standard No. 5 approved by the Commission in July 2007 are having
the intended effect of facilitating more cost-effective internal
control evaluations and audits of smaller reporting companies. The
study includes gathering new data from a broad array of companies
about the costs and benefits of compliance with the Section 404
requirements. The study also pays special attention to those
smaller companies that are complying for the first time with the
requirements that are currently in effect.
Section 404 has two provisions: 404(a) requires company
management to assess the effectiveness of the company's internal
controls over financial reporting, while 404(b) requires an
auditor attestation on management's assessment. Larger companies,
comprising more than 95 percent of the market capitalization of
U.S equity securities markets, have been subject to both
provisions since 2004.
The extension of the Section 404(b) compliance date for smaller
companies is the latest in a series of Commission efforts to help
reduce unnecessary compliance costs for smaller companies while
preserving important investor protections. In 2007, the SEC issued
new guidance for management's Section 404 assessment to help
companies focus their reviews on the internal control issues that
matter most to investors. Companies of all sizes, including
smaller companies, are filing their first 404(a) reports this year
with the benefit of the new guidance. Furthermore, the SEC and the
PCAOB voted unanimously to replace the standard for the 404(b)
auditor attestation, which is intended to make the process more
efficient. This year, larger companies are filing their first
404(b) reports under the new audit standard.
The full text of the final amendments for the extension of the
auditor attestation requirement for smaller companies will be
posted to the SEC Web site as soon as possible. The amendments
will take effect 60 days after the release is published in the
Federal Register.
Source: http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-116.htm
For more information, please contact Jim Kochanski at 215-564-1900.
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