Compliance Week, a magazine and newsletter on corporate governance and compliance, today announced the results of a study of financial reporting and corporate risk areas across a wide range of industries. The results show that Corporate America is making marked improvements in regulatory compliance despite persistent problems.
BOSTON (Business Wire EON) November 26, 2007 --
Compliance Week, a magazine
and newsletter on corporate governance and compliance, today announced
the results of a study of financial reporting and corporate risk areas
across a wide range of industries. The results show that Corporate
America is making marked improvements in regulatory compliance despite
persistent problems.
The “2007 Financial Reporting & Internal
Control Benchmarking
Reports” are available to members of the
press on a limited basis.
The same issues that dogged companies when The Sarbanes-Oxley Act first
came into effect three years ago—poor
documentation of accounting procedures, insufficiently trained
accounting and finance staffs, and difficulty closing the books at
year-end—still flummox companies as they try
to comply with SOX today. But the total number of such “material
weaknesses,” which must be disclosed under
Section 404 of the law, has plunged from 537 such disclosures in “Year
One” to only 173 in “Year
Three.”
“The data clearly show that after three
years, corporations are doing a much better job identifying and
remediating problems,” said Matt Kelly,
managing editor of Compliance Week, who spearheaded the research.
“Executives might not like Sarbanes-Oxley,”
added Kelly, “but they’re
certainly getting better at addressing its challenges. The benchmark
reports’ data will prove useful to these
companies as they look to uncover hidden risks that are common in their
industry.”
Major Findings
-
Better Early Warning. Across all industries, companies are
reporting fewer weaknesses in their internal control over financial
reporting, as disclosed under the annual Section 404 disclosure.
Correspondingly, they are reporting more weaknesses under the
quarterly Section 302 disclosure. “Companies
are doing a better job identifying problems on an interim basis and
fixing those problems before the 404 filing at the end of the year,”
said Kelly.
-
Fewer SOX-Related Late Filings. More companies are filing their
financial statements late, primarily because they are planning to
restate those financial results. However, the number of late filings
that cited difficulties complying with Sarbanes-Oxley has fallen from
21 percent in 2004 to only 6 percent in 2006.
-
Restatements Decreasing Among Large Firms, but Up Overall. The
number of financial restatements is rising for most industries;
however, the numbers are somewhat deceiving. First, the increase has
been caused primarily by smaller public companies, not the larger
companies that are already in compliance with the internal control
provisions of Sarbanes-Oxley. Second, a wave of restatements related
to lease accounting in 2005—fueled by a
letter from the SEC’s former chief
accountant to the AICPA—contributed to the
increase. In all, restatements among large companies are actually decreasing.
-
Top-Performing Industry. The financial services industry was
the best-performing industry studied by Compliance Week. During the
period studied, companies in that industry showed a declining number
of restatements, fewer Section 404 weaknesses, and fewer late filings
than other industries. Companies in the Energy & Utilities industry,
however, saw less frequent enforcement and pending material litigation.
-
Audit Fees. Smaller companies pay higher audit fees, as a
percentage of revenue, than their larger brethren. Companies with less
than $1 billion in revenue, for example, pay audit fees that are equal
to 0.306 percent of revenue; companies with more than $1 billion in
revenue pay audit fees that are equal to only 0.053 percent of revenue.
-
Vertical Impact. The reports quantify the impact of well-known
accounting problems, such as backdated stock options or faulty lease
accounting, in specific industries. When lease accounting erupted as a
point of concern in 2005, for example, it was mentioned in 78.6
percent of the restatements of companies in the retail industry;
however, it was mentioned in only 19.3 percent of all other
restatements. Similarly, revenue recognition proved especially
troublesome for companies in the telecommunications equipment
industry, which must grapple with complicated rules regarding when
companies can book sales.
“Companies will find myriad uses for these
benchmarking reports,” said Kelly. For
example, some companies will discover they are plagued by chronic
problems that do not impact their peers. “These
research reports can start executives at those companies on a path to
understanding and addressing those hidden risks.”
About the Benchmarking Report
Compliance Week’s findings were published in
a series of “Financial Reporting & Internal
Control Benchmarking Reports.” Each report
examines myriad corporate risks—including the
most common causes of restatements, late filings, internal control and
disclosure control weaknesses, SEC enforcement, class-action litigation,
and more—for nine industries based on filings
between November 15, 2004 and May 31, 2007:
1. Business Services
2. Consumer Products Manufacturing
3. Energy and Utilities
4. Financial Services
5. Food and Beverage
6. Health Care,
7. Industrial Manufacturing
8. Retail
9. Telecommunications Equipment
The reports were published to help boards of directors and corporate
financial and legal executives understand the types of issues most
prevalent among peer companies and to help them gauge whether those
problems present a greater risk to the industry generally and them
specifically. Audit fees, D&O turnover, and other metrics were included
in the reports, so companies could ascertain whether there were
correlations between, for example, restatements and higher audit fees,
or CFO turnover and internal control weaknesses.
The “2007 Financial Reporting & Internal
Control Benchmarking Reports” are available
to members of the press on a limited basis. Details can be found at http://research.complianceweek.com,
or by contacting the publication, below.
About Compliance Week
Compliance Week is a magazine and newsletter on corporate governance,
risk, and compliance that reaches over 20,000 financial and legal
executives at public companies. Available in print and online,
Compliance Week features the insights of numerous governance and
securities experts, including former Securities and Exchange Chairman
Harvey Pitt. For more information on Compliance Week, visit http://www.complianceweek.com.
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