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Corporate
Scandals: One Year Later
by
Maria Tomchick
August
30, 2003
Approximately
a year ago, before the Bush administration made the Iraq war its major
priority, the nation was riveted by corporate scandals. At the time, Congress
passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to stiffen regulation of the accounting industry.
The Bush administration threw a little extra money into the Securities and
Exchange Commission so that it could, ostensibly, pursue the job of enforcing
corporate compliance with basic accounting standards.
Of
course, these were only palliative measures. Conservatives argued forcefully that
nothing else really needed to be done, because the market would regulate
itself. Corporate officers would see the damage sustained by Enron and Worldcom
and be driven to clean up their balance sheets before the same terrible fate
hit their own companies--or so the argument went.
A
year later, however, little has changed.
The
Sarbanes-Oxley Act established the Accounting Oversight Board, whose purpose is
to keep an eye on accounting firms and set new standards for auditing public
corporations. Setting up a new agency can be a slow process, but the Accounting
Oversight Board faces unique hurdles.
The
funding issue is the most critical. The board is currently operating on money
borrowed from the US Treasury, because the Sarbanes-Oxley Act set aside no public
funding source for the Accounting Oversight Board. Instead, the Act specified
that the board itself would bill accounting firms and use those funds for its
operations. But the board has yet to finish registering all the public
accounting firms in the US and the foreign accounting firms that do business
with US companies overseas (a contentious issue with the European Union), much
less figure out rules for how much to bill them and how often. Should they
impose an annual fee? Bill only those firms they audit? What ratio should they
use in order to avoid over-taxing smaller firms?
More
importantly, this raises the issue of whether the Accounting Oversight Board
can be truly independent of the accounting industry if its main funding source
is the industry itself, particularly the big firms that are responsible for the
most egregious abuses.
In
the same vein, the board is having trouble recruiting members and drafting
rules for inspection and enforcement. Naturally, the pay is not as good as in
private industry. Chairman William McDonough, however, makes half a million
dollars per year--more than the chairman of the SEC and the President of the
United States make combined. No one, so far, has pointed out that this classic
corporate pay scale might be counterproductive for recruitment purposes.
Currently, after a year of recruiting, the board has only 60 members, while its
goal was to have 200 by the end of this year.
New
employees are being drawn from large public accounting firms and the industry's
own trade group, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, which
has been attempting to influence the standards set by the Accounting Oversight
Board. This increases the risk of the board becoming a revolving door for the
very industry it's supposed to be regulating, like so many other government
agencies.
At
least the SEC is on the case, right? Well, the added funding from the Bush
administration has made little difference in the SEC's ability to review the
thousands of financial statements filed by public companies in the US every
three months. It's a Herculean task, an insurmountable mountain of paper, and
the SEC has been historically (and still is) chronically understaffed, only
able to check selected financial statements on a spot basis and with little
depth.
For
example, last year the SEC issued a rule that requires corporate executives to
personally sign and certify the accuracy of their companies' financial
statements. In the months since then, there have been many companies whose executives
have failed to comply, including some who've simply refused to comply on
principle, like Intel Corp. Qwest Communications, Gemstar-TV Guide, Footstar,
and others have broken this rule repeatedly but have not received any fines or
other sanctions from the SEC. In fact, only one company has been punished under
this rule: HealthSouth Corp., whose officers signed financial statements that
were so clearly incorrect as to be impossible to ignore.
Meanwhile,
the notion that US companies would voluntarily stop abusing the system has been
disproved by recent financial scandals, most of which have received little
press coverage. For example, Freddie Mac has been recently caught incorrectly
booking derivatives on its balance sheet in a effort to smooth out its earnings
and make the company look consistently profitable from quarter-to-quarter--an
illegal move that got Microsoft and other companies in trouble with the SEC in
the 1990s. The repercussions for the economy have been serious: market analysts
blame much of the increase in mortgage interest rates on the accounting scandal
at Freddie Mac.
Another
example: ten banks, including Bank of America and Washington Mutual, have been
forced by the SEC to close down proprietary mutual funds the companies set up in
the mid-1990s. The banks transferred a number of loans to these mutual funds,
and each fund only had one shareholder: the bank that set it up. The banks then
reported the interest earned on the loans in these mutual funds to the IRS as
tax-exempt dividends, and thereby avoided paying state and federal income taxes
on billions of dollars of income from 1995 to the present. The IRS and the
States of California and New York are also investigating this widespread
scam--set up by accounting firm KPMG LLP--and are expected to levy heavy
penalties. Naturally, the banks will have to pass this expense on to their
clients in the form of higher fees and interest rates.
It's
true that many companies have given up publishing and publicizing "pro
forma" financial statements--revised balance sheets that subtract certain
expense and debt items and have the effect of making companies look more
profitable or in better shape than they really are. However, other companies
have learned new gimmicks for dressing up their finances. One popular route is
the "net debt" calculation. Heavily indebted telecom companies, in
particular, are pushing this iffy number as a way for investors and creditors
to gage the soundness of their companies.
"Net
debt" is simply a company's total debt minus its cash on hand. The problem
is that cash on hand isn't always available to directly pay off debt. Cash may
be needed instead to pay restructuring costs, buy back shares for stock option
plans, pay off fired or retired corporate officers, pay legal bills or
penalties, shore up under-funded pension plans, or pay for new acquisitions.
And many companies, particularly those with heavy debt loads, are required by
their creditors to keep a large amount of cash on hand for emergencies,
effectively putting that money off-limits for paying down debt. The difference
between "net debt" and total debt can run into billions and tens of
billions of dollars.
Clearly,
the subterfuge is continuing. So far the war in Iraq has served as the perfect
smokescreen to cover up the abiding problems in corporate America. But the
public's attention is turning back to the ailing economy, and it will soon
become very clear that leaving the market--and the Bush administration--in
control is an extremely dangerous game.
Some
sources for this article: "Modest Digs, Tough Job for an Accounting
Cop," Cassell Bryan-Low, Wall Street Journal, 7/23/03, C1; "SEC's Top
Accountant Candidate Is PriceWaterhouse's Nicolaisen," Jonathan Weil and
Deborah Soloman, WSJ, 8/4/03, A4; "Sealed, Delivered but Not Yet Signed by
CEOs," Kate Kelly, WSJ, 7/25/03, C1; "Surge in Rates May Hurt Pillar
of the Economy," Edmund L. Andrews, New York Times, 8/5/03; "Is It
Too Late To Refinance?" Jon E. Hilsenrath, WSJ, 7/31/03, D1; "Bond
chaos hurts US mortgage financiers," Jenny Wiggins, Financial Times,
8/4/03; "Banks Shifted Billions Into Funds Sheltering Income From
Taxes," Glenn R. Simpson, WSJ, 8/7/03, A1; and "Talking Up 'Net Debt'
Allows Some Firms To Take a Load Off," Shawn Young, WSJ, 7/28/03, C1.
Maria Tomchick is a co-editor
and contributing writer for Eat The State!, a biweekly anti-authoritarian
newspaper based in Seattle, Washington where this article first appeared (www.eatthestate.org). She can be reached
at: tomchick@drizzle.com.
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