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Return to Virginia Business - February 2005

News & Features


By the book
Virginia companies feel the squeeze of Sarbanes-Oxley

by Garry Kranz
Virginia Business

February 2005

Jones Tallent occupies one of the most important jobs at The Fairchild Corp. Yet less than a year ago, Tallent’s position didn’t even exist. The former Ernst & Young auditor was hired as manager of internal controls to spearhead Fairchild’s compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The sweeping reform legislation, which targets public companies, requires stringent new accounting regulations.

READER RESOURCES
Web Pointers: For more information
Sarbanes-Oxley Act Community Forum
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
Guide to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act

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Tallent has implemented a system of checks and balances on hundreds of business functions at Fairchild, a Dulles-based holding company with 12 subsidiaries, including a retail distributor of motorcycle gear and a manufacturer of aircraft equipment. The diversified companies have their own sets of business processes that now must be fully tested and documented as part of Fairchild’s financial statements. “Hundreds of thousands of dollars” have been spent so far to get into compliance, says Tallent, with additional audit fees expected to consume thousands of dollars more each year.

The new reporting requirements require painstaking attention to detail. Companies must report on a long litany of activities: which employees are authorized to purchase goods, whether goods are scanned into inventory or checked in manually, who has access to financial data. Seemingly innocuous things must be accounted for, such as who answers the phone when a customer calls to place an order.

“I don’t know how much impact this law is going to have on companies that were cheating. But for companies like ours that have been going by the book, it definitely makes achieving compliance much harder than before,” says Tallent.

Such is the price for doing business in the highly regulated environment enveloping publicly traded U.S. companies. Congress passed Sarbanes-Oxley to shore up eroding investor confidence in the wake of major scandals involving Enron Corp., WorldCom and other companies. The act makes the financial dealings of companies much more transparent.

Those with a market capitalization of at least $75 million were required to meet a November 2004 deadline for full compliance, while smaller companies have until December 2005. Experts say the latest round of financial reports this month should provide clues as to how many Virginia public firms measure up.

What’s already clear is the fallout. Sarbanes-Oxley, for all the good intended, is costing companies millions, changing corporate cultures and making it harder to fill board vacancies. Rather than clean up business, some people worry that the law’s many tentacles will weight businesses down so much that public companies will throw in the towel and go private just to escape its onerous conditions. “I think it’s going to discourage some small companies that may have been thinking about going public,” says Jan Alpert, vice chair at Richmond-based LandAmerica Financial Group.

Surprisingly, though, more and more private companies apparently see value in voluntarily grafting parts of the new regulation as best practices. Mike Paulette, managing director of Core Consulting in Richmond, already is fielding more calls from private companies asking about the regulation — some with designs on going public one day. “This isn’t widespread now but it will be going forward, especially because of enhanced investor confidence,” says Paulette.

One of Sarbanes’ major requirements focuses on public companies and their independent auditors. Companies must establish and test internal controls over financial information and hire independent auditors to validate that the controls work. To discourage conflicts of interest, the act prohibits companies from using the same accounting firm to provide both accounting services and consulting.

And it demands accountability from executives. CEOs and top financial officers are required to certify under oath that financial statements are accurate and that controls are in place on key business processes. Executives who fail to meet their fiduciary duty to shareholders could face severe penalties, including fines or possible jail time. As a result, they are “spending significant time and effort making sure that internal controls are in literal compliance — not just that their financial records are correct,” says Nicholas Conte, a Roanoke lawyer who advises companies on Sarbanes-Oxley.

For now, Virginia companies don’t have to worry about state lawmakers piling on, as has happened in some states. Virginia legislators in 2001 took steps to heighten accountability of public companies by passing the Virginia Uniform Accountancy Act. The measure created an independent Board of Accountancy to provide uniform rules for licensing and enforcement of certified public accountants. That made Virginia one of only nine states to independently regulate CPAs. Among its requirements is continuing education for accountants, including coursework on ethics and reporting.

The stricter federal reporting brings unwanted cultural changes at Universal Corp., a Richmond-based tobacco leaf merchant with more than 50 worldwide subsidiaries. Company officials worry their decentralized system of management will gradually disappear as the company is forced to make operations more uniform. “We’ve always followed a philosophy of hiring strong local management and letting them do their jobs,” says Hartwell Roper, Universal’s chief financial officer. “But to some degree, this law puts bureaucracy into our company that we really don’t want.”

For example, Universal now must maintain controls on about 280 significant accounts, nearly 260 key business processes, and another 500 or so “subprocesses” that fall under the purview of the new law. Local managers are required to sign off on the internal controls governing these business functions. Nearly 40,000 hours of planning and “thousands and thousands of dollars” were spent to ensure that Universal’s overseas and domestic operations follow the same reporting guidelines.

Universal devoted its entire audit group of 12 people to manage first-year compliance efforts, forcing the postponement of revenue-generating activities such as collecting on open invoices. “We have little standardization in our company, but we [are required] to document all these various processes. Because of that, our cost of compliance is huge,” with audit fees alone doubling to about $3 million in 2004, says Roper.

In fact, U.S. companies on average are spending more than $5 million to reach compliance, with ongoing compliance costing another $3.7 million. That’s according to a survey by Korn/Ferry International, an executive recruitment firm based in Los Angeles. “The perception among CEOs and directors is that [Sarbanes-Oxley compliance] is incredibly expensive and not the best use of capital by any means,” says Charles King, who heads Korn/Ferry’s global board services practice.

One of the largest cost increases for businesses are yearly audit fees, which jumped 40 percent on average in 2004, according to Financial Executives International of Florham Park, N.J. That accounting firms are reaping a windfall from the stepped-up oversight is highly ironic and a tad irksome to executives. Now-disgraced Arthur Andersen — once one of the “Big Five” accounting firms — helped trigger the Enron debacles with off-books accounting schemes. “While admitting that certain parts of this legislation are virtuous and to the good, most CEOs don’t feel the potential business benefits are large enough to offset the cost and the ongoing incremental effort” needed to comply, says Dave West, an analyst with Davenport & Co. of Richmond.

Following the example of other public companies, Glen Allen-based LandAmerica Financial Group uses two accounting firms: one for its financial records and another to assess internal controls. LandAmerica’s financial audit fees topped $1.5 million in 2004, with compliance-related internal audits estimated to cost an additional $800,000 to $1 million. Meanwhile, the company has hired three full-time compliance experts to manage ongoing compliance. Says Chief Financial Officer Bill Evans: “The biggest burden is the level of documentation required to prove that your controls work.”

Sarbanes-Oxley also raises the stakes for paid directors of public companies. Board members are expected to exert more oversight over a company’s operations and could be personally liable for noncompliance issues. “Much more is now required of boards of directors, including understanding the nuances of their own company’s financial statements. They’re also expected to have a better understanding of business processes,” says Conte.

The heightened liability was brought home last month when former WorldCom directors agreed to pay millions out of their own pockets in a tentative agreement to settle a class-action settlement suit brought by investors. (WorldCom’s successor, MCI Inc., is based in Ashburn.) The potential for personal liability is making it tougher for companies to fill board vacancies. The number of people declining invitations to join boards of directors more than doubled since Sarbanes-Oxley became law — jumping from 13 percent in 2002 to 29 percent in 2004, according to Korn/Ferry’s study. Cronyism also is targeted. Greater disclosure now surrounds the nominating, auditing and compensation committees of public companies.

Directors serving in those roles must be completely independent of the company. This requirement adds its own level of complexity. For instance, if a private board member retains an attorney whose firm has performed work for the company, that relationship could constitute a conflict of interest. “That has pushed more boards to look outside their inner realm of contacts” when filling vacant seats, especially on vital committees, says Tom Visotsky, president of Corporate Board Executive Search in Richmond.

Stricter corporate governance and disclosure reforms are driving some public companies to consider abandoning public markets altogether. Foley and Lardner LLP, a Chicago-based law firm, found that 21 percent of 115 public firms surveyed last year have considered going private, up from 13 percent in 2003.

So far, the regulations haven’t prompted any of Virginia’s public companies to revert to private ownership. Besides, there’s incentive to comply with Sarbanes-Oxley; namely all those still smoldering embers of scandal.

Return to Virginia Business - February 2005


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