SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin:
No. 99 Materiality
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 211
[Release No. SAB 99]
Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 99
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission
ACTION: Publication of Staff Accounting Bulletin
SUMMARY: This staff accounting bulletin expresses the views of the
staff that exclusive reliance on certain quantitative benchmarks to assess
materiality in preparing financial statements and performing audits of those
financial statements is inappropriate; misstatements are not immaterial simply
because they fall beneath a numerical threshold.
DATE: August 12, 1999
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: W. Scott Bayless, Associate Chief
Accountant, or Robert E. Burns, Chief Counsel, Office of the Chief Accountant
(202-942-4400), or David R. Fredrickson, Office of General Counsel
(202-942-0900), Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20549-1103; electronic addresses: BaylessWS@sec.gov; BurnsR@sec.gov;
FredricksonD@sec.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The statements in the staff accounting
bulletins are not rules or interpretations of the Commission, nor are they
published as bearing the Commission's official approval. They represent
interpretations and practices followed by the Division of Corporation Finance
and the Office of the Chief Accountant in administering the disclosure
requirements of the Federal securities laws.
Jonathan G. Katz
Secretary
Date: August 12, 1999
Part 211 - (AMEND) Accordingly, Part 211 of Title 17 of the Code of Federal
Regulations is amended by adding Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 99 to the table
found in Subpart B.
STAFF ACCOUNTING BULLETIN NO. 99
The staff hereby adds Section M to Topic 1 of the Staff Accounting Bulletin
Series. Section M, entitled "Materiality," provides guidance in applying
materiality thresholds to the preparation of financial statements filed with the
Commission and the performance of audits of those financial statements.
STAFF ACCOUNTING BULLETINS
TOPIC 1: FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
* * * * *
M. Materiality
1. Assessing Materiality
Facts: During the course of preparing or auditing year-end financial
statements, financial management or the registrant's independent auditor becomes
aware of misstatements in a registrant's financial statements. When combined,
the misstatements result in a 4% overstatement of net income and a $.02 (4%)
overstatement of earnings per share. Because no item in the registrant's
consolidated financial statements is misstated by more than 5%, management and
the independent auditor conclude that the deviation from generally accepted
accounting principles ("GAAP") is immaterial and that the accounting is
permissible.1
Question: Each Statement of Financial Accounting Standards adopted by
the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") states, "The provisions of
this Statement need not be applied to immaterial items." In the staff's view,
may a registrant or the auditor of its financial statements assume the
immateriality of items that fall below a percentage threshold set by management
or the auditor to determine whether amounts and items are material to the
financial statements?
Interpretive Response: No. The staff is aware that certain
registrants, over time, have developed quantitative thresholds as "rules of
thumb" to assist in the preparation of their financial statements, and that
auditors also have used these thresholds in their evaluation of whether items
might be considered material to users of a registrant's financial statements.
One rule of thumb in particular suggests that the misstatement or omission2
of an item that falls under a 5% threshold is not material in the absence of
particularly egregious circumstances, such as self-dealing or misappropriation
by senior management. The staff reminds registrants and the auditors of their
financial statements that exclusive reliance on this or any percentage or
numerical threshold has no basis in the accounting literature or the law.
The use of a percentage as a numerical threshold, such as 5%, may provide the
basis for a preliminary assumption that without considering all relevant
circumstances a deviation of less than the specified percentage with respect
to a particular item on the registrant's financial statements is unlikely to be
material. The staff has no objection to such a "rule of thumb" as an initial
step in assessing materiality. But quantifying, in percentage terms, the
magnitude of a misstatement is only the beginning of an analysis of materiality;
it cannot appropriately be used as a substitute for a full analysis of all
relevant considerations. Materiality concerns the significance of an item to
users of a registrant's financial statements. A matter is "material" if there is
a substantial likelihood that a reasonable person would consider it important.
In its Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts No. 2, the FASB stated the
essence of the concept of materiality as follows:
The omission or misstatement of an item in a financial report is material if,
in the light of surrounding circumstances, the magnitude of the item is such
that it is probable that the judgment of a reasonable person relying upon the
report would have been changed or influenced by the inclusion or correction of
the item.3
This formulation in the accounting literature is in substance identical to
the formulation used by the courts in interpreting the federal securities laws.
The Supreme Court has held that a fact is material if there is
a substantial likelihood that the . . . fact would have been viewed by the
reasonable investor as having significantly altered the "total mix" of
information made available.
4
Under the governing principles, an assessment of materiality requires that
one views the facts in the context of the "surrounding circumstances," as the
accounting literature puts it, or the "total mix" of information, in the words
of the Supreme Court. In the context of a misstatement of a financial statement
item, while the "total mix" includes the size in numerical or percentage terms
of the misstatement, it also includes the factual context in which the user of
financial statements would view the financial statement item. The shorthand in
the accounting and auditing literature for this analysis is that financial
management and the auditor must consider both "quantitative" and "qualitative"
factors in assessing an item's materiality.5
Court decisions, Commission rules and enforcement actions, and accounting and
auditing literature6 have all considered
"qualitative" factors in various contexts.
The FASB has long emphasized that materiality cannot be reduced to a
numerical formula. In its Concepts Statement No. 2, the FASB noted that some had
urged it to promulgate quantitative materiality guides for use in a variety of
situations. The FASB rejected such an approach as representing only a "minority
view," stating
The predominant view is that materiality judgments can properly be made only
by those who have all the facts. The Board's present position is that no general
standards of materiality could be formulated to take into account all the
considerations that enter into an experienced human judgment.
7
The FASB noted that, in certain limited circumstances, the Commission and
other authoritative bodies had issued quantitative materiality guidance, citing
as examples guidelines ranging from one to ten percent with respect to a variety
of disclosures.8 And it took account of
contradictory studies, one showing a lack of uniformity among auditors on
materiality judgments, and another suggesting widespread use of a "rule of
thumb" of five to ten percent of net income.9
The FASB also considered whether an evaluation of materiality could be based
solely on anticipating the market's reaction to accounting information.10
The FASB rejected a formulaic approach to discharging "the onerous duty of
making materiality decisions"11 in favor of an
approach that takes into account all the relevant considerations. In so doing,
it made clear that
[M]agnitude by itself, without regard to the nature of the item and the
circumstances in which the judgment has to be made, will not generally be a
sufficient basis for a materiality judgment.12
Evaluation of materiality requires a registrant and its auditor to consider
allthe relevant circumstances, and the staff believes that there are
numerous circumstances in which misstatements below 5% could well be material.
Qualitative factors may cause misstatements of quantitatively small amounts to
be material; as stated in the auditing literature:
As a result of the interaction of quantitative and qualitative considerations
in materiality judgments, misstatements of relatively small amounts that come to
the auditor's attention could have a material effect on the financial
statements.13
Among the considerations that may well render material a quantitatively small
misstatement of a financial statement item are
- whether the misstatement arises from an item capable of precise
measurement or whether it arises from an estimate and, if so, the degree of
imprecision inherent in the estimate14
- whether the misstatement masks a change in earnings or other trends
- whether the misstatement hides a failure to meet analysts' consensus
expectations for the enterprise
- whether the misstatement changes a loss into income or vice versa
- whether the misstatement concerns a segment or other portion of the
registrant's business that has been identified as playing a significant role
in the registrant's operations or profitability
- whether the misstatement affects the registrant's compliance with
regulatory requirements
- whether the misstatement affects the registrant's compliance with loan
covenants or other contractual requirements
- whether the misstatement has the effect of increasing management's
compensation for example, by satisfying requirements for the award of
bonuses or other forms of incentive compensation
- whether the misstatement involves concealment of an unlawful
transaction.
This is not an exhaustive list of the circumstances that may affect the
materiality of a quantitatively small misstatement.15
Among other factors, the demonstrated volatility of the price of a registrant's
securities in response to certain types of disclosures may provide guidance as
to whether investors regard quantitatively small misstatements as material.
Consideration of potential market reaction to disclosure of a misstatement is by
itself "too blunt an instrument to be depended on" in considering whether a fact
is material.16 When, however, management or the
independent auditor expects (based, for example, on a pattern of market
performance) that a known misstatement may result in a significant positive or
negative market reaction, that expected reaction should be taken into account
when considering whether a misstatement is material.17
For the reasons noted above, the staff believes that a registrant and the
auditors of its financial statements should not assume that even small
intentional misstatements in financial statements, for example those pursuant to
actions to "manage" earnings, are immaterial.18
While the intent of management does not render a misstatement material, it may
provide significant evidence of materiality. The evidence may be particularly
compelling where management has intentionally misstated items in the financial
statements to "manage" reported earnings. In that instance, it presumably has
done so believing that the resulting amounts and trends would be significant to
users of the registrant's financial statements.19
The staff believes that investors generally would regard as significant a
management practice to over- or under-state earnings up to an amount just short
of a percentage threshold in order to "manage" earnings. Investors presumably
also would regard as significant an accounting practice that, in essence,
rendered all earnings figures subject to a management-directed margin of
misstatement.
The materiality of a misstatement may turn on where it appears in the
financial statements. For example, a misstatement may involve a segment of the
registrant's operations. In that instance, in assessing materiality of a
misstatement to the financial statements taken as a whole, registrants and their
auditors should consider not only the size of the misstatement but also the
significance of the segment information to the financial statements taken as a
whole.20 "A misstatement of the revenue and
operating profit of a relatively small segment that is represented by management
to be important to the future profitability of the entity"21
is more likely to be material to investors than a misstatement in a segment that
management has not identified as especially important. In assessing the
materiality of misstatements in segment information - as with materiality
generally -
situations may arise in practice where the auditor will conclude that a
matter relating to segment information is qualitatively material even though, in
his or her judgment, it is quantitatively immaterial to the financial statements
taken as a whole.22
Aggregating and Netting Misstatements
In determining whether multiple misstatements cause the financial statements
to be materially misstated, registrants and the auditors of their financial
statements should consider each misstatement separately and the aggregate effect
of all misstatements.23 A registrant and its
auditor should evaluate misstatements in light of quantitative and qualitative
factors and "consider whether, in relation to individual line item amounts,
subtotals, or totals in the financial statements, they materially misstate the
financial statements taken as a whole."24 This
requires consideration of -
the significance of an item to a particular entity (for example, inventories
to a manufacturing company), the pervasiveness of the misstatement (such as
whether it affects the presentation of numerous financial statement items), and
the effect of the misstatement on the financial statements taken as a whole ....25
Registrants and their auditors first should consider whether each
misstatement is material, irrespective of its effect when combined with other
misstatements. The literature notes that the analysis should consider whether
the misstatement of "individual amounts" causes a material misstatement of the
financial statements taken as a whole. As with materiality generally, this
analysis requires consideration of both quantitative and qualitative factors.
If the misstatement of an individual amount causes the financial statements
as a whole to be materially misstated, that effect cannot be eliminated by other
misstatements whose effect may be to diminish the impact of the misstatement on
other financial statement items. To take an obvious example, if a registrant's
revenues are a material financial statement item and if they are materially
overstated, the financial statements taken as a whole will be materially
misleading even if the effect on earnings is completely offset by an equivalent
overstatement of expenses.
Even though a misstatement of an individual amount may not cause the
financial statements taken as a whole to be materially misstated, it may
nonetheless, when aggregated with other misstatements, render the financial
statements taken as a whole to be materially misleading. Registrants and the
auditors of their financial statements accordingly should consider the effect of
the misstatement on subtotals or totals. The auditor should aggregate all
misstatements that affect each subtotal or total and consider whether the
misstatements in the aggregate affect the subtotal or total in a way that causes
the registrant's financial statements taken as a whole to be materially
misleading.26
The staff believes that, in considering the aggregate effect of multiple
misstatements on a subtotal or total, registrants and the auditors of their
financial statements should exercise particular care when considering whether to
offset (or the appropriateness of offsetting) a misstatement of an estimated
amount with a misstatement of an item capable of precise measurement. As noted
above, assessments of materiality should never be purely mechanical; given the
imprecision inherent in estimates, there is by definition a corresponding
imprecision in the aggregation of misstatements involving estimates with those
that do not involve an estimate.
Registrants and auditors also should consider the effect of misstatements
from prior periods on the current financial statements. For example, the
auditing literature states,
Matters underlying adjustments proposed by the auditor but not recorded by
the entity could potentially cause future financial statements to be materially
misstated, even though the auditor has concluded that the adjustments are not
material to the current financial statements.27
This may be particularly the case where immaterial misstatements recur in
several years and the cumulative effect becomes material in the current year.
2. Immaterial Misstatements That are Intentional
Facts: A registrant's management intentionally has made adjustments to
various financial statement items in a manner inconsistent with GAAP. In each
accounting period in which such actions were taken, none of the individual
adjustments is by itself material, nor is the aggregate effect on the financial
statements taken as a whole material for the period. The registrant's earnings
"management" has been effected at the direction or acquiescence of management in
the belief that any deviations from GAAP have been immaterial and that
accordingly the accounting is permissible.
Question: In the staff's view, may a registrant make intentional
immaterial misstatements in its financial statements?
Interpretive Response: No. In certain circumstances, intentional
immaterial misstatements are unlawful.
Considerations of the Books and Records Provisions Under the Exchange
Act
Even if misstatements are immaterial,28
registrants must comply with Sections 13(b)(2) - (7) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act").29 Under these
provisions, each registrant with securities registered pursuant to Section 12 of
the Exchange Act,30 or required to file reports
pursuant to Section 15(d),31 must make and keep
books, records, and accounts, which, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly
reflect the transactions and dispositions of assets of the registrant and must
maintain internal accounting controls that are sufficient to provide reasonable
assurances that, among other things, transactions are recorded as necessary to
permit the preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP.32
In this context, determinations of what constitutes "reasonable assurance" and
"reasonable detail" are based not on a "materiality" analysis but on the level
of detail and degree of assurance that would satisfy prudent officials in the
conduct of their own affairs.33 Accordingly,
failure to record accurately immaterial items, in some instances, may result in
violations of the securities laws.
The staff recognizes that there is limited authoritative guidance34
regarding the "reasonableness" standard in Section 13(b)(2) of the Exchange Act.
A principal statement of the Commission's policy in this area is set forth in an
address given in 1981 by then Chairman Harold M. Williams.35
In his address, Chairman Williams noted that, like materiality, "reasonableness"
is not an "absolute standard of exactitude for corporate records."36
Unlike materiality, however, "reasonableness" is not solely a measure of the
significance of a financial statement item to investors. "Reasonableness," in
this context, reflects a judgment as to whether an issuer's failure to correct a
known misstatement implicates the purposes underlying the accounting provisions
of Sections 13(b)(2) - (7) of the Exchange Act.37
In assessing whether a misstatement results in a violation of a registrant's
obligation to keep books and records that are accurate "in reasonable detail,"
registrants and their auditors should consider, in addition to the factors
discussed above concerning an evaluation of a misstatement's potential
materiality, the factors set forth below.
- The significance of the misstatement. Though the staff does not
believe that registrants need to make finely calibrated determinations of
significance with respect to immaterial items, plainly it is "reasonable" to
treat misstatements whose effects are clearly inconsequential differently
than more significant ones.
- How the misstatement arose. It is unlikely that it is ever
"reasonable" for registrants to record misstatements or not to correct known
misstatements even immaterial ones as part of an ongoing effort directed
by or known to senior management for the purposes of "managing" earnings. On
the other hand, insignificant misstatements that arise from the operation of
systems or recurring processes in the normal course of business generally
will not cause a registrant's books to be inaccurate "in reasonable detail."38
- The cost of correcting the misstatement. The books and records
provisions of the Exchange Act do not require registrants to make major
expenditures to correct small misstatements.39
Conversely, where there is little cost or delay involved in correcting a
misstatement, failing to do so is unlikely to be "reasonable."
- The clarity of authoritative accounting guidance with respect to the
misstatement. Where reasonable minds may differ about the appropriate
accounting treatment of a financial statement item, a failure to correct it
may not render the registrant's financial statements inaccurate "in
reasonable detail." Where, however, there is little ground for reasonable
disagreement, the case for leaving a misstatement uncorrected is
correspondingly weaker.
There may be other indicators of "reasonableness" that registrants and their
auditors may ordinarily consider. Because the judgment is not mechanical, the
staff will be inclined to continue to defer to judgments that "allow a business,
acting in good faith, to comply with the Act's accounting provisions in an
innovative and cost-effective way."40
The Auditor's Response to Intentional Misstatements
Section 10A(b) of the Exchange Act requires auditors to take certain actions
upon discovery of an "illegal act."41 The
statute specifies that these obligations are triggered "whether or not [the
illegal acts are] perceived to have a material effect on the financial
statements of the issuer . . . ." Among other things, Section 10A(b)(1) requires
the auditor to inform the appropriate level of management of an illegal act
(unless clearly inconsequential) and assure that the registrant's audit
committee is "adequately informed" with respect to the illegal act.
As noted, an intentional misstatement of immaterial items in a registrant's
financial statements may violate Section 13(b)(2) of the Exchange Act and thus
be an illegal act. When such a violation occurs, an auditor must take steps to
see that the registrant's audit committee is "adequately informed" about the
illegal act. Because Section 10A(b)(1) is triggered regardless of whether an
illegal act has a material effect on the registrant's financial statements,
where the illegal act consists of a misstatement in the registrant's financial
statements, the auditor will be required to report that illegal act to the audit
committee irrespective of any "netting" of the misstatements with other
financial statement items.
The requirements of Section 10A echo the auditing literature. See, for
example, Statement on Auditing Standards No. ("SAS") 54, "Illegal Acts by
Clients," and SAS 82, "Consideration of Fraud in a Financial Statement Audit."
Pursuant to paragraph 38 of SAS 82, if the auditor determines there is evidence
that fraud may exist, the auditor must discuss the matter with the appropriate
level of management. The auditor must report directly to the audit committee
fraud involving senior management and fraud that causes a material misstatement
of the financial statements. Paragraph 4 of SAS 82 states that "misstatements
arising from fraudulent financial reporting are intentional misstatements or
omissions of amounts or disclosures in financial statements to deceive financial
statement users."42 SAS 82 further states that
fraudulent financial reporting may involve falsification or alteration of
accounting records; misrepresenting or omitting events, transactions or other
information in the financial statements; and the intentional misapplication of
accounting principles relating to amounts, classifications, the manner of
presentation, or disclosures in the financial statements.43
The clear implication of SAS 82 is that immaterial misstatements may be
fraudulent financial reporting.
44
Auditors that learn of intentional misstatements may also be required to (1)
re-evaluate the degree of audit risk involved in the audit engagement, (2)
determine whether to revise the nature, timing, and extent of audit procedures
accordingly, and (3) consider whether to resign.45
Intentional misstatements also may signal the existence of reportable
conditions or material weaknesses in the registrant's system of internal
accounting control designed to detect and deter improper accounting and
financial reporting.46 As stated by the
National Commission on Fraudulent Financial Reporting, also known as the
Treadway Commission, in its 1987 report,
The tone set by top management - the corporate environment or culture within
which financial reporting occurs - is the most important factor contributing to
the integrity of the financial reporting process. Notwithstanding an impressive
set of written rules and procedures, if the tone set by management is lax,
fraudulent financial reporting is more likely to occur.47
An auditor is required to report to a registrant's audit committee any
reportable conditions or material weaknesses in a registrant's system of
internal accounting control that the auditor discovers in the course of the
examination of the registrant's financial statements.
48
GAAP Precedence Over Industry Practice
Some have argued to the staff that registrants should be permitted to follow
an industry accounting practice even though that practice is inconsistent with
authoritative accounting literature. This situation might occur if a practice is
developed when there are few transactions and the accounting results are clearly
inconsequential, and that practice never changes despite a subsequent growth in
the number or materiality of such transactions. The staff disagrees with this
argument. Authoritative literature takes precedence over industry practice that
is contrary to GAAP.49
General Comments
This SAB is not intended to change current law or guidance in the accounting
or auditing literature.50 This SAB and the
authoritative accounting literature cannot specifically address all of the novel
and complex business transactions and events that may occur. Accordingly,
registrants may account for, and make disclosures about, these transactions and
events based on analogies to similar situations or other factors. The staff may
not, however, always be persuaded that a registrant's determination is the most
appropriate under the circumstances. When disagreements occur after a
transaction or an event has been reported, the consequences may be severe for
registrants, auditors, and, most importantly, the users of financial statements
who have a right to expect consistent accounting and reporting for, and
disclosure of, similar transactions and events. The staff, therefore, encourages
registrants and auditors to discuss on a timely basis with the staff proposed
accounting treatments for, or disclosures about, transactions or events that are
not specifically covered by the existing accounting literature.
Footnotes
|
1 |
American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants ("AICPA"), Codification of Statements on Auditing
Standards ("AU") § 312, "Audit Risk and Materiality in
Conducting an Audit," states that the auditor should consider
audit risk and materiality both in (a) planning and setting the
scope for the audit and (b) evaluating whether the financial
statements taken as a whole are fairly presented in all material
respects in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles. The purpose of this Staff Accounting Bulletin ("SAB")
is to provide guidance to financial management and independent
auditors with respect to the evaluation of the materiality of
misstatements that are identified in the audit process or
preparation of the financial statements (i.e., (b) above). This
SAB is not intended to provide definitive guidance for assessing
"materiality" in other contexts, such as evaluations of auditor
independence, as other factors may apply. There may be other
rules that address financial presentation. See, e.g., Rule 2a-4,
17 CFR 270.2a-4, under the Investment Company Act of 1940. |
|
2 |
As used in this SAB, "misstatement" or
"omission" refers to a financial statement assertion that would
not be in conformity with GAAP. |
|
3 |
FASB, Statement of Financial Accounting
Concepts No. 2, Qualitative Characteristics of Accounting
Information ("Concepts Statement No. 2"), 132 (1980). See also
Concepts Statement No. 2, Glossary of Terms - Materiality. |
|
4 |
TSC Industries v. Northway, Inc.,
426 U.S.
438, 449 (1976). See also Basic, Inc. v. Levinson,
485 U.S. 224 (1988). As
the Supreme Court has noted, determinations of materiality
require "delicate assessments of the inferences a 'reasonable
shareholder' would draw from a given set of facts and the
significance of those inferences to him . . . ." TSC Industries,
426 U.S. at
450. |
|
5 |
See, e.g., Concepts Statement No. 2, 123-124;
AU § 312.10 (" . . . materiality judgments are made in light of
surrounding circumstances and necessarily involve both
quantitative and qualitative considerations."); AU § 312.34
("Qualitative considerations also influence the auditor in
reaching a conclusion as to whether misstatements are
material."). As used in the accounting literature and in this
SAB, "qualitative" materiality refers to the surrounding
circumstances that inform an investor's evaluation of financial
statement entries. Whether events may be material to investors
for non-financial reasons is a matter not addressed by this SAB. |
|
6 |
See, e.g., Rule 1-02(o) of Regulation S-X, 17
CFR 210.1-02(o), Rule 405 of Regulation C, 17 CFR 230.405, and
Rule 12b-2, 17 CFR 240.12b-2; AU §§ 312.10 - .11, 317.13, 411.04
n. 1, and 508.36; In re Kidder Peabody Securities Litigation, 10
F. Supp. 2d 398 (S.D.N.Y. 1998); Parnes v. Gateway 2000, Inc.,
122 F.3d 539 (8th Cir. 1997); In re Westinghouse Securities
Litigation,
90 F.3d 696 (3d Cir. 1996); In the Matter of W.R.
Grace & Co., Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Release No. ("AAER")
1140 (June 30, 1999); In the Matter of Eugene Gaughan, AAER 1141
(June 30, 1999); In the Matter of Thomas Scanlon, AAER 1142
(June 30, 1999); and In re Sensormatic Electronics Corporation,
Sec. Act Rel. No. 7518 (March 25, 1998). |
|
7 |
Concepts Statement No. 2, 131 (1980). |
|
8 |
Concepts Statement No. 2, 131 and 166. |
|
9 |
Concepts Statement No. 2, 167. |
|
10 |
Concepts Statement No. 2, 168-69. |
|
11 |
Concepts Statement No. 2, 170. |
|
12 |
Concepts Statement No. 2, 125. |
|
13 |
AU § 312.11. |
|
14 |
As stated in Concepts Statement No. 2, 130:
Another factor in materiality judgments is the degree of
precision that is attainable in estimating the judgment item.
The amount of deviation that is considered immaterial may
increase as the attainable degree of precision decreases. For
example, accounts payable usually can be estimated more
accurately than can contingent liabilities arising from
litigation or threats of it, and a deviation considered to be
material in the first case may be quite trivial in the second.
This SAB is not intended to change current law or guidance in
the accounting literature regarding accounting estimates. See,
e.g., Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 20, Accounting
Changes 10, 11, 31-33 (July 1971). |
|
15 |
The staff understands that the Big Five Audit
Materiality Task Force ("Task Force") was convened in March of
1998 and has made recommendations to the Auditing Standards
Board including suggestions regarding communications with audit
committees about unadjusted misstatements. See generally Big
Five Audit Materiality Task Force, "Materiality in a Financial
Statement Audit Considering Qualitative Factors When
Evaluating Audit Findings" (August 1998). The Task Force
memorandum is available at www.aicpa.org. |
|
16 |
See Concepts Statement No. 2, 169. |
|
17 |
If management does not expect a significant
market reaction, a misstatement still may be material and should
be evaluated under the criteria discussed in this SAB. |
|
18 |
Intentional management of earnings and
intentional misstatements, as used in this SAB, do not include
insignificant errors and omissions that may occur in systems and
recurring processes in the normal course of business. See notes
38 and 50 infra. |
|
19 |
Assessments of materiality should occur not
only at year-end, but also during the preparation of each
quarterly or interim financial statement. See, e.g., In the
Matter of Venator Group, Inc., AAER 1049 (June 29, 1998). |
|
20 |
See, e.g., In the Matter of W.R. Grace & Co.,
AAER 1140 (June 30, 1999). |
|
21 |
AUI § 326.33. |
|
22 |
Id. |
|
23 |
The auditing literature notes that the "concept
of materiality recognizes that some matters, either individually
or in the aggregate, are important for fair presentation of
financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles." AU § 312.03. See also AU § 312.04. |
|
24 |
AU § 312.34. Quantitative materiality
assessments often are made by comparing adjustments to revenues,
gross profit, pretax and net income, total assets, stockholders'
equity, or individual line items in the financial statements.
The particular items in the financial statements to be
considered as a basis for the materiality determination depend
on the proposed adjustment to be made and other factors, such as
those identified in this SAB. For example, an adjustment to
inventory that is immaterial to pretax income or net income may
be material to the financial statements because it may affect a
working capital ratio or cause the registrant to be in default
of loan covenants. |
|
25 |
AU § 508.36. |
|
26 |
AU § 312.34 |
|
27 |
AU § 380.09. |
|
28 |
FASB Statements of Financial Accounting
Standards ("Standards" or "Statements") generally provide that
"[t]he provisions of this Statement need not be applied to
immaterial items." This SAB is consistent with that provision of
the Statements. In theory, this language is subject to the
interpretation that the registrant is free intentionally to set
forth immaterial items in financial statements in a manner that
plainly would be contrary to GAAP if the misstatement were
material. The staff believes that the FASB did not intend this
result. |
|
29 |
15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(b)(2) - (7). |
|
30 |
15 U.S.C. § 78l. |
|
31 |
15 U.S.C. § 78o(d). |
|
32 |
Criminal liability may be imposed if a person
knowingly circumvents or knowingly fails to implement a system
of internal accounting controls or knowingly falsifies books,
records or accounts. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(4) and (5). See also Rule
13b2-1 under the Exchange Act, 17 CFR 240.13b2-1, which states,
"No person shall, directly or indirectly, falsify or cause to be
falsified, any book, record or account subject to Section
13(b)(2)(A) of the Securities Exchange Act." |
|
33 |
15 U.S.C. § 78m(b)(7). The books and records
provisions of section 13(b) of the Exchange Act originally were
passed as part of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act ("FCPA"). In
the conference committee report regarding the 1988 amendments to
the FCPA, the committee stated,
The conference committee adopted the prudent man
qualification in order to clarify that the current standard does
not connote an unrealistic degree of exactitude or precision.
The concept of reasonableness of necessity contemplates the
weighing of a number of relevant factors, including the costs of
compliance.
Cong. Rec. H2116 (daily ed. April 20, 1988). |
|
34 |
So far as the staff is aware, there is only one
judicial decision that discusses Section 13(b)(2) of the
Exchange Act in any detail, SEC v. World-Wide Coin Investments,
Ltd., 567 F. Supp. 724 (N.D. Ga. 1983), and the courts generally
have found that no private right of action exists under the
accounting and books and records provisions of the Exchange Act.
See e.g., Lamb v. Phillip Morris Inc., 915 F.2d 1024 (6th Cir.
1990) and JS Service Center Corporation v. General Electric
Technical Services Company, 937 F. Supp. 216 (S.D.N.Y. 1996). |
|
35 |
The Commission adopted the address as a formal
statement of policy in Securities Exchange Act Release No. 17500
(January 29, 1981), 46 FR 11544 (February 9, 1981), 21 SEC
Docket 1466 (February 10, 1981). |
|
36 |
Id. at 46 FR 11546. |
|
37 |
Id. |
|
38 |
For example, the conference report regarding
the 1988 amendments to the FCPA stated,
The Conferees intend to codify current Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) enforcement policy that penalties not
be imposed for insignificant or technical infractions or
inadvertent conduct. The amendment adopted by the Conferees
[Section 13(b)(4)] accomplishes this by providing that criminal
penalties shall not be imposed for failing to comply with the
FCPA's books and records or accounting provisions. This
provision [Section 13(b)(5)] is meant to ensure that criminal
penalties would be imposed where acts of commission or omission
in keeping books or records or administering accounting controls
have the purpose of falsifying books, records or accounts, or of
circumventing the accounting controls set forth in the Act. This
would include the deliberate falsification of books and records
and other conduct calculated to evade the internal accounting
controls requirement.
Cong. Rec. H2115 (daily ed. April 20, 1988). |
|
39 |
As Chairman Williams noted with respect to the
internal control provisions of the FCPA, "[t]housands of dollars
ordinarily should not be spent conserving hundreds." 46 FR
11546. |
|
40 |
Id., at 11547. |
|
41 |
Section 10A(f) defines, for purposes of Section
10A, an "illegal act" as "an act or omission that violates any
law, or any rule or regulation having the force of law." This is
broader than the definition of an "illegal act" in AU § 317.02,
which states, "Illegal acts by clients do not include personal
misconduct by the entity's personnel unrelated to their business
activities." |
|
42 |
AU § 316.04. See also AU § 316.03. An
unintentional illegal act triggers the same procedures and
considerations by the auditor as a fraudulent misstatement if
the illegal act has a direct and material effect on the
financial statements. See AU §§ 110 n. 1, 316 n. 1, 317.05 and
317.07. Although distinguishing between intentional and
unintentional misstatements is often difficult, the auditor must
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance that
the financial statements are free of material misstatements in
either case. See AU § 316 note 3. |
|
43 |
AU § 316.04. Although the auditor is not
required to plan or perform the audit to detect misstatements
that are immaterial to the financial statements, SAS 82 requires
the auditor to evaluate several fraud "risk factors" that may
bring such misstatements to his or her attention. For example,
an analysis of fraud risk factors under SAS 82 must include,
among other things, consideration of management's interest in
maintaining or increasing the registrant's stock price or
earnings trend through the use of unusually aggressive
accounting practices, whether management has a practice of
committing to analysts or others that it will achieve unduly
aggressive or clearly unrealistic forecasts, and the existence
of assets, liabilities, revenues, or expenses based on
significant estimates that involve unusually subjective
judgments or uncertainties. See AU §§ 316.17a and .17c. |
|
44 |
AU §§ 316.34 and 316.35, in requiring the
auditor to consider whether fraudulent misstatements are
material, and in requiring differing responses depending on
whether the misstatement is material, make clear that fraud can
involve immaterial misstatements. Indeed, a misstatement can be
"inconsequential" and still involve fraud.
Under SAS 82, assessing whether misstatements due to fraud
are material to the financial statements is a "cumulative
process" that should occur both during and at the completion of
the audit. SAS 82 further states that this accumulation is
primarily a "qualitative matter" based on the auditor's
judgment. AU § 316.33. The staff believes that in making these
assessments, management and auditors should refer to the
discussion in Part 1 of this SAB. |
|
45 |
AU §§ 316.34 and 316.36. Auditors should
document their determinations in accordance with AU §§ 316.37,
319.57, 339, and other appropriate sections. |
|
46 |
See, e.g., AU § 316.39. |
|
47 |
Report of the National Commission on Fraudulent
Financial Reporting at 32 (October 1987). See also Report and
Recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Committee on Improving the
Effectiveness of Corporate Audit Committees (February 8, 1999). |
|
48 |
AU § 325.02. See also AU § 380.09, which, in
discussing matters to be communicated by the auditor to the
audit committee, states,
The auditor should inform the audit committee about
adjustments arising from the audit that could, in his judgment,
either individually or in the aggregate, have a significant
effect on the entity's financial reporting process. For purposes
of this section, an audit adjustment, whether or not recorded by
the entity, is a proposed correction of the financial
statements.... |
|
49 |
See AU § 411.05. |
|
50 |
The FASB Discussion Memorandum, Criteria for
Determining Materiality, states that the financial accounting
and reporting process considers that "a great deal of the time
might be spent during the accounting process considering
insignificant matters . . . . If presentations of financial
information are to be prepared economically on a timely basis
and presented in a concise intelligible form, the concept of
materiality is crucial." This SAB is not intended to require
that misstatements arising from insignificant errors and
omissions (individually and in the aggregate) arising from the
normal recurring accounting close processes, such as a clerical
error or an adjustment for a missed accounts payable invoice,
always be corrected, even if the error is identified in the
audit process and known to management. Management and the
auditor would need to consider the various factors described
elsewhere in this SAB in assessing whether such misstatements
are material, need to be corrected to comply with the FCPA, or
trigger procedures under Section 10A of the Exchange Act.
Because this SAB does not change current law or guidance in the
accounting or auditing literature, adherence to the principles
described in this SAB should not raise the costs associated with
recordkeeping or with audits of financial statements. |
|