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PCAOB Historical Perspective St. Louis University Presented by: Jim Castellano, CPA Chairman, RubinBrown LLP March 2, 2010

PCAOB Historical Perspective St. Louis University Presented by: Jim Castellano, CPA Chairman, RubinBrown LLP March 2, 2010

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PCAOBHistorical Perspective

St. Louis University

Presented by:

Jim Castellano, CPA

Chairman, RubinBrown LLP

March 2, 2010

Challenges to the Profession

How did we get there?

Enron announces bankruptcy (12/2/2001)

Andersen discloses document shredding (1/10/02)

SEC news conference and proposals (1/17/02)

CPA profession supports SEC reforms (1/17/02)

AICPA Chairman testifies before House Commerce

Sub-Committee (2/14/02) and Senate Banking

Committee (3/14/02)

How did we get here?

Indictment of Andersen (3/14/02)

Arthur Andersen found guilty of obstruction (6/15/02)

WorldCom restatement (6/26/02)

WorldCom declares bankruptcy (7/21/02)

Sarbanes/Oxley Act of 2002 enacted (7/30/02)

What went wrong? Corporate culture and reporting model

Simple greed or arrogance.

Market pressure on short term earnings.

Failures in corporate management.

Failures in corporate governance.

Too many rules leading to “connect the dots accounting.”

Some analysts biased.

What went wrong? The work of auditors

Some auditors did not step up to their

responsibilities to serve the public interest.

Inadequate emphasis on fraud detection –

“Expectation Gap.”

Possibly failure to implement audit approach or

simply an inadequate audit approach.

Possible auditor dependence on fees from major

clients.

Global Financial Crisis

What Went Wrong?Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pushed by Congress into making imprudent loansConsumers take on extraordinary debtHouse speculators and “flippers”Failure of bond rating agenciesInsufficient regulation of new debt instrumentsFederal Reserve monetary policyBankers originating mortgages with unworthy borrowers, then selling them to investorsCredit default swaps sold to hedge investor riskImprudent investors

Wall Street's Latest Downfall: Madoff Charged with Fraud

FBI makes first arrest in Stanford fraud case

Restoring Confidence Post EnronSarbanes/Oxley Act of 2002

Public Company Accounting Oversight Board created

Accounting firms registered with PCAOB

Inspections of firms

US auditing standards set by PCAOB

Scope of service restrictions

Section 404

PCAOBFive-member Board:

Only two can be CPAs

Daniel Goelzer, Acting Chairman

Staff

Budget2010 - $183 million

2009 - $158 million

2008 - $130 million

Responsibilities

Accounting Firm Registrations

Firms registered

2405 total firms registered as of 2-16-2010

Including approximately 1,000 foreign firms

Inspections

Scope of inspections

Inspection reports

Inspections

Inspection shall include at least the following

components

Selected audit engagements

Evaluation of the sufficiency of the firm’s quality

control system

Testing of the audit, supervisory and quality

control procedures

Limitations on public disclosure

US Auditing Standards

PCAOB sets standards for public companies

Initially adopted all existing GAAS

PCAOB standards 1-7

Implications for standard setting

PCAOB Standing Advisory Group

Scope of Service Restrictions

Prohibited services

Audit Committee approval requirement

Implications for the profession and

marketplace

Section 404

Requirement for internal control

assessment by the issuer and report by

external auditor

Audit standard – AS 5

Impact on Companies and the Accounting Profession

Increased value of the audit:

Audit Committees interested in the scope of

the audit first, cost of the audit second

Quality counts – no longer “cross-selling”

Looking to the Future

Value of auditing services continues to increase, but continuous innovations needed

International business capabilities increasingly important

IFRS will be the standard

Demand for accountants remains high

Quality counts and will be rewarded:

People, Quality, Growth, Profit

Thank you!

Questions?