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George M. Mangion | Wednesday, 09 December 2009

Accountants lock horns with regulators

Over the last few years, public confidence in the auditing of company accounts has been seriously shaken by corporate scandals such as Enron in the US, Dutch retailer Ahold, Italy’s Parmalat and Societe Generale in France (just to name a few). In response to these scandals and as part of the preparations for a broader action plan on corporate governance, the EU Commission has conducted a number of studies.
One such study has concluded on four key areas: These covered the international market for statutory audits of large and very large companies as this is highly concentrated and dominated by the Big-4 networks.
As a result of pressures from accounting and corporate governance scandals the EU Commission implemented a new audit rule styled the eight directive. This includes amongst other things, mandatory audit committees at listed companies and the need for compulsory rotation of audit firms on a seven year term. This is a heavy piece of legislation concerning the regulation of auditors. As members of the EU once this directive is implemented then rotation of auditors of quoted companies will take place. In serving the public interest, the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB) went into overdrive to set high-quality international auditing and assurance standards. The IAASB recognizes that standards need to be understandable, clear, and capable of consistent application. These aspects of clarity serve to enhance the quality and uniformity of practice worldwide. In 2004, the IAASB began a comprehensive program to enhance the clarity of its International Standards on Auditing (ISAs). This program involved the application of new drafting conventions to all ISAs, either as part of a substantive revision or through a limited redrafting, to reflect the new conventions and matters of clarity generally. On February this year the Clarity Project reached its completion when the Public Interest Oversight Board approved the due process for the last several clarified ISAs.
Auditors worldwide will now have to reform their approach based on 36 newly updated and clarified ISAs and a clarified International Standard on Quality Control (ISQC ).This of course was exacerbated by the onslaught of the credit crunch which saw solid triple “AAA” banks face the wall. The financial crisis has exposed numerous flaws in the financial markets—as well as some shortcomings of fair value accounting for debt securities. Fair value accounting has led to banks publishing some very dispiriting financial results, but this is because the news itself has been bad, not the way in which it has been presented.
With hindsight one can admit that fair value accounting was found to be a suitable scapegoat for the hubris, poor risk controls and some excessively greedy decisions of the banking sector. During the recession, most financial instruments held by banks for trading were expected to be measured using fair value accounting. Under normal circumstances, where there is an active market for the instrument, this method follows naturally to be assessed at its current market value. Trouble ensues where a market value is unavailable or unreliable, since by definition fair value “is an estimate of what the market value would be if there were a market”. For this reason, fair value is also defined in the regulations as mark-to-market. Some commentators have strongly argued that fair value accounting contributed to the financial crisis by exaggerating the severity of problems in banks’ portfolios.
They rightfully reason that if you have a trading activity, then the use of a market value approach is appropriate, but, where you have a distressed market or assets and liabilities held for the long term, then it is not actually appropriate to force short-term fluctuations in values through the balance sheets and profit and loss accounts of companies.
The uncomfortable truth for some banks is that market participants had over-inflated asset prices which have subsequently to be dramatically scaled down. To be truthful one can credit the existing regulation of fair value accounting as the agent responsible that has actually exposed this correction, and done so more quickly than any alternative method would have done. Naturally when things go wrong and in times of unprecedented recession markets are deeply depressed consequently the fair value concept has produced a somewhat distorted view of the future potential of bank’s assets. Many lamented that there is no perfect system yet when things turn sour everyone expects that accounting frameworks encourage transparency and consistency across firms and asset classes. Again, accountants are being heavily blamed for the dismal results reported last year by financial institutions that has partially started the so called credit crunch.
Can a perfect solution be in sight such that one can build a bridge to span the great divide. Something must be done so that the financial markets can rapidly return to normality. Optimists hope that investors receive financial statements which lead them to take intelligent decision-making. Regulators have egg in the faces when politicians accuse them that the safety net did not work. One need only mention the loose regulation in America that led to the proliferation of easy banking credit leading to the now infamous sub-prime crisis.
All this has culminated in severe political pressure on accountancy regulatory bodies like the IASB and IFAC to respond with adequate and more water tight regulation. Realistically the revised Eight audit Directive is not seeking to alter the fundamental mechanics of the relationship between the auditors and the market-but merely to ensure that these mechanics are based on high international standards. They are perceived to be more transparent and are subject to greater external oversight. A more important paradigm shift is the reprieve from using fair values or marked to market for banks. This pressure on International Accounting Standards Board by the European Commission resulted in a carve-out clause.
This alleged pressure effectively presented the IASB with an invidious choice between losing the IASB’s coverage of the European Union on the one hand or acceding to the Commission’s demands at the expense of a loss of credibility in other nations . Certainly a dilemma. Commentators argue that the arm twisting tactics by the EC to the IASB was badly timed. But change had to happen. Thus we witnessed sudden amendments to IAS 39, announced by the IASB which led to insert new disclosure requirements An alternative to using mark-to-market is now the mark-to-model.
The latter refers to the practice of pricing a position or portfolio at prices determined by financial models in contrast to allowing the market to determine the price. This has thus permitted banks in Malta to value their portfolios in a better light and we have already seen unpredicted improvement in earnings from local banks for this year. There is now a consensus among enlightened shareholders who are seeing the bank’s results blossoming.
They are in unison agreeing that mark –to-model is perfectly sound once the bank has no immediate reason of selling them. This compromise solution at a time of recession and high unemployment may appear to be a temporary respite for banks and other institutions. Naturally accountants have to be assured that the use of models do reflect current positions while trying to make the best use of market data in the public domain. (which in most instances is not readily available).
To conclude accountants in practice nowadays need to spend time to catch up with complex audit regulations which are being issued by the hour at neck breaking speed. The time one needs to invest just to keep abreast is getting horrendously high. It is typical for accountants to lock horns with regulators complaining of the added stress arising from over-regulation. Yet one cannot but agree that the scandals that rocked the markets during this unprecedented recession are showing positive signs of dying away. One hopes that the reforms instigated by IFAC and IASB will lead to a stabilisation effect on the accountancy profession in time for the recession to ebb away.

George Mangion
The writer is a partner in PKF (Malta )

 

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09 December 2009
ISSUE NO. 611

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Malta Today

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