Sarbanes Oxley act changed the way how public companies do
business in this world after the debacle at Enron and WorldCom. All the
Public Companies should understand what Sarbanes Oxley means to them and
how they should be compliant in each one of their financially critical
business process.
Objective of Sarbanes Oxley
To protect investors by improving the accuracy and reliability of corporate disclosures made pursuant to the securities laws, and for other purposes.
Sarbanes Oxley Act
was enacted on January 23,2002
was sponsored by Banking committee chairman Paul Sarbanes and
Congressman Michael G. Oxley
Sarbanes Oxley Act Key Facts
Introduced new standards of corporate accountability as well a new penalties including jail term for fraud
Stresses importance on accuracy and reliability of financial results
Executive Management of the company is responsible for the accuracy and reliability of the financial reports
Stresses that there are sufficient internal controls available to prove the accuracy of financial data
Sarbanes Oxley Non-Compliance Penalties
Non compliance penalties range from the loss of exchange listing, loss of D&O insurance to multimillion dollar fines and imprisonment
A CEO/CFO who submits a fraud certificate for financial results can receive a fine of up to 1 million dollar or up to 10 years jail term
A willful submission of wrong financial certification can result in fines of up to 5 million dollars
Possible delisting of the company from Stock Exchanges
Loss of D&O insurance which can cause the company to pay millions of dollars in risk insurance
Sarbanes Oxley Act applies to
Public US companies
International Companies with equity or debt securities in SEC
Accounting firms providing auditing services to Public US companies and
International companies
Objective of Sarbanes Oxley
To protect investors by improving the accuracy and reliability of corporate disclosures made pursuant to the securities laws, and for other purposes.
Sarbanes Oxley Act
was enacted on January 23,2002
was sponsored by Banking committee chairman Paul Sarbanes and
Congressman Michael G. Oxley
Sarbanes Oxley Act Key Facts
Introduced new standards of corporate accountability as well a new penalties including jail term for fraud
Stresses importance on accuracy and reliability of financial results
Executive Management of the company is responsible for the accuracy and reliability of the financial reports
Stresses that there are sufficient internal controls available to prove the accuracy of financial data
Sarbanes Oxley Non-Compliance Penalties
Non compliance penalties range from the loss of exchange listing, loss of D&O insurance to multimillion dollar fines and imprisonment
A CEO/CFO who submits a fraud certificate for financial results can receive a fine of up to 1 million dollar or up to 10 years jail term
A willful submission of wrong financial certification can result in fines of up to 5 million dollars
Possible delisting of the company from Stock Exchanges
Loss of D&O insurance which can cause the company to pay millions of dollars in risk insurance
Sarbanes Oxley Act applies to
Public US companies
International Companies with equity or debt securities in SEC
Accounting firms providing auditing services to Public US companies and
International companies
