Tag: PCAOB rule 3502 contributory liability

SEC approves new PCAOB proposals

Yesterday, the SEC held an open meeting to consider a number of PCAOB proposals addressing the “general responsibilities of an auditor conducting an audit as well as technology-assisted analysis and contributory liability rule for associated persons.” In his opening remarks, SEC Chair Gary Gensler put this initiative in the historic context of the adoption of SOX in 2002, which led to the establishment of the PCAOB as “an independent watchdog over the audits of public companies and registered broker-dealers and their auditors. The Enron crisis revealed a key problem: the quality of auditing standards. Candidly, the relationships between issuers and auditors, between standard-setters and auditing firms, were too clubby.”  Auditing standards were set by the AICPA, which meant that, in effect, the “profession was writing its own rules. That’s an inherent conflict. To correct course, the PCAOB was tasked with setting enhanced auditing standards. For practical purposes, Congress permitted the newly established PCAOB to carry over existing AICPA standards on an interim basis. The expectation was that the Board would produce a more appropriate set of standards going forward.” Although these standards “were already decades-old when the Board adopted them in 2003,” before now, the PCAOB had adopted only seven new standards—“42 of these 49 so-called ‘interim standards’ remained in public company audit practice.”  Yesterday, the SEC approved a proposed rule amendment and two proposals for new and updated audit standards adopted by the PCAOB:  an amendment to PCAOB Rule 3502 governing contributory liability (approved three to two); AS 1000, regarding the general responsibilities of the auditor in conducting an audit (approved unanimously), and AS 1105 and AS 2301, amendments related to aspects of designing and performing audit procedures that involve technology-assisted analysis of information in electronic form (approved unanimously). According to the press release, Gensler said that he was “pleased that the PCAOB is fulfilling its obligations under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act by updating its standards and rules regarding the practice of auditing….I’m proud to support the PCAOB’s proposed changes to instill greater trust among investors and issuers in our markets.”