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Michael W. Peregrine is a partner at McDermott Will & Emery LLP. This post is based on his McDermott Will & Emery memorandum.
Next year will mark the 20th anniversary of the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, federal legislation that has had an enormous—and mostly positive—impact on the integrity and reliability of companies, their financial statements, leadership and advisors. It sparked the corporate responsibility movement, which continues to impact corporate and leadership ethics and compliance with law. It remains one of the most consequential governance developments in history and serves as an important lesson for corporate officers, directors and their professional advisors.
The act was developed in response to the sweeping instability of commerce and the financial markets following the collapse of several major U.S. corporations in 2000 and 2001 because of financial reporting irregularities, fraud and other contributing factors.
For example, when Enron—once the country’s largest energy trading firm—filed for Chapter 11 protection in December 2001, it became the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history at that time. It was soon surpassed in such ignominy by the July 2002 bankruptcy of the telecommunications firm WorldCom. Several other large corporations met similar fates.
Sarbanes-Oxley was developed in response to the loss of consumer confidence in the capital markets and corporate financial statements arising from these scandals. Congressional hearings identified a series of causes that contributed to the harm, including lax oversight of auditors, the absence of auditor independence, insufficient corporate governance practices, conflicts of interest of stock analysts, limited disclosure obligations and “grossly inadequate” funding of the SEC and its enforcement capabilities.
The resulting legislation contained at least 10 major elements (the bulk of which retain their influence to this day), including:
These and other changes had a remarkable impact on corporate governance, including the focus on corporate responsibility and ethics generally; the obligation to exercise oversight of the reliability of financial statements; the importance attributed to oversight of audit and compliance functions; board composition (especially relating to director competencies); the finance committee’s role in preserving accurate financial reporting to the board; and the importance attributed to director independence. Perhaps more thematically important was the gentle shift in corporate control from the CEO to the board.
It should also be noted that these and other act provisions led to significant changes in the professional responsibility of attorneys and were recognized in large part as applicable in concept to nonprofit and private companies.
The initial criticisms of the act were many. It was overbroad, it represented an unnecessary intrusion of the federal government into the financial markets, it represented the federalization of corporate governance, compliance would place severe financial burdens on many smaller companies, and it would depress the IPO market. Over time, the legitimacy of almost all these criticisms faded or failed to materialize.
Indeed, it can be argued that the act has been a great success—it fundamentally changed the relationship between the company and the audit/auditor, enhanced the reliability of financial reporting, established the PCAOB and sparked the corporate responsibility movement, igniting a more robust respect for corporate compliance, fiduciary duty to shareholders, attentive board oversight and ethical behavior—having contributed to limiting the number of financial accounting scandals over time.
A new generation of corporate leaders has entered the boardroom since 2002, and for many of them the magnitude of the financial crisis, its root causes and the impact of the act’s provisions may have faded. As Sarbanes-Oxley’s anniversary draws near, there may be value in leadership education, and perhaps introspection, on how the commerce and governance we know today was shaped by this momentous legislation.