"Bloomberg
Is the SEC Going Easy on General Electric?
By - Jan 24,
2014
The
Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled a curious settlement today with
KPMG LLP over violations of auditor-independence rules. And it looks like the
agency went out of its way to protect the Big Four accounting firm and its
longtime audit client, General Electric Co.
The settlement papers came in two
parts. The first was an administrative order, under which the firm will pay $8.2 million in
fines and disgorgement. The SEC said KPMG provided bookkeeping and other
prohibited services to three audit clients. The SEC said some KPMG partners
also owned stock in one of the clients, which is a no-no.
The SEC didn't name the clients,
which is odd, because the agency has in other auditor-independence cases. One
that comes to mind was a 2010 settlement with a former vice chairman at Deloitte
& Touche LLP, Thomas Flanagan, who was caught trading shares of Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. and other Deloitte audit clients. Another was a 2002 case against
KPMG, which was the auditor for AIM Funds at the same time it had invested $25 million in one of the mutual funds that AIM
ran.
The second part of today's
settlement offers more intrigue. The SEC issued a separate report about an investigation into KPMG's
practice of lending tax professionals from its own staff to certain audit
clients. Once again, the SEC didn't name any of the companies. But it's a safe
bet that one of them was GE.
Francine McKenna, who writes about accounting
and auditing for her website re: The Auditors, broke the story in March 2011 that KPMG was doing this at
GE. Some of the KPMG employees working at GE even were given GE e-mail
addresses, she reported.
The
SEC spent much of its report explaining what sorts of staff-lending
arrangements it had uncovered at KPMG and why they are prohibited. Audit firms'
employees aren't allowed to act as employees of an audit client. "The
legal consequence of an auditor lacking independence is that it violates, and
causes its audit clients to violate, various provisions of the federal
securities laws," the report said. The commission said it issued the
report "in order to address uncertainty regarding the commission's
interpretation" of its rules on the subject.
The
report also said "the commission has determined not to pursue an
enforcement action with regard to these loaned staff engagements."
However, it didn't explain why. And given all of the secrecy, I can't help but
wonder.
KPMG has been GE's auditor for more than 100 years. GE
is a systemically important financial institution, because of its GE Capital
finance arm. The company paid KPMG almost $100 million in fees for 2012. It has
paid the firm more than $1.3 billion since 2000. Former SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro, who left
the agency in December 2012, joined GE's board last year. And you never know
what a fresh pair of eyes might find on GE's books if the SEC ever ordered it
to get a new accounting firm.
Could any of those things have been an issue when the SEC
decided not to name any audit clients? Or penalize KPMG for lending them its
tax staff? Or disqualify KPMG as GE's outside auditor? An SEC spokesman, John
Nester, declined to comment."
Read at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-24/is-the-sec-going-easy-on-general-electric-.html
Read at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-24/is-the-sec-going-easy-on-general-electric-.html
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