| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
THE SEC HAS
TAKEN ITS FIRST ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS against
companies that violated regulation FD by
selectively disclosing material nonpublic
information about themselves to certain
parties, such as investment analysts,
before sharing it with the public.
CPAs CAN PLAY AN
IMPORTANT ROLE for their
public-company clients and their
employersif they work for an SEC
registrantby ensuring those
companies understand what regulation FD
requires of them and how they can most
easily and effectively comply with it.
CLEAR DISCLOSURE
GUIDELINES are the starting
point for an effective strategy for
complying with regulation FD. CPAs should
advocate documentation that spells out
what kinds of information the rules
govern and to whom, when and under what
circumstances company officials are
permitted or obligated to release it.
A COMPREHENSIVE
COMMUNICATIONS REVIEW procedure
is an essential complement to disclosure
guidelines. CPAs should recommend that
such procedures provide for knowledgeable
vetting of all company announcements to
ensure they conform with regulation
FDs provisions and, when necessary,
for initiating corrective actions within
prescribed time frames.
COMPANIES MUST ENSURE
WIDESPREAD DISTRIBUTION to avoid
selective disclosure when they release
material nonpublic information. CPAs can
recommend several ways to achieve this.
One method is to file a Form 8-K with the
SEC. Others include issuing a press
release through a news or wire service or
hosting a webcastan Internet-based
live or delayed version of a sound or
video broadcast.
IF A COMPANY MAKES A
SELECTIVE DISCLOSURE of material
nonpublic information, the time frame
within which it must share those data
with the public depends on whether the
disclosure was intentional or
unintentional. If the company did it
deliberately, it must make a public
statement at the same time as the
selective disclosure. But if it
inadvertently disclosed the information,
it must make a public announcement by the
later of 24 hours afterward or the
beginning of the next trading day on the
New York Stock Exchange.
|
| ED McCARTHY is a freelance
writer in Warwick, Rhode Island, who
specializes in finance and technology.
His e-mail address is edmccarthy1@yahoo.com. |
o
one knew how stringently the SEC would apply
regulation FD, which requires public companies to
share earnings data and related information
equally with all interested parties. But last
November the commission instituted its first
enforcement actions against a number of companies
and, in the process, gave many others a wake-up
call. Heres how several CPAs, drawing on
their own experiences and those of companies
caught violating regulation FD, say you can help
keep your clients or your employerif you
work for an SEC registrantin compliance.
(Also, see After Regulation FD:
Talking to Your Constituents, JofA,
Feb.01, page 28.)
THE
SEC FOLLOWS UP
This article
examines the cases of four companies (referred to
below as A, B, C and D) the SEC cited for
inequitable disclosure practices. While three
were the SECs first regulation FD
enforcement actions, the agencys regional
offices have been actively monitoring potential
violations.
| Boris Feldman, a partner and
securities litigator in law firm Wilson
Sonsini Goodrich & Rosatis Palo
Alto, California, office, advises
publicly traded companies on regulation
FD. He reports the SEC contacted a number
of his clients with disclosure-related
questions since the regulation became
effective. Several of our clients
received calls from, for example, the
SECs San Francisco regional office
saying, We noticed such and such a
comment triggering a stock
reaction, Feldman says.
Would you mind bringing the
CFO in? We want to talk to her about what
happened. By making such inquiries, the
commission sought to determine whether a
sudden movement in the price of a
companys stock was precipitated by
the actions of a small group of investors
to whom the companyintentionally or
nothad selectively disclosed
nonpublic material information about
itself. In instances where this happened,
a privileged few had acted on their
exclusive knowledge and bought the
companys stock before its price
rose or sold the stock short before its
price fell. In either case the
insiders profited when the
information became public and the
stocks price moved in the direction
they had anticipated, producing the
profits they had expected.
|
Playing It
Safe
When regulation FD
took effect in October 2000,
companies began making public
preannouncements or
advance statements of their
earnings. The number of such
press releases doubled in 2001
and has continued to grow
rapidly. 
Source: Thomson
Financial/First Call, www1.firstcall.com.
|
|
When a company releases
such information to everyone simultaneously,
however, the playing field is level and no one
has an advantage. Since that was the SECs
goal in issuing regulation FD, companies actually
or seemingly not complying may attract the
attention of the commissions enforcement
division.
So how do you avoid regulation
FD violations? Feldman and the CPAs interviewed
for this article recommend companies create a
compliance program that
Establishes clear
disclosure guidelines.
Follows a stringent
communications review procedure.
Uses multiple channels to
disseminate information.
Ensures the company
responds quickly and effectively after nonpublic
disclosures.
The next four sections of the
article explain how to implement these compliance
objectives.
DECIDE
WHAT TO SAY
Feldman urges his
clients to adopt bright-line rulesprecise
limitsthat provide clear guidance to staff
members on what they safely can disclose. Such
procedures help prevent errors in judgment that
can lead to inadvertent violations during, for
instance, an unscripted conference call or
presentation. You dont want to have
to weigh different factors when youre on a
call with an analyst or a reporter, he
says. Instead, you need red-light and
green-light rules, meaning unambiguous
instructions that indicate whether releasing
information in a given situation is forbidden or
permitted under regulation FD. For example,
after you give your outlook in an earnings
release or in a conference call, you could make
it a standard practice that you dont update
it during the quarter unless you find your
estimate was so far off that you have to put out
another release preannouncing a quarterly miss.
Thats a bright-line rule, Feldman
says.
| Such a precept might have
prevented company A from violating
regulation FD. On two occasions its CEO
disclosed information to two portfolio
managers about a significant sales
contract the company had not announced
publicly. If the companys policy
had prohibited the CEO from discussing
the contract until the company had
publicly announced it in a press release,
it could have avoided the violation. But
since the company had no such protocol,
it broke the SEC rule and in November the
commission issued a public
cease-and-desist order prohibiting the
company from continuing its illegal
practices but imposing no penalty.
Earnings projections
between scheduled announcements are an
area where its easy to violate
regulation FD. Feldman advises his
clients to provide forecasts at the
beginning of the quarter and then to
avoid any subsequent confirmation or
denial of analysts estimates.
Dont give updates, even
casual ones such as, Were on
track, he says. If you
must provide an update, do it through a
press release.
Some experts offer even
more conservative advice. Susan M.
Barnard, a partner of law firm Sullivan
& Worcester in Boston, says her firm
tells its clients to eliminate
private analyst calls. Now everything
goes out over a simulcasta live
broadcast on, for example, the Web and
televisionor a conference call. Our
clients no longer correct analysts
forecasts, either, she adds.
They rectify errors only in reports
of historical facts.
At Ross Systems Inc., a
software developer in Atlanta, Verome M.
Johnston, CFO and CPA, follows a
procedure similar to the one Feldman
advocates. According to Johnston, the
company issues earnings projections
annually but not quarterly and limits its
quarterly press releases to initial
estimates followed by confirmed numbers.
As soon as possible after the
quarter has ended and we have discussed
our revenues with our external auditors,
we issue a preliminary revenue and
earnings outlook in the form of a press
release, he says. We advise
the public that it is preliminary and
subject to a routine evaluation. After
the external auditors have completed
their review, we confirm the earnings
estimate in a detailed press
release.
|
Reg FD Tool
Kit
CPAs should ensure these
essential resources are available
for corrective action when an
official representing their
employer or client reveals
material nonpublic information.
Contact
list. Companies
should designate an emergency
response team with the knowledge
and authority to make
supplemental announcements that
can counter the effects of a
selective disclosure. Each person
on that team and all company
officials who discuss significant
topics with external parties
should exchange cell phone
numbers and e-mail addresses to
ensure timely communication in a
crisis.
Communications
capability. All
company spokespersons and members
of the companys emergency
response team should have cell
phones and keep them on at all
times. E-mail can serve as a
backup communications medium,
especially when circulating
documents for review.
Procedures.
CPAs should help their employers
and clients prepare a
comprehensive plan that clearly
identifies necessary actions,
responsible parties and deadlines
for completion. All members of
management and the emergency team
should maintain a copy of the
plan for reference.
Designated
coordinator. The
company should identify a senior
managerand at least one
backup personto oversee the
ongoing appropriateness of the
emergency plan and the readiness
of those responsible for
executing it.
Robert
Tie
Robert
Tie is a senior editor with the JofA.
His e-mail address is rtie@aicpa.org.
|
|
Johnston also points out
the need to control disclosures to internal
audiences. In the past, during a
company-wide meeting, we might have given some
casual indications of our current financial
performance. But weve definitely curtailed
that practice and now treat all parties the same.
We disclose any new information in a press
release, and we disseminate it through the proper
channels to make sure we comply with regulation
FD. Besides sending information to the SEC,
companies can distribute their announcements
through Business Wire (http://home.businesswire.com) and other services that deliver
corporate press releases to the media, financial
markets, investors and other public audiences.
LOOK
BEFORE YOU SPEAK
With the help of
compliance experts, a company can review its
internal and external communications
practicesto see whether they comply with
regulation FDand reduce the likelihood of
its violating the rule, as company B did. During
a public conference call, the CEO said the
company had a negative business outlook. But
three weeks later, at an invitation-only
technology conference, he presented attendees
with a positive view of the companys
prospects, and the price of its stock immediately
rose 20%. In fining the company $250,000, the SEC
said the public did not have access to the
technology conference and was unable to benefit
from the information disclosed there. Clearly, if
a processfor example, a prior review by
in-house counselfor vetting the CEOs
planned remarks had been in place, it might have
revealed the discrepancy and saved the company a
quarter of a million dollars.
At Ross Systems,
Johnstons staff members collect
datasuch as descriptions of recently added
customersfor use in reports and news
releases. The company then combines the
information with that from other departments and
makes an announcement. If management believes the
announcement is nonmaterialfor example, a
routine statement about a new account or
employeeit is reviewed internally only. But
notices regulators might consider material, such
as the loss of a major account, undergo an
external review as well. In those cases we
also let our accountants, corporate counsel and
securities-law attorneys take a look at
them, Johnston says.
W.R. Grace & Co., a
chemical products manufacturer in Columbia,
Maryland, also follows a thorough communications
review procedure. The company circulates draft
press releases by e-mail through its financial,
executive and legal groups, the last of which
includes SEC counsel. This gives key
managers and each division a chance to contribute
to the documents language, says
Robert M. Tarola, CFO and CPA. We
dont send anything outside the company
without going through that process. We can
accomplish this within hours if necessary, but it
usually takes a few days when the release is
about a complex subject such as quarterly
earnings.
SPREAD
THE WORD
Many of the
violators made the same mistake: Each of their
cases involved a material disclosure from
corporate management to a select audience via
private conversations or an invitation-only
meeting. For example, the SEC cited company C for
material nonpublic disclosures to securities
analysts following one of its investor
conferences. The commission said the
companys CFO selectively had disclosed
quarterly and semiannual earnings projections
during one-on-one talks with analysts about the
accuracy of their estimates of the companys
first-quarter earnings. Following these
discussions, the analysts revised their
calculations to align them more closely with the
companys estimatesthe outcome
management had sought so that the companys
performance would be consistent with expectations
and its shares would appear to be safe
investments.
| Like company A, company C
discontinued such illegal practices,
settled with the SEC and received no
penalty. Since
regulation FD prohibits behind-the-scenes
maneuvers, CPAs should advise companies
to simultaneously communicate all
potentially material information through
many different channels. Toward that end
CPA Thomas A. Nardi, CFO of Peoples
Energy Corp., a distributor of natural
gas based in Chicago, says that his
company now files Form 8-K more
frequently with the SEC (for a list of
the most common corporate filings, go to www.sec.gov/info/edgar/forms.htm). In addition Peoples conducts
its quarterly earnings conference calls
by means of webcastsInternet-based
live or delayed versions of sound or
video broadcastswhich it then
archives and makes available for replay
by interested parties. According to
Nardi, the company still meets
face-to-face with analysts; but, he says:
Were careful to operate
within the requirements of regulation FD.
We dont disclose any material
information that has not been publicly
disseminated.
|
The Easiest
Way to Comply
Although
the SEC cited four companies for
violating regulation FD, its
actions toward them varied. What
lay behind the SECs
different treatment of these
companies? Reflecting the
complexity of the circumstances
prompting the enforcement
actions, the five SEC
commissioners were unable to
agree on whether a fine was
appropriate as part of each case.
The vote
was 4-1 against a penalty for
company A and company C and 3-2
in favor of one for company B.
The commission unanimously
opposed enforcement action
against company D. Since
its so difficult to predict
the SECs reaction to a
particular form of disclosure
violation, the moral for CPAs and
CFOs is to advise clients and/or
employers that its easier
and less expensive to be
conservative. In short: When in
doubt, issue a press release.
Robert
Tie
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|
Webcasts are gaining in
popularityand for good reason. Feldman says
that since many investors have Internet access,
almost every company he advises uses the
Internet-based programs to publicize the
announcements and presentations they make at
analyst meetings and investor conferences. He
wholeheartedly endorses the practice because
webcasts distribute information immediately to
everyone and allow it to be saved for future
reference. Plus, they give the company a
cushion if, for example, its management says too
much in response to an analysts
question, Feldman says. Because the
webcast is out there for the world to see, it can
prevent the companys disclosure from being
selective and violating regulation FD.
DAMAGE
CONTROL
If an SEC
registrant releases nonpublic material
information, it must act quickly to correct its
error. The SEC requires that in such a case the
company must publicly disclose the
information promptly after it knows (or is
reckless in not knowing) the information
selectively disclosed was both material and
nonpublic. The time frame within which the
company must make a public announcement depends
on whether the selective disclosure was
intentional or unintentional. If it was
deliberate, the press release or other public
statement must be simultaneous with the nonpublic
disclosure. But if it was unintentional, the
regulation allows the company 24 hours to
recognize the violation and disseminate the
inadvertently disclosed information through
public channels.
To take effective action within
24 hours, the company must have a corrective
procedure in place. You need a clear chain
of command in the communications channel,
Feldman says. The key is being able to
track down a spokesperson, such as the
companys CEO, CFO, investor relations
officer or attorney.
And while its important
to have backup contact staff,
together they must deliver a coordinated message.
Determine who will say what, Barnard
advises. To that end, the CPA should ensure that
company officials with the knowledge and
authority to make public announcements work
together as part of a well-thought-out
communications strategy. In this way they can
address an unintentional disclosure on a timely
basis.
The case of company A
demonstrated the importance of having a plan for
rapid corrective action. The companys CEO,
working from his home, participated in a
conference call with a portfolio manager and a
salesperson from an investment advisory group.
From her office, the companys director of
investor relations also took part in the
conversation. During the call, the director
realized the CEO unwittingly disclosed nonpublic
information, but she didnt interrupt him.
As soon as the conference call ended, she tried
to reach him by telephone but was able to leave
him only a voice-mail message expressing her
concern over his inadvertent selective
disclosure. Not until an hour later did the CEO
get her message. He then asked the other call
participants to keep the information
confidential, but took no further action that
day.
| At the time the CEO learned of
his disclosure error, he had 24 hours to
publicly disseminate the material
information. That much time was available
because his selective release was unintentional.
But that time frame became irrelevant the
next day, when the CEO again selectively
disclosedthis time intentionallythe
material information without issuing a
press release. He divulged the news only
to analysts because he wanted them to
know of a large purchase order his
company had won, but he didnt issue
a statement to the public because the
buyer wanted to gather more information
before it consented to a company A press
release announcing the deal.
Unfortunately for the company and the
CEO, his second disclosure triggered a
more stringent regulation FD requirement.
Under it, his intentional selective
disclosure had to be accompanied by a simultaneous
public announcement. But the company did
not meet this requirement. Instead, it
issued a press release three hours later
and thus violated the rule. By then its
stock had risen nearly 15% since the
CEOs first nonpublic disclosure.
Still, the companys effort to
comply, albeit tardy, may have been a
factor in the commissions decision
not to impose a fine as part of its
ensuing enforcement action. |
| PRACTICAL
TIPS TO REMEMBER To simplify
compliance with regulation FD,
CPAs should recommend that their
clients or their employerif
they work for an SEC
registranthave a compliance
program that
Establishes clear
guidelines for determining the
extent of disclosure required.
Entails rigorous
review of disclosures by a team
formally identified, properly
qualified and fully empowered to
perform it.
Requires the use of
several mass communications
media, including submissions to
the SEC, press releases and
Internet-based sound and video
presentations.
Provides resources
and procedures necessary to take
appropriate corrective action as
soon as possible after a
selective disclosure of nonpublic
material information.
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Although W.R. Grace
hasnt had any problems related to
regulation FD, its management has implemented a
corrective procedure. According to Tarola, in the
event of a suspected violation, the company would
convene a review team of executives, attorneys
and other professionals and then decide on the
method and content of the follow-up
communication. We would execute the
correction within the day, consulting or advising
our board of directors if the matter warranted
their advanced attention, he says.
TWICE
AND YOURE OUT
Of the four
companies the SEC cited for violating regulation
FD, company D was the single one for which the
commission issued only a Report of Investigation,
a less serious enforcement action than it took
against the others.
The company started off on the
right foot when it issued a press release
announcing significant weakness in
its quarterly sales and orders. Soon afterward,
the companys investor relations director
decided that, based on equity analysts
research notes he had seen, the analysts had not
understood the true extent of the decline in
business. So, he selectively informed them
significant meant 25% or
more. The director did so with the approval
of in-house counsel, which concluded that his
clarification was not material and had already
been announced to the public. Consequently, the
company did not issue a second press release when
it recontacted the analysts, and it thus violated
regulation FD.
Despite this infraction, the
SEC determined the companys counsel had
made an honest error in viewing the
directors clarification as nonmaterial and
previously publicized. So the commission issued
the report as a reminder of the companys
obligations under regulation FD. At the same time
the SEC said it would no longer be as lenient in
similar situations.
LOOKING
AHEAD
Although the
number of enforcement actions is small, financial
executives, in general, dont treat
regulation FD lightly. One CPA and CFO who
requested anonymity characterized the
commissions actions as warning shots.
The SEC wanted to remind us its
actively enforcing these rules, he said.
Im sure well hear more.
But thats no reason for
pessimism. Its not that difficult to
stay out of trouble with regulation FD,
Barnard says. Make sure your spokespersons
understand the rules and, whenever possible,
prepare your comments in advance.
An SEC official declined to
offer advice on avoiding violations of the
disclosure rules. He said the regulation itself
and recent enforcement actions related to it
provide sufficiently clear guidance. And so, a
word to the wise: To help their clients and
employers stay out of disclosure-related trouble,
CPAs should advise them to retain legal counsel
who follows the SECs regulation FD-related
activities. The days are over when a good-faith
effort is enough to avoid a substantial fine. 
Learn
More
For additional
give-and-take on financial reporting
requirements, attend the AICPA Spring
Business and Industry Conference in Las
Vegas, June 19-20, 2003, or the AICPA
Fall Business and Industry Conference in
Lake Buena Vista, Florida, October 13-14.
To register go to www.cpa2biz.com
and click on the CPE & Conferences
tab. |
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