View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

At the Institute of Internal Auditors Financial Services Conference, Arlington, Virginia
May 19, 2004

Corporate Governance: Where Do We Go From Here?
Introduction
Good morning. Thank you for the invitation to speak to this Institute of Internal Auditors'
Financial Services Conference. I understand by looking at the IIA's website that May marks
the second annual global celebration of Internal Audit Awareness Month which gives you an
opportunity to promote your profession within individual organizations and throughout the
business community. Before becoming a Federal Reserve Governor, I was at various times
the chief internal auditor and chief financial officer of a bank, so I understand and
appreciate the work you perform.
Today, I will share some of my views on effective corporate governance and risk
management with a special focus on certain aspects of the current risk environment. I will
also talk about the role of internal auditing in both the enterprise-wide risk-management
environment and under the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's standards.
Finally, I will mention a couple of specific areas where you can have an important role in
assessing the adequacy of controls.
Corporate Governance
Events at some corporations over the past three years have called into question the
effectiveness of operational, financial reporting, and compliance controls; corporate
governance practices; and the professionalism of auditors. Governance issues have also been
raised concerning securities underwriting, bank lending practices, mutual funds, and a major
stock exchange. Revelations of significant corporate governance and accounting failures,
with Parmalat and Shell serving as recent examples, demonstrate that these are serious
concerns worldwide, not just here in the United States. Events at the international level have
renewed the resolve of companies around the globe to implement high-quality corporate
governance practices and accounting and disclosure standards, and for auditors to employ
rigorous and sound auditing techniques.
Internal Control Fundamentals and Enterprise Risk Management
When we talk about corporate governance, we typically start at the top of the organization,
with the board of directors and senior management, and work downward. We do this for
good reason. The directors and senior management set the governance tone within
organizations and lead the way. It's apparent that boards of directors and senior management
have a very full plate these days. They must assess the quality of corporate governance
within their organization and ensure that the firm has effective accounting practices, internal
controls, and audit functions. They must respond to the new requirements of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act. They must establish more stringent anti-money-laundering programs
and comply with the USA Patriot Act. Some large financial institutions must address issues
relating to Basel II and the implementation work that needs to be done. Firms are

considering how they can be more effective in managing the business risks they face,
including the rise in operational risks due to increased homeland security issues and reliance
on technology. And, of course, they must still find the time and resources to run their
businesses profitably.
The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) Internal Control Integrated
Framework is still the U.S. standard on internal controls. 1 The COSO model serves as the
basis for meeting the internal control assessment and reporting requirements for depository
institutions laid out in section 112 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Improvement Act (FDICIA 112). This model is also broadly applicable to public companies
in complying with section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
Under COSO, directors have responsibility for overseeing internal control processes so that
they can reasonably expect that their directives will be followed. Although directors are not
expected to understand the nuances of every line of business or to oversee every
transaction, they are responsible for setting the tone regarding their corporations' risk-taking
and for establishing an effective monitoring program. The implication is that directors should
be vigilant in maintaining a clear understanding of how COSO is being implemented in their
organizations.
Directors should also keep up with innovations in corporate governance. For example,
directors should be aware that a new COSO framework has been proposed to encompass
Enterprise Risk Management.2 A draft of the updated COSO framework was released for
comment last summer, and a final document is expected later this year.
For those of you not familiar with the new COSO framework, let me briefly explain that
enterprise-wide risk management is a discipline that an organization can use to identify
events that may affect its ability to achieve its strategic goals and to manage its activities
consistent with its risk appetite. Such events include not only those that may result in
adverse outcomes, but also those that give rise to opportunities. When embraced, an
enterprise-wide risk management framework improves the quality and flow of information
for decisionmakers and stakeholders, focuses attention on the achievement of organizational
goals, and improves the overall governance of an organization.
Some key steps in effective enterprise-wide risk management include identifying and
assessing the key risks within an organization and determining the appropriate response to
those risks. Companies should determine the level of risk they are willing to accept given the
return they can achieve. Management then must implement effective processes to limit risk
to the acceptable level. Once these steps have been taken, business line managers are
expected to monitor actual risk levels and test the effectiveness of the risk responses.
Several elements are essential to the successful implementation of enterprise-wide risk
management. One is clearly articulated risk-management goals which provide a foundation
for the enterprise-wide risk management program and for related training and
communication. A second is a common risk language which is critical because it enables
individuals throughout the organization to conduct meaningful cross-functional discussions
about risk. A third essential element is that individuals clearly understand their roles in the
risk-assessment and risk-management framework. In today's environment, all organizations
should consider embracing this discipline. Indeed, the Federal Reserve is currently
considering how enterprise-wide risk management can better be integrated into its
management processes.

Tone at the Top
It is also important that a strong culture of compliance be established at the top of the
organization and that a proper ethical tone be set for governing the conduct of business. In
many instances, senior management must move from thinking about compliance as chiefly a
cost center to considering the benefits of compliance in protecting against legal and
reputational risks that can have an impact on the bottom line. The board and senior
management are obligated to deliver a strong message to others in the firm about the
importance of integrity, compliance with the law, fair treatment of customers, and overall
good business ethics. Leaders should demonstrate their commitment through their individual
conduct and their response to control failures.
While the ethical tone of a financial institution comes from the top, a successful ethics
program must be demonstrated by staff members at all levels and throughout the
organization. The environment should empower any employee to elevate ethical or
reputational concerns to appropriate levels of management without fear of retribution. In
other words, the culture of the organization should permit issues to be raised to senior
management; management can then demonstrate their commitment by responding
appropriately.
Role of Internal Audit
This leads me to the importance of the role of the internal audit function within an
organization. The Federal Reserve very much supports a strong, independent audit function
at financial services companies. As indicated in our amended interagency policy statement3
released last year, the audit committee is responsible for providing an independent,
objective, and professional internal audit process. The audit committee, in its oversight of
the internal audit staff, should ensure that the function's consulting activities do not interfere
or conflict with the objectivity it should have with respect to monitoring the institution's
system of internal control. In order to maintain its independence, the internal audit function
should not assume a business-line management role over control activities, such as
approving or implementing operating policies or procedures, including those it helped design
in connection with its consulting activities.
To support this goal, the audit committee should ensure that internal audit has an effective
quality assurance process. This becomes increasingly important as organizations grow in
scale, enter new lines of business, become more complex, or acquire organizations with
different cultures. As organizations grow, internal auditors must learn new technical skills,
manage larger staffs, and be continually alert for emerging gaps or conflicts of interest in the
system of internal controls. This often requires that the quality assurance process around the
internal audit process become better defined and promptly alerts the general auditor and the
audit committee to weaknesses in the internal audit program.
Risk-focused audit programs should be reviewed regularly to ensure that audit resources are
focused on the higher-risk areas as the company grows and products and processes change.
As lower-risk areas come up for review, auditors should do enough analysis to be confident
of their risk rating. Audit committees should receive reports on all breaks in internal controls
in a form that will help them determine where the controls and the auditing process can be
strengthened.
Before a company moves into new or higher-risk areas, the board of directors and senior
management should receive assurances from appropriate management and internal audit that

the tools and metrics are in place to ensure adherence to the basics of sound governance.
The audit committee should actively engage the internal auditor to ensure that the bank's risk
assessment and control process are vigorous.
Many of the organizations that have seen their reputations tarnished in the past few years
have simply neglected to consider emerging conflicts of interest when adding new products
and lines of business. It is important to make sure that appropriate firewalls and mitigating
controls are in place before the product or activity begins.
Some institutions seek to coordinate the internal audit function with several risk monitoring
functions (for example, loan review, market risk assessment, and legal compliance
departments) by establishing an administrative arrangement under one senior executive.
Coordination of these other monitoring activities with the internal audit function can
facilitate the reporting of material risk and control issues to the audit committee, increase the
overall effectiveness of these monitoring functions, better use available resources, and
enhance the institution's ability to comprehensively manage risk.
But I want to add a word of caution. The internal audit function must remain independent of
all control processes to be effective. In addition, when an auditor becomes part of the
management process subject to internal audit review, the independent view is lost. Internal
auditors are in the unique position to understand the evolution of all forms of risks and
controls across the organization. If internal audit administratively reports to a chief risk
officer, the relationship should be designed to avoid interfering with or hindering the
manager of internal audit's direct functional reporting relationship to the audit committee.
Also, the audit committee should ensure that efforts to coordinate these monitoring functions
do not result in the manager of internal audit conducting control activities. Furthermore, the
internal audit manager should have the ability to independently audit these other monitoring
functions.
I would also like to add that internal auditors are the eyes and ears of the audit committee
around the organization. As the complexity of financial products and technology has grown,
the financial services industry has increased its reliance on vendors and third-party service
providers for a host of technological solutions. Be mindful that these outsourcing
arrangements may pose additional types of risks for the organization, such as security or data
privacy risks. Internal auditors should remain vigilant in identifying risks as the organization
changes or new products are delivered to the marketplace.
The Compliance Function
I also want to mention that an integral part of enterprise-wide risk management is an
enterprise-wide compliance program that looks at how activities in one area of the firm may
affect the legal and reputational risks of other business lines and across the enterprise as a
whole. It should consider how compliance with laws, regulations, and internal policies,
procedures, and controls should be enhanced or changed in response. This approach is in
marked contrast to the silo approach to compliance, which considers the legal and
reputational risks of activities or business lines in isolation without considering how those
risks interrelate and affect other business lines. With banking organizations offering a wider
variety of products, the possibility of breaks in consumer, legal and regulatory compliance
grows. A paradigm shift to an enterprise-wide compliance structure is an integral part of
effective enterprise-wide risk management.
While the compliance function will vary by the size and complexity of the organization, the
compliance function should be independent of other functions in the organization, including

the internal audit function. Compliance officers should have access to all operational areas.
An independent compliance function can help identify compliance weaknesses that cross
management lines of responsibilities and may not be effectively managed. In larger
organizations, this may require both business-line and enterprise-wide compliance
committees to prioritize resources.
The internal audit function should perform independent reviews of the effectiveness of the
compliance function. These reviews should examine the quality of information in
compliance reports, the adequacy of training programs, whether deficiencies are promptly
corrected, and how compliance risk management is implemented by product managers. The
internal auditor can also assess whether sufficient resources are available to meet the
changing needs of the organization.
The U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
While we are discussing the importance of effective internal controls, let me point out that
the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) has recently approved Auditing
Standard No. 2, An Audit of Internal Control over Financial Reporting Performed in
Conjunction with an Audit of Financial Statements. 4 The new standard is clearly an
improvement over the previous one. It highlights the benefits of strong internal controls over
financial reporting and furthers the objectives of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. This standard
requires external auditors of public companies to evaluate the process that management uses
to prepare the company's financial statements. External auditors must gather evidence
regarding the design and operations effectiveness of the company's internal controls and
determine whether the evidence supports management's assessment of the effectiveness of
the company's internal controls. While the new standard allows external auditors to use the
work of others, including that performed by internal auditors, it emphasizes that external
auditors must perform enough of the testing themselves so that their own work provides the
principal evidence for making a determination regarding the company's controls. Based on
the work performed, the external auditor must render an opinion as to whether the
company's internal control process is effective, which is a relatively high standard.
In addition, as part of its overall assessment of internal controls, the external auditor is
expected to evaluate the effectiveness of the audit committee. If the audit committee is
deemed to be ineffective, the external auditor is required to report that assessment to the
company's board of directors.
This new standard will certainly put more demands on external auditors and public
companies alike. But this is the price to be paid for "raising the bar" to achieve greater
reliability in corporate financial statements and to regain the confidence of the public and
the trust of financial markets.
Operations Risk
Since the mid-1990s, the concept of operations risk has received increasing attention in
connection with the evolution of enterprise risk management. By "operations risk" I mean
any risk that arises from inadequate or failed internal processes, people, or systems or from
external events. Examples of operations risk include employee fraud, failed information
system conversions, mis-sent wires, and weaknesses in security procedures for protecting
assets and information.
In February 2003, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision released a paper titled
"Sound Practices for the Management and Supervision of Operational Risk" that outlines a

set of broad principles that should govern the management of operational risk at depository
institutions of all sizes. 5 These principles will likely play a key role in shaping our ongoing
supervisory efforts in the United States with regard to operations risk management. As with
COSO's enterprise risk management framework, I encourage you to read the operations risk
paper.
Operations risk has always been a part of the financial services industry. But the increasing
complexity of financial organizations, an increase in the number and variety of products and
services they provide, the evolution of business processes (including substantially greater
reliance on information technology and telecommunications), and changes in the ethical
environment in which we live have all contributed to more observable exposures to this type
of risk. Many of the community bank failures in recent years have been due to operations
risks. In a few cases, dominant chief executives perpetrated fraud by manipulating the
internal controls. In others, the management information systems necessary to monitor
exposures in riskier lines of business were never built. As a result, other managers and the
boards of directors did not have the information necessary to monitor and understand the
growing risks inherent in what appeared to be profitable strategies.
Operations risk was a primary focus of Y2K preparations a few years ago. Identification of
critical computer-reliant systems and infrastructures gave us a much clearer understanding
of the financial system's dependence on technology and of the complexities of managing
operations risk. Once institutions understood the considerable business risks that would
result if they could not serve customers, they moved the management of Y2K preparations
out of the back office and onto the desks of product-line and senior managers--where it
belonged.
Moreover, it became clear that financial institutions needed to plan for the possibility that an
external threat--a failure in the critical infrastructure or by a major service provider or
material counterparty--might severely impact a financial institution's business operations.
There was an increased understanding of the interdependencies across market participants
and of how credit, liquidity, and operations risks at one organization could have a cascading
impact on other financial institutions.
Complex Structured Finance Transactions
Let's turn our attention to a couple of important areas where internal auditors can have a
critical role in assessing the adequacy of controls. Innovation has occurred in the
development of complex structured finance transactions, which have received quite a bit of
negative press of late. While we are all too aware that recent events have unfortunately
highlighted the ways in which complex structured transactions can be used for improper or
even fraudulent purposes, these transactions, when designed and used appropriately, can
play an important role in financing businesses and mitigating various forms of financial risks.
Although deal structures vary, complex structured finance transactions generally have some
common characteristics. Perhaps the most important characteristic is that they may expose
the financial institution to elevated levels of market, credit, operations, legal, or reputational
risk.
First, they typically result in a final product that is nonstandard and is structured to meet a
customer's specific financial objectives. Second, they often involve professionals from
multiple disciplines and may involve significant fees. Third, they may be associated with the
creation or use of one or more special-purpose entities designed to address the customer's

economic, legal, tax, or accounting objectives or the use of a combination of cash and
derivatives products. Financial institutions may assume substantial risks when they engage in
a complex structured finance transaction unless they have a full understanding of the
economic substance and business purpose of the transaction. These risks are often difficult
to quantify, but the result can be severe damage to the reputations of both the companies
engaging in the transactions and their financial advisers--and, in turn, impaired public
confidence in those institutions. These potential risks and the resulting damage are
particularly severe when markets react through adverse changes in pricing for similarly
structured transactions that are designed appropriately.
Assessments of the appropriateness of a transaction for a client traditionally have required
financial firms and advisers to determine if the transaction is consistent with the market
sophistication, financial condition, and investment policies of the customer. Given recent
events, it is appropriate to raise the bar for appropriateness assessments by taking into
account the business purpose and economic substance of the transaction. When banking
organizations provide advice on, arrange, or actively participate in complex structured
finance transactions, they may assume legal and reputational risks if the end user enters into
the transaction for improper purposes. Legal counsel to financial firms can help manage
legal and reputational risk by taking an active role in the review of the customer's
governance process for approving the transaction, of financial disclosures relating to the
transaction, and of the customer's objectives for entering into the transaction.
As in other operational areas, strong internal controls and risk-management procedures can
help institutions effectively manage the risks associated with complex structured finance
transactions. Here are some of the steps that financial institutions, with the assistance of
counsel and other advisers, should take to establish such controls and procedures:
Ensure that the institution's board of directors establishes the institution's overall
appetite for risk (especially reputational and legal) and effectively communicates the
board's risk tolerances throughout the organization.
Implement firm-wide policies and procedures that provide for the consistent
identification, evaluation, documentation, and management of all risks associated with
complex structured finance transactions--in particular, the credit, reputational, and
legal risks.
Implement firm-wide policies and procedures that ensure that the financial institution
obtains a thorough understanding of the business purposes and economic substance of
those transactions identified as involving heightened legal or reputational risk and that
those transactions are approved by appropriate senior management.
Clearly define the framework for the approval of individual complex structured
finance transactions as well as new complex structured finance product lines within
the context of the firm's new-product approval process. The new-product policies for
complex structured finance transactions should address the roles and responsibilities
of all relevant parties and should require the approval of all relevant control areas that
are independent of the profit center before the transaction is offered to customers.
Finally, implement monitoring, risk-reporting, and compliance processes for creating,
analyzing, offering, and marketing complex structured finance products. Subsequent
to new-product approval, the firm should monitor new complex structured finance
products to ensure that they are effectively incorporated into the firm's risk-control

systems.
Of course, these internal controls and risk-management processes need to be supported and
enforced by a strong "tone at the top" and a firm-wide culture of compliance as mentioned
earlier.
Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses
Finally, another area where your work on assessing controls can be very important is in
reviewing the assessment of the adequacy of the allowance for loan and lease losses
(ALLL). Financial regulators want to encourage banking organizations to strengthen their
processes and documentation associated with their determination of the adequacy of their
ALLL. As you know, accounting standard setters recently questioned the methodology for
loan loss reserves and proposed new guidance. The good news is that they now recognize
that reaffirming existing guidance could address many of the questions raised. But the fact
that loan loss reserve methodology is a recurring issue reflects the reality that concerns
about how the ALLL is being estimated and its impact on earnings do arise from time to
time. In general, these situations can be addressed through strengthened audit procedures
rather than changes in accounting standards. Furthermore, management of financial
institutions should be reminded to take the time to review the estimation procedures for
determining their loan-loss reserves.
Banking institutions should be applying an ALLL methodology that is well defined,
consistently applied, and auditable. Institutions are required to maintain written
documentation to support the amounts of the ALLL and the provision for loan and lease
losses reported in the financial statements. This methodology should be validated
periodically and should be modified to incorporate new events or findings as needed.
Interagency supervisory guidance specifies that management, under the direction of the
board of directors, should implement appropriate procedures and controls to ensure
compliance with the institution's ALLL policies and procedures. Given that many banks use
credit models, it is important that those models be validated periodically. Institutions should
be vigilant to ensure the integrity of their credit-related data and that the loan review process
provides the most up-to-date and accurate information possible for management to consider
as part of its ALLL assessment.
Conclusion
I have touched on a number of important topics today. While some of them, such as
structured finance transactions and loan loss reserve accounting, are rather specific, these
risk issues cannot be viewed in isolation. I want to note that these are just aspects of the
broader issues of corporate governance and enterprise-wide risk management. Successful
risk management should be integrated into an organization's corporate governance processes,
with appropriate controls, testing, and oversight.
Boards of directors and senior management have the responsibility to establish effective
risk-management and assessment processes across their organizations and to integrate the
results of those efforts into their strategic and operating planning processes. Because of its
unique, firm-wide perspective and its independence, the internal audit function can play an
important role in reviewing the quality of corporate governance, internal control, and
enterprise-wide risk management.
Footnotes

1. COSO defines internal control as "a process, effected by an entity's board of directors,
management and other personnel, designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the
achievement of: effectiveness and efficiency of operations, reliability of financial reporting,
and compliance with applicable laws and regulations." Internal Control Integrated
Framework is available for purchase from the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants; COSO also provides an executive summary. Return to text
2. A copy of the draft can be obtained at the COSO web site. Return to text
3. A copy of the interagency policy statement (286 KB PDF) was released on March 17,
2003. Return to text
4. A copy of the auditing standard can be obtained at the PCAOB web site. Return to text
5. The paper can be obtained on the BIS web site. Return to text
Return to top
2004 Speeches
Home | News and events
Accessibility | Contact Us
Last update: May 19, 2004