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Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
2200 N. PEARL ST.
DALLAS, TX 75201-2272

February 14, 2006

Notice 06-11

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District

SUBJECT
Federal Financial Regulatory Agencies Issue
Interagency Advisory on External Auditor Limitation of
Liability Provisions
DETAILS
The Board of Governors, Office of Thrift Supervision, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National Credit Union Administration, and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(collectively, the agencies), have finalized the Interagency Advisory on the Unsafe and Unsound
Use of Limitation of Liability Provisions in External Audit Engagement Letters (advisory). The
advisory informs financial institutions’ boards of directors, audit committees, and management
that they should not enter into agreements that incorporate unsafe and unsound external auditor
limitation of liability provisions with respect to engagements for financial statement audits,
audits of internal control over financial reporting, and attestations on management’s assessment
of internal control over financial reporting.
The advisory is effective for engagement letters executed on or after February 9, 2006.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 6847–55, Vol. 71, No. 27 of the Federal
Register dated February 9, 2006, is attached.

For additional copies, bankers and others are encouraged to use one of the following toll-free numbers in contacting the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas: Dallas Office (800) 333-4460; El Paso Branch Intrastate (800) 592-1631, Interstate (800) 351-1012;
Houston Branch Intrastate (800) 392-4162, Interstate (800) 221-0363; San Antonio Branch Intrastate (800) 292-5810.

-2MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Bobby Coberly, Banking Supervision Department,
(214) 922-6209. Previous Federal Reserve Bank notices are available on our web site at
www.dallasfed.org/banking/notices/index.html or by contacting the Public Affairs Department
at (214) 922-5254.

Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 27 / Thursday, February 9, 2006 / Notices
assessment of internal control over
financial reporting.
DATES: Effective Date: The Advisory is
effective for engagement letters executed
on or after February 9, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OTS: Jeffrey J. Geer, Chief Accountant,
at jeffrey.geer@ots.treas.gov or (202)
906–6363; or Patricia Hildebrand,
Senior Policy Accountant, at
patricia.hildebrand@ots.treas.gov or
(202) 906–7048.
Board: Terrill Garrison, Supervisory
Financial Analyst, at
terrill.garrison@frb.gov or (202) 452–
2712; or Nina A. Nichols, Assistant
Director, at nina.nichols@frb.gov or
(202) 452–2961.
FDIC: Harrison E. Greene, Jr., Senior
Policy Analyst (Bank Accounting),
Division of Supervision and Consumer
Protection, at hgreene@fdic.gov or (202)
898–8905; or Michelle Borzillo,
Counsel, Supervision and Legislation
Section, Legal Division, at
mborzillo@fdic.gov or (202) 898–7400.
NCUA: Karen Kelbly, Chief
Accountant, at kelblyk@ncua.gov or
(703) 518–6389; or Steven Widerman,
Trial Attorney, Office of General
Counsel, at widerman@ncua.gov or
(703) 518–6557.
OCC: Zane Blackburn, Chief
Accountant, at
zane.blackburn@occ.treas.gov or (202)
874–4944; or Kathy Murphy, Deputy
Chief Accountant, at
kathy.murphy@occ.treas.gov or (202)
874–5675.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
[No. 2006–04]

Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision
Interagency Advisory on the Unsafe
and Unsound Use of Limitation of
Liability Provisions in External Audit
Engagement Letters
Office of Thrift Supervision
(OTS), Treasury; Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System (Board);
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC); National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA); Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC),
Treasury.
ACTION: Issuance of Interagency
Advisory.

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AGENCIES:

SUMMARY: The OTS, Board, FDIC,
NCUA, and OCC (collectively, the
‘‘Agencies’’), have finalized the
Interagency Advisory on the Unsafe and
Unsound Use of Limitation of Liability
Provisions in External Audit
Engagement Letters (‘‘Advisory’’). The
Advisory informs financial institutions’’
boards of directors, audit committees,
and management that they should not
enter into agreements that incorporate
unsafe and unsound external auditor
limitation of liability provisions with
respect to engagements for financial
statement audits, audits of internal
control over financial reporting, and
attestations on management’s

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I. Background
The Agencies have observed an
increase in the types and frequency of
provisions in financial institutions’
external audit engagement letters that
limit the auditors’ liability. These
provisions take many forms, but can
generally be categorized as an agreement
by a financial institution that is a client
of an external auditor to:
• Indemnify the external auditor
against claims made by third parties;
• Hold harmless or release the
external auditor from liability for claims
or potential claims that might be
asserted by the client financial
institution; or
• Limit the remedies available to the
client financial institution.
Reliable financial and regulatory
reporting supports the Agencies’ riskfocused supervision of financial
institutions by contributing to effective
pre-examination planning and off-site
monitoring and appropriate assessments
of an institution’s internal control over
financial reporting, capital adequacy,

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6847

financial condition, and performance.
Audits play a valuable role in ensuring
the reliability of institutions’ financial
information.
The Agencies believe that when
financial institutions agree to limit their
external auditors’ liability, either in
provisions in engagement letters or in
provisions that accompany alternative
dispute resolution (ADR) agreements,
such provisions may weaken the
external auditors’ objectivity,
impartiality, and performance. The
inclusion of such provisions in financial
institutions’ external audit engagement
letters may reduce the reliability of
audits and therefore raises safety and
soundness concerns.
On May 10, 2005, the Federal
Financial Institutions Examinations
Council (FFIEC) on behalf of the
Agencies published in the Federal
Register a proposed Interagency
Advisory on the Unsafe and Unsound
Use of Limitation of Liability Provisions
and Certain Alternative Dispute
Resolution Provisions in External Audit
Engagement Letters (70 FR 24576) and
sought comments to fully understand
the effect of the proposed Advisory on
financial institutions.
II. Scope of Advisory
The Advisory applies to engagement
letters between financial institutions
and external auditors with respect to
financial statement audits, audits of
internal control over financial reporting,
and attestations on management’s
assessment of internal control over
financial reporting (collectively,
‘‘Audit’’ or ‘‘Audits’’). The Advisory
does not apply to:
• Non-audit services that may be
performed by financial institutions’
external auditors;
• Audits of financial institutions’
401K plans, pension plans, and other
similar audits;
• Services performed by accountants
who are not engaged to perform
financial institutions’ Audits (e.g.,
outsourced internal audits, loan
reviews); and
• Other service providers (e.g.,
software consultants, legal advisors).
The Advisory applies to all Audits of
financial institutions, regardless of
whether an institution is a public or a
non-public company, including Audits
required under Section 36 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, OTS regulations,
or Section 202 of the Federal Credit
Union Act, Audits required by any of
the Agencies, and voluntary Audits.

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III. Summary of Comments

Comments

Overview

A. Application to Non-public
Companies
A number of commenters expressed
concern that the Agencies were
applying SEC and PCAOB auditor
independence rules to Audits of nonpublic companies. The Agencies’ audit
rules for financial institutions generally
reference both the AICPA and SEC
auditor independence standards and
already apply to many non-public
institutions. Therefore, the concept of
applying SEC auditor independence
standards to non-public financial
institutions is in place under existing
bank and thrift audit regulations and is
not the result of the issuance of the
Advisory. Since safety and soundness
concerns apply equally to all
institutions’ Audits, the Advisory does
not establish different requirements for
public and non-public financial
institutions.

The Agencies received 44 comment
letters from auditors, financial
institutions, trade organizations,
attorneys, arbitration associations, and
other interested parties. While public
comments were requested on all aspects
of the Advisory, the Agencies
specifically sought comments on seven
questions. Less than one third of all
commenters addressed all seven
questions.
Most financial institutions and
industry trade groups supported the
proposed Advisory and commended the
Agencies’ efforts. A number of the
commenters explained that limitation of
liability provisions in audit engagement
letters originate with external auditing
firms rather than financial institutions.
Most of the letters from external
auditors opposed the proposal. External
auditors explained that limitation of
liability provisions are risk management
tools commonly used in audit
engagement pricing as well as in other
business transactions. They asserted
that such provisions allocate risk and
facilitate a timely and cost effective
means to resolve disputes while
minimizing litigation expenses. Further,
auditors stated that they should not be
liable for losses resulting from knowing
misrepresentations by the client’s
management.
A number of commenters asked for
clarification on the scope of the
Advisory and on the application of the
Advisory to ADR agreements (e.g.,
arbitration) and waivers of jury trials.
The Agencies have addressed these
comments in the Advisory.
A number of commenters stated that
the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB),
and the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants (AICPA) have
established auditor independence rules
and requirements; therefore, they
asserted, the Advisory is not needed.
Other commenters expressed a need for
the SEC, PCAOB, and AICPA to clarify
their guidance. On September 15, 2005,
the AICPA published for comment its
proposed interpretation of its auditor
independence standards. In that
proposal, the AICPA specifically
identified limitation of liability
provisions that impair auditor
independence under its standards. Most
of the provisions cited as unsafe and
unsound in the Agencies’ Advisory
were also deemed to impair
independence in the AICPA’s proposed
interpretation.

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B. Risk Management and Business
Practices
Auditors asserted that to the extent
the Advisory would limit an auditor’s
ability to use risk allocation tools such
as: (1) Capping damages; (2) restricting
the time period to file a claim; (3)
restricting the transfer or assignment of
legal rights by an audit client; or (4)
otherwise limiting the allocation of risk
between contracting parties, the
Advisory would result in auditors
assuming more risk, which would lead
to economic costs with no
countervailing showing of benefits, such
as improved audits.
Auditors further stated that the
Advisory largely ignores the interest
that financial institutions have in
obtaining professional and independent
audit services within a framework of
allocated risk. Further, auditors stated
that the Advisory attempts to use safety
and soundness as a means for setting
auditor independence standards and
limits the use of accepted business
practices to manage disputes. In
addition, the auditors and some
financial institutions expressed
concerns that the Advisory may result
in an increase in costs and be a
disincentive for financial institutions to
continue to engage an auditor when not
required to do so.
The Agencies continue to believe that
certain limitation of liability provisions
reduce the auditor’s accountability and
thus may weaken the auditor’s
objectivity, impartiality, and
performance. In the Agencies’ judgment,
concerns about potential increased costs
or restrictions on the ability of the
parties to an audit engagement letter to

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allocate risk do not outweigh the need
to protect financial institutions from the
safety and soundness concerns posed by
such limitation of liability provisions.
Furthermore, any disincentive for
financial institutions to obtain Audits
when not required should be limited
because Audits represent best practices
and are strongly encouraged by the
Agencies.
In addition, these limitations on
external auditor liability may not be
consistent with the auditor
independence standards of the SEC,
PCAOB, and AICPA. All financial
institution Audits must comply with the
independence standards set by one or
more of these standard-setters.
C. Management’s Knowing
Misrepresentations
Many auditors asserted that the
information provided to outside
auditors is management’s responsibility
and that audit firms should not be liable
unless fraudulent behavior or willful
misconduct exists on the part of the
auditor. Further, if management
knowingly misrepresents significant
facts to the external auditor, it is
sometimes impossible for the auditor to
uncover the true facts of a situation. The
auditors asserted that they should be
allowed to limit their liability when
knowing misrepresentations of
management contribute to the loss.
Those commenters further stated that
indemnification for management’s
knowing misrepresentations
communicates a commitment that
financial institution management and its
governing board understand their
responsibilities to perform honestly and
legally. These commenters rejected the
assertion that indemnifying auditors for
management’s knowing
misrepresentations might cause an
auditor to lose independence or to
perform a less responsible audit. They
also stated that protections that the
client may provide against the client’s
own knowing misrepresentations do not
preclude third parties from suing the
auditor.
Nevertheless, a clause that would
release, indemnify, or hold an external
auditor harmless from any liability
resulting from knowing
misrepresentations by management is
inappropriate under the SEC’s existing
guidance on auditor independence (see
Appendix B of the Advisory). The
inclusion in external audit engagement
letters of limitation of liability
provisions that are prohibited by the
auditor independence rules and
interpretations of the SEC, PCAOB, or
AICPA is considered an unsafe and
unsound practice for financial

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institutions. Provisions not clearly
addressed by authoritative guidance
may also raise safety and soundness
concerns when there is a potential
impairment of the external auditors’
independence, objectivity, impartiality,
or performance.
The AICPA’s Professional Standards,
AU Section 110: Responsibilities and
Functions of the Independent Auditor
state: ‘‘The auditor has a responsibility
to plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material
misstatement, whether caused by error
or fraud.’’ The Agencies believe that
including an indemnification or
limitation of liability provision for the
client’s knowing misrepresentations,
willful misconduct, or fraudulent
behavior in an Audit engagement letter
may not be viewed as consistent with
the auditor’s duty and obligation to
comply with auditing standards.
The Agencies acknowledge that
management bears the responsibility for
its conduct and representations.
Nevertheless, the auditor has a
responsibility to obtain reasonable
assurance that the financial statements
are free from material misstatements,
including misstatements caused by
management fraud. A limitation of
liability provision in external Audit
engagement letters for management’s
knowing misrepresentations, willful
misconduct, or fraudulent behavior
could act to reduce the auditor’s
professional skepticism. Limited
liability could lead to inadvertent
consequences such as an auditor not
fully considering the possibility that
management fraud exists. This might
result in less robust challenges to and
over-reliance on management’s
representations rather than performance
of appropriate audit procedures to
corroborate them.
The Agencies believe that the
auditor’s potential liability related to
material misstatements due to
management’s misrepresentations
should be decided by a trier of fact in
a legal or other proceeding and should
not be predetermined in the engagement
letter. The trier of fact would take into
account whether the Audit was properly
conducted in accordance with
applicable auditing standards.
D. Auditor Independence and
Performance Standards
Many auditors contended that various
limitation of liability provisions
addressed in the proposed Advisory
would not impair their independence.
For example, a large accounting firm
stated, ‘‘* * * the Proposal goes far
beyond the independence standards

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established by the SEC, PCAOB, and
AICPA.’’ Another large accounting firm
stated, ‘‘Of the specific contractual
terms identified for criticism in the
proposal, some are already prohibited
by the SEC for those entities subject to
SEC regulation. Other contractual terms,
however, are fully permissible and
widely in use as tools to allocate risk.’’
In contrast, other commenters
contended that all of the provisions in
the proposal impair an auditor’s
independence. This view was most
clearly expressed in the comment letter
from an independent proxy and
financial research firm, which stated,
‘‘We believe audit engagement letters
containing liability limitations impair
the auditor’s independence and reduce
audit quality to an unacceptable level.’’
They further stated, ‘‘We believe it is
inappropriate for an audit contract
between a company and its auditor to
limit the auditor’s liability including (1)
Any limitations on rights to trial, (2)
limits on compensatory or punitive
damages, or (3) limits on discovery,
including in arbitration.’’
A number of commenters discussed
the auditor’s requirement to comply
with auditing standards and stated that
the failure to comply with such
standards would result in the violation
of the requirements of the SEC, PCAOB,
AICPA, and/or state licensing
authorities. Some commenters stated
that adherence to professional auditing
standards is further assured by periodic
peer reviews and by PCAOB
inspections. Commenters noted that
auditors are subject to possible
disciplinary action by state boards of
accountancy, the SEC, the PCAOB, and
the AICPA. These commenters
concluded that the auditor’s
performance is controlled by
professional standards and is not
influenced by provisions in audit
engagement letters that limit the
auditor’s liability. Consequently, they
believed that the Advisory is
unnecessary.
The Agencies’ observations lead them
to conclude otherwise. Their concern is
that limitation of liability provisions
may adversely impact the reliability of
Audits whether related to disincentives
for auditor performance or impairment
of auditor independence in fact or
appearance. The Agencies have not
attempted to categorize limitation of
liability provisions that adversely affect
safety and soundness as either matters
of performance or independence.
The Agencies acknowledge that the
SEC, PCAOB, and AICPA set
independence and performance
standards for auditors. The Advisory
does not purport to affect those

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standards. Regardless of whether
limitation of liability provisions are
permissible under auditor
independence standards, the Agencies
have a separate obligation to evaluate
their impact on the safety and
soundness of financial institutions.
Some commenters questioned
whether the Agencies have adequate
evidence that limitation of liability
provisions adversely affect auditor
independence, objectivity, and
performance. The Agencies
acknowledge that it is inherently
difficult to prove links from
circumstances to states of mind and
from there to performance.
Nevertheless, the Agencies cannot wait
for proof of harm before establishing
guidance to ensure the safety and
soundness of financial institutions. The
Agencies must make judgments about
circumstances that may render Audits
less reliable. The Agencies’ concern
with the potential impact of such
provisions is not only that an auditor
might intentionally act less than
appropriately, but might unconsciously
do so.
A reasonable person may believe that
limitation of liability provisions create
circumstances that may adversely affect
Audit reliability. For example, a
reasonable person may conclude that if
the auditor faces less potential liability
for the Audit, the auditor may be less
thorough. Further, that knowledge may
erode the auditor’s independence of
mind.
The Agencies observe that the SEC
has addressed limitations of liability in
its independence rulings for more than
50 years. The AICPA also addresses
limitations of liability in its
independence standards and related
interpretations. Additionally, many
commenters stated that limitations of
liability impair an auditor’s
independence.
Auditors, in their comments,
expressed inconsistent interpretations of
the meaning and scope of the SEC,
PCAOB, and AICPA auditing standards
relating to limitations of liability. The
Agencies have concluded that
supervisory guidance in addition to the
existing auditing standards is necessary
to carry out their safety and soundness
mandate. Because the Agencies rely on
Audits to help ensure the safety and
soundness of financial institutions, they
are necessarily concerned with
provisions that could affect the auditor’s
judgment and professional skepticism.
Thus, the Agencies have concluded that
since the limitation of liability
provisions may adversely affect Audit
reliability, such provisions are
considered unsafe and unsound.

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E. Waivers of Punitive Damages
The comment letters included much
discussion on punitive damage waivers.
Some commenters stated that the
Advisory should not prohibit these
waivers. The AICPA’s comment letter
typified the views of the commenters
advocating punitive damage waivers.
The AICPA asserted, ‘‘* * * limiting an
auditor’s liability to the client for
punitive damage claims will not impair
independence or objectivity, provided
the auditor remains liable for actual
damages—that is, the auditor remains
exposed to clients, and also to lenders,
shareholders, and other non-clients, for
damages for any actual harm caused.’’
Others noted that a waiver of punitive
damages by the client has no bearing on
punitive damages that may be sought by
a third party. Several commenters stated
that a financial institution’s agreement
to not seek punitive damages has no
effect on the safety and soundness of a
financial institution.
Due in part to the extensive comments
regarding client agreements not to seek
punitive damages from their auditors,
the Agencies have decided to take the
issue under advisement. Accordingly, at
this time, provisions that waive the right
of financial institutions to seek punitive
damages from their external auditor are
not treated as unsafe and unsound
under the Advisory. Nevertheless, the
Agencies have concluded that
agreements by financial institutions to
indemnify their auditors for third party
punitive damage awards are deemed
unsafe and unsound.
To enhance transparency and market
discipline, public financial institutions
that agree to waive claims for punitive
damages against their external auditors
may want to disclose annually the
nature of these arrangements in their
proxy statements or other public
reports.

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F. Alternative Dispute Resolution
Agreements and Waiver of Jury Trials
The Advisory encourages all financial
institutions to review proposed Audit
engagement letters presented by audit
firms and understand any limitations
imposed by mandatory pre-dispute
alternative dispute resolution
agreements (ADR) (including arbitration
agreements) or jury trial waivers on the
institution’s ability to recover damages
from an audit firm in any future
litigation. The Advisory also directs
financial institutions to review rules of
procedure referenced in ADR
agreements to ensure that the potential
consequences of such procedures are
acceptable to the institution and to
recognize that ADR agreements may

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themselves incorporate limitation of
liability provisions.
A number of commenters stated that
the Advisory addresses mandatory ADR
mechanisms and the waiver of jury
trials in a way that will discourage
financial institutions from agreeing in
advance with their auditors to use these
widely accepted, efficient, and cost
effective means of resolving disputes. A
few commenters noted that ADR and
waiver of jury trial provisions do not
take away rights; they merely reflect the
parties’ choice of a method for resolving
a dispute. Further, commenters stated
that the Agencies have previously
issued pronouncements that recognize
and even encourage the use of ADR, for
example, the FDIC’s Statement of Policy
on Use of Binding Arbitration (66 FR
18632 (April 10, 2001)). The Interagency
Policy Statement on the Internal Audit
Function and its Outsourcing (issued by
the OTS, Board, FDIC, and OCC in
March 2003) provides that all written
contracts between vendors and financial
institutions shall prescribe a process
(arbitration, mediation, or other means)
for resolving disputes and for
determining who bears the costs of
consequential damages arising from
errors, omissions, and negligence.
Commenters also stated that ADR is
commercially reasonable because it
creates certainty and reduces litigationrelated costs and, therefore, should be
encouraged.
The Agencies observed that limitation
of liability provisions frequently
accompanied ADR or waiver of jury trial
agreements contained in or referenced
by Audit engagement letters. The
Agencies do not oppose ADR or waiver
of jury trial agreements. However, the
Agencies do object to the practice of
including unsafe and unsound
limitation of liability provisions in these
agreements.
In response to the comments received,
the Agencies clarified that ADR or
waiver of jury trial provisions in Audit
engagement letters do not present safety
and soundness concerns, provided the
agreements do not incorporate
limitation of liability provisions.
Institutions should carefully review
ADR and jury trial provisions in
engagement letters, as well as any
agreements regarding rules of
procedure. ADR agreements should not
include any unsafe and unsound
limitation of liability provisions. The
Advisory does not change or affect
previously issued policies referencing
ADR and does not encourage or
discourage the use of ADR in Audit
engagement letters.

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G. Legal Considerations
Four commenters addressed legal
aspects of the proposed Advisory. Two
of the four commented that state and
Federal laws explicitly permit limitation
of liability or indemnification
provisions. They indicated that these
clauses are a common feature in many
business and consumer contracts in
wide use today. The Agencies note that
Audits by their nature require a
uniquely high level of objectivity and
impartiality as compared to other types
of business arrangements. Therefore,
some commonly used limitation of
liability provisions that may be
acceptable for other business contracts
are inappropriate for Audits of financial
institutions.
Another commenter stated that
certain jurisdictions prohibit claims
against auditors where management
fraud is imputable to the client. The
Advisory is not intended to override
existing state or Federal laws that
govern the types of damages that may be
awarded by the courts. It advises
financial institutions’ boards of
directors, audit committees, and
management that they should not agree
to any Audit engagement letters that
may present safety and soundness
concerns, including provisions that may
violate the auditor independence
standards of the SEC, PCAOB, or
AICPA, as applicable.
One commenter stated that the
Agencies have not complied with the
legal constraints on Federal agency
rulemaking (e.g., the Administrative
Procedures Act (APA) and Executive
Order 12866) with the Advisory. The
APA prohibits agency action that is,
among other things, arbitrary and
capricious. Executive Order 12866
provides that when a Federal agency
engages in rulemaking, it must first
determine whether a rule is necessary.
The Agencies have authority to issue
safety and soundness guidance without
engaging in a formal rulemaking
procedure. Under 12 U.S.C. 1831p–
1(d)(1), the Agencies issue standards for
safety and soundness by regulation or
by guideline. The Advisory is issued
under that authority and the supervisory
authority vested in each of the Agencies.
The Agencies have determined that
there is a significant need for guidance
based on their review of actual auditor
engagement letters, the comments from
financial institutions that strongly
expressed a need for guidance, and the
likely benefits as compared to the
possible costs.

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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 27 / Thursday, February 9, 2006 / Notices
H. Other Considerations

I. Questions, Comments, and Responses

Several commenters expressed
concern that, since the Advisory does
not apply to other industries, financial
institutions will not have a level playing
field with other audit clients when
negotiating audit engagement terms. In
the Agencies’ judgment, any concerns
about potential increased costs or
restrictions on the ability of financial
institutions, as compared to other audit
clients, to negotiate Audit engagement
terms do not outweigh the need to
protect financial institutions from safety
and soundness concerns posed by
limitation of liability provisions.
Other commenters stated that auditors
should only be liable for audits they
perform. The commenters believed that
a financial institution’s engagement
letter covers only the period under audit
and that auditors should not be held
responsible for losses arising in
subsequent periods in which the auditor
was not engaged. Further, losses that
arise in subsequent periods that may be
related to matters that existed during
periods previously audited by another
audit firm should not result in a liability
to the successor audit firm.
The Agencies concur with the concept
that auditors are not responsible for the
work of others. The Agencies object to
provisions that are worded in a way that
may not only preclude collection of
consequential damages for harm in later
years, but that may also preclude any
recovery at all. For example, the
Agencies observed provisions where no
claim of liability could be brought
against an auditor until the audit report
is actually delivered, and then these
provisions limited any liability
thereafter to claims raised during the
period covered by the audit. In other
words, the auditor’s liability may be
limited to claims raised during the
period before there could be any
liability. Read more broadly, the auditor
would be liable for losses that arise in
subsequent years only if the auditor
continued to audit subsequent periods.
Several commenters asked the
Agencies to provide examples of losses
sustained by financial institutions as a
result of limitation of liability
provisions discussed in the Advisory.
The Agencies’ charge is to identify and
mitigate the risk of loss to financial
institutions, not merely to react after
losses occur. Therefore, the appropriate
standard to be applied in the Advisory
is the risk of loss created by limitation
of liability provisions, and not losses
sustained by reason of such provisions.

1. The Advisory, as written, indicates
that limitation of liability provisions are
inappropriate for all financial
institution external audits.
a. Is the scope appropriate? If not, to
which financial institutions should the
Advisory apply and why?
b. Should the Advisory apply to
financial institution audits that are not
required by law, regulation, or order?
Comments and Responses: The vast
majority of commenters stated that the
Advisory should apply uniformly to
audits of financial statements for all
financial institutions. A few
commenters stated that voluntary audits
should not be subject to the provisions
in the Advisory. Several commenters
stated that the Advisory should apply to
audits of all entities, not just financial
institutions.
Since the Agencies are concerned
with the safety and soundness of all
financial institutions, the Advisory
applies to all Audits of financial
institutions including voluntary Audits.
Regarding the comments relative to the
broader application of the Advisory, the
Agencies do not have the authority to
apply the Advisory to entities other than
financial institutions.
2. What effects would the issuance of
this Advisory have on financial
institutions’ ability to negotiate the
terms of audit engagements?
Comments and Responses: Several
commenters stated that the Advisory
will harm financial institutions’ ability
to negotiate the terms of audit
engagements and therefore either result
in higher audit costs or a lessened
ability to negotiate on usual business
terms. Other commenters stated that
negotiations would be easier because
auditors would not be able to force
undesirable terms into engagement
letters.
The Agencies believe that the
Advisory does not unduly affect the
negotiating positions of the parties or
pose undue burdens on auditors
because these clauses did not exist in
the majority of the engagement letters
reviewed by the Agencies.
3. Would the Advisory on limitation
of liability provisions result in an
increase in external audit fees?
a. If yes, would the increase be
significant?
b. Would it discourage financial
institutions that voluntarily obtain
audits from continuing to be audited?
c. Would it result in fewer audit firms
being willing to provide external audit
services to financial institutions?
Comments and Responses: The
majority of commenters stated that audit

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fees would increase; however, the range
of increase was judged to be anywhere
from ‘‘insignificant’’ to ‘‘dramatic.’’ A
few commenters stated that fees would
remain the same because many auditors
have performed audits without
limitation of liability provisions for a
very long period of time. Most
commenters stated that an increase in
audit fees would not discourage
financial institutions from engaging
auditors because Audits represent best
business practices and because the
benefits of Audits would continue to
outweigh the costs.
A few commenters said that the
increase in fees would reduce the
number of financial institutions that
voluntarily obtain audits. More than
half of the commenters expressed
concern about the number of auditors
willing to perform audits of financial
institutions because of the inability to
include limitation of liability provisions
in the engagement letters.
Several commenters noted that the
use of such clauses furthers the public
interest in reducing dispute resolution
costs and ensures the availability of
reasonably affordable audit services and
the equitable distribution of financial
risk. Commenters also noted that audit
fees are determined by a variety of
factors and engagement risk is a
significant component.
In the Agencies’ judgment, any
concerns about potential increased costs
or restrictions on the ability of the
parties to an Audit engagement letter to
allocate risk do not outweigh the need
to protect financial institutions from
safety and soundness concerns posed by
limitation of liability provisions.
Furthermore, any disincentive for
financial institutions to obtain Audits
when not required should be limited
because Audits represent best practices
and are strongly encouraged by the
Agencies.
The Agencies do not believe that the
Advisory would significantly affect the
number of audit firms willing to provide
external Audit services to financial
institutions because limitation of
liability provisions were not present in
the majority of the engagement letters
reviewed by the Agencies.
4. The Advisory describes three
general categories of limitation of
liability provisions.
a. Is the description complete and
accurate?
b. Is there any aspect of the Advisory
or terminology that needs clarification?
Comments and Responses: The vast
majority of commenters found the three
general categories of limitation of
liability provisions complete and
accurate and did not express a need for

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the Advisory or terminology to be
clarified. It was apparent from the
comments received that the discussion
of ADR was unclear; the Agencies have
clarified their position in the Advisory.
5. Appendix A of the Advisory
contains examples of limitation of
liability provisions.
a. Do the examples clearly and
sufficiently illustrate the types of
provisions that are inappropriate?
b. Are there other inappropriate
limitation of liability provisions that
should be included in the Advisory? If
so, please provide examples.
Comments and Responses: The vast
majority of commenters found the
examples of limitation of liability
provisions to clearly and sufficiently
illustrate the types of provisions that are
inappropriate. A number of commenters
stated that permitting an auditor and a
client to agree to a release from or
indemnification for claims resulting
from knowing misrepresentations by
management is fundamentally fair to the
client and is a significant deterrent to
management fraud. As discussed in
section C. Management’s Knowing
Misrepresentations, the Agencies are not
persuaded by the commenters’
arguments.
6. Is there a valid business purpose for
financial institutions to agree to any
limitation of liability provision? If so,
please describe the limitation of liability
provision and its business purpose.
Comments and Responses: Very few
commenters directly responded to this
question. Those commenters indicated
there is not a valid business purpose for
financial institutions to agree to any
limitation of liability provision in audit
engagements.
7. The Advisory strongly recommends
that financial institutions take
appropriate action to nullify limitation
of liability provisions in 2005 audit
engagement letters that have already
been accepted. Is this recommendation
appropriate? If not, please explain your
rationale (including burden and cost).
Comments and Responses: The vast
majority of commenters stated that
accepted audit engagement letters
containing limitation of liability
provisions should not require
nullification for a number of reasons,
including the fact that a contract
negotiated in good faith should not be
subject to renegotiation.
The Agencies agreed with these
comments. The Advisory applies to
Audit engagement letters executed on or
after February 9, 2006. Financial
institutions are not required to nullify
Audit engagement letters executed prior
to February 9, 2006. If a financial
institution has executed a multi-year

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Audit engagement letter prior to
February 9, 2006 (e.g., covering years
ending in 2007 or later), the Agencies
encourage financial institutions to seek
to amend the engagement letter to be
consistent with the Advisory for any
Audit periods ending in 2007 or later.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35), the Agencies have
reviewed the Advisory and determined
that it does not contain a collection of
information pursuant to the Act.
Text of Interagency Advisory
The text of the Interagency Advisory
on the Unsafe and Unsound Use of
Limitation of Liability Provisions in
External Audit Engagement Letters
follows:
Interagency Advisory on the Unsafe
and Unsound Use of Limitation of
Liability Provisions in External Audit
Engagement Letters
Purpose
This Advisory, issued jointly by the
Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), the
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (Board), the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC),
the National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA), and the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC) (collectively, the ‘‘Agencies’’),
alerts financial institutions’ 1 boards of
directors, audit committees,
management, and external auditors to
the safety and soundness implications
of provisions that limit external
auditors’ liability in audit engagements.
Limits on external auditors’ liability
may weaken the external auditors’
objectivity, impartiality, and
performance and, thus, reduce the
Agencies’ ability to rely on Audits.
Therefore, certain limitation of liability
provisions (described in this Advisory
and Appendix A) are unsafe and
unsound. In addition, such provisions
may not be consistent with the auditor
independence standards of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board (PCAOB), and the
American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA).
Scope
This Advisory applies to engagement
letters between financial institutions
and external auditors with respect to
1 As used in this document, the term financial
institutions includes banks, bank holding
companies, savings associations, savings and loan
holding companies, and credit unions.

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financial statement audits, audits of
internal control over financial reporting,
and attestations on management’s
assessment of internal control over
financial reporting (collectively,
‘‘Audit’’ or ‘‘Audits’’).
This Advisory does not apply to:
• Non-Audit services that may be
performed by financial institutions’
external auditors;
• Audits of financial institutions’
401K plans, pension plans, and other
similar audits;
• Services performed by accountants
who are not engaged to perform
financial institutions’ Audits (e.g.,
outsourced internal audits, loan
reviews); and
• Other service providers (e.g.,
software consultants, legal advisors).
While the Agencies have observed
several types of limitation of liability
provisions in external Audit
engagement letters, this Advisory
applies to any agreement that a financial
institution enters into with its external
auditor that limits the external auditor’s
liability with respect to Audits in an
unsafe and unsound manner.
Background
A properly conducted audit provides
an independent and objective view of
the reliability of a financial institution’s
financial statements. The external
auditor’s objective in an audit is to form
an opinion on the financial statements
taken as a whole. When planning and
performing the audit, the external
auditor considers the financial
institution’s internal control over
financial reporting. Generally, the
external auditor communicates any
identified deficiencies in internal
control to management, which enables
management to take appropriate
corrective action. In addition, certain
financial institutions are required to file
audited financial statements and
internal control audit/attestation reports
with one or more of the Agencies. The
Agencies encourage financial
institutions not subject to mandatory
audit requirements to voluntarily obtain
audits of their financial statements. The
Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council’s (FFIEC)
Interagency Policy Statement on
External Auditing Programs of Banks
and Savings Associations 2 notes, ‘‘[a]n
institution’s internal and external audit
programs are critical to its safety and
soundness.’’ The Policy also states that
an effective external auditing program
‘‘can improve the safety and soundness
2 Published in the Federal Register on September
28, 1999 (64 FR 52319). The NCUA, a member of
the FFIEC, has not adopted the policy statement.

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of an institution substantially and lessen
the risk the institution poses to the
insurance funds administered by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC).’’
Typically, a written engagement letter
is used to establish an understanding
between the external auditor and the
financial institution regarding the
services to be performed in connection
with the financial institution’s audit.
The engagement letter commonly
describes the objective of the audit, the
reports to be prepared, the
responsibilities of management and the
external auditor, and other significant
arrangements (e.g., fees and billing). The
Agencies encourage boards of directors,
audit committees, and management to
closely review all of the provisions in
the audit engagement letter before
agreeing to sign. As with all agreements
that affect a financial institution’s legal
rights, legal counsel should carefully
review audit engagement letters to help
ensure that those charged with engaging
the external auditor make a fully
informed decision.
While the Agencies have not observed
provisions that limit an external
auditor’s liability in the majority of
external audit engagement letters
reviewed, they have observed a
significant increase in the types and
frequency of these provisions. These
provisions take many forms, making it
impractical to provide an all-inclusive
list. This Advisory describes the types
of objectionable limitation of liability
provisions and provides examples.3
Financial institutions’ boards of
directors, audit committees, and
management should also be aware that
certain insurance policies (such as error
and omission policies and director and
officer liability policies) might not cover
losses arising from claims that are
precluded by limitation of liability
provisions.

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Limitation of Liability Provisions
The provisions the Agencies deem
unsafe and unsound can be generally
categorized as an agreement by a
financial institution that is a client of an
external auditor to:
• Indemnify the external auditor
against claims made by third parties;
• Hold harmless or release the
external auditor from liability for claims
or potential claims that might be
asserted by the client financial
institution, other than claims for
punitive damages; or
3 Examples of auditor limitation of liability
provisions are illustrated in Appendix A.

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• Limit the remedies available to the
client financial institution, other than
punitive damages.
Collectively, these categories of
provisions are referred to in this
Advisory as ‘‘limitation of liability
provisions.’’
Provisions that waive the right of
financial institutions to seek punitive
damages from their external auditor are
not treated as unsafe and unsound
under this Advisory. Nevertheless,
agreements by clients to indemnify their
auditors against any third party damage
awards, including punitive damages, are
deemed unsafe and unsound under this
Advisory. To enhance transparency and
market discipline, public financial
institutions that agree to waive claims
for punitive damages against their
external auditors may want to disclose
annually the nature of these
arrangements in their proxy statements
or other public reports.
Many financial institutions are
required to have their financial
statements audited while others
voluntarily choose to undergo such
audits. For example, banks, savings
associations, and credit unions with
$500 million or more in total assets are
required to have annual independent
audits.4 Certain savings associations (for
example, those with a CAMELS rating of
3, 4, or 5) and savings and loan holding
companies are also required by OTS
regulations to have annual independent
audits.5 Furthermore, financial
institutions that are public companies 6
must have annual independent audits.
The Agencies rely on the results of
Audits as part of their assessment of the
safety and soundness of a financial
institution.
In order for Audits to be effective, the
external auditors must be independent
in both fact and appearance, and must
perform all necessary procedures to
comply with auditing and attestation
standards established by either the
AICPA or, if applicable, the PCAOB.
When financial institutions execute
agreements that limit the external
auditors’ liability, the external auditors’
objectivity, impartiality, and
performance may be weakened or
compromised, and the usefulness of the
Audits for safety and soundness
purposes may be diminished.
4 For banks and savings associations, see Section
36 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act)
(12 U.S.C. 1831m) and Part 363 of the FDIC’s
regulations (12 CFR Part 363). For credit unions, see
Section 202(a)(6) of the Federal Credit Union Act
(12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)) and Part 715 of the NCUA’s
regulations (12 CFR Part 715).
5 See OTS regulation at 12 CFR 562.4.
6 Public companies are companies subject to the
reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934.

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By their very nature, limitation of
liability provisions can remove or
greatly weaken external auditors’
objective and unbiased consideration of
problems encountered in audit
engagements and may diminish
auditors’ adherence to the standards of
objectivity and impartiality required in
the performance of Audits. The
existence of such provisions in external
audit engagement letters may lead to the
use of less extensive or less thorough
procedures than would otherwise be
followed, thereby reducing the
reliability of Audits. Accordingly,
financial institutions should not enter
into external audit arrangements that
include unsafe and unsound limitation
of liability provisions identified in this
Advisory, regardless of (1) The size of
the financial institution, (2) whether the
financial institution is public or not, or
(3) whether the external audit is
required or voluntary.
Auditor Independence
Currently, auditor independence
standard-setters include the SEC,
PCAOB, and AICPA. Depending upon
the audit client, an external auditor is
subject to the independence standards
issued by one or more of these standardsetters. For all credit unions under the
NCUA’s regulations, and for other nonpublic financial institutions that are not
required to have annual independent
audits pursuant to either Part 363 of the
FDIC’s regulations or § 562.4 of the
OTS’s regulations, the Agencies’ rules
require only that an external auditor
meet the AICPA independence
standards; they do not require the
financial institution’s external auditor to
comply with the independence
standards of the SEC and the PCAOB.
In contrast, for financial institutions
subject to the audit requirements either
in Part 363 of the FDIC’s regulations or
in § 562.4 of the OTS’s regulations, the
external auditor should be in
compliance with the AICPA’s Code of
Professional Conduct and meet the
independence requirements and
interpretations of the SEC and its staff.7
In this regard, in a December 13, 2004,
Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) on
the application of the SEC’s auditor
independence rules, the SEC staff
reiterated its long-standing position that
when an accountant and his or her
client enter into an agreement which
seeks to provide the accountant
immunity from liability for his or her
7 See FDIC Regulation 12 CFR Part 363, Appendix
A—Guidelines and Interpretations; Guideline 14,
Role of the Independent Public Accountant—
Independence; and OTS Regulation 12 CFR
562.4(d)(3)(i), Qualifications for independent public
accountants.

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own negligent acts, the accountant is
not independent. The FAQ also states
that including in engagement letters a
clause that would release, indemnify, or
hold the auditor harmless from any
liability and costs resulting from
knowing misrepresentations by
management would impair the auditor’s
independence.8 The SEC’s FAQ is
consistent with Section 602.02.f.i.
(Indemnification by Client) of the SEC’s
Codification of Financial Reporting
Policies. (Section 602.02.f.i. and the
FAQ are included in Appendix B.)
Based on this SEC guidance and the
Agencies’ existing regulations, certain
limits on auditors’ liability are already
inappropriate in audit engagement
letters entered into by:
• Public financial institutions that file
reports with the SEC or with the
Agencies;
• Financial institutions subject to Part
363; and
• Certain other financial institutions
that OTS regulations (12 CFR 562.4)
require to have annual independent
audits.
In addition, certain of these limits on
auditors’ liability may violate the
AICPA independence standards.
Notwithstanding the potential
applicability of auditor independence
standards, the limitation of liability
provisions discussed in this Advisory
present safety and soundness concerns
for all financial institution Audits.

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Alternative Dispute Resolution
Agreements and Jury Trial Waivers
The Agencies have observed that
some financial institutions have agreed
in engagement letters to submit disputes
over external audit services to
mandatory and binding alternative
dispute resolution, binding arbitration,
other binding non-judicial dispute
resolution processes (collectively,
‘‘mandatory ADR’’) or to waive the right
to a jury trial. By agreeing in advance to
submit disputes to mandatory ADR,
financial institutions may waive the
right to full discovery, limit appellate
review, or limit or waive other rights
and protections available in ordinary
litigation proceedings.
8 In contrast to the SEC’s position, AICPA Ethics
Ruling 94 (ET § 191.188–189) currently concludes
that indemnification for ‘‘knowing
misrepresentations by management’’ does not
impair independence. On September 15, 2005, the
AICPA published for comment its proposed
interpretation of its auditor independence
standards. In that proposal the AICPA specifically
identified limitation of liability provisions that
impair auditor independence under the AICPA’s
standards. Most of the provisions cited in this
Advisory were deemed to impair independence in
the AICPA’s proposed interpretation. At this
writing, the AICPA has not issued a final
interpretation.

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The Agencies recognize that
mandatory ADR procedures and jury
trial waivers may be efficient and costeffective tools for resolving disputes in
some cases. Accordingly, the Agencies
believe that mandatory ADR or waiver
of jury trial provisions in external Audit
engagement letters do not present safety
and soundness concerns, provided that
the engagement letters do not also
incorporate limitation of liability
provisions. The Agencies encourage
institutions to carefully review
mandatory ADR and jury trial
provisions in engagement letters, as well
as any agreements regarding rules of
procedure, and to fully comprehend the
ramifications of any agreement to waive
any available remedies. Financial
institutions should ensure that any
mandatory ADR provisions in Audit
engagement letters are commercially
reasonable and:
• Apply equally to all parties;
• Provide a fair process (e.g., neutral
decision-makers and appropriate
hearing procedures); and
• Are not imposed in a coercive
manner.
Conclusion
Financial institutions’ boards of
directors, audit committees, and
management should not enter into any
agreement that incorporates limitation
of liability provisions with respect to
Audits. In addition, financial
institutions should document their
business rationale for agreeing to any
other provisions that limit their legal
rights.
This Advisory applies to engagement
letters executed on or after February 9,
2006. The inclusion of limitation of
liability provisions in external Audit
engagement letters and other agreements
that are inconsistent with this Advisory
will generally be considered an unsafe
and unsound practice. The Agencies’
examiners will consider the policies,
processes, and personnel surrounding a
financial institution’s external auditing
program in determining whether (1) the
engagement letter covering external
auditing activities raises any safety and
soundness concerns, and (2) the
external auditor maintains appropriate
independence regarding relationships
with the financial institution under
relevant professional standards. The
Agencies may take appropriate
supervisory action if unsafe and
unsound limitation of liability
provisions are included in external
Audit engagement letters or other
agreements related to Audits that are
executed (accepted or agreed to by the
financial institution) on or after
February 9, 2006.

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Appendix A
Examples of Unsafe and Unsound Limitation
of Liability Provisions
Presented below are some of the types of
limitation of liability provisions (with an
illustrative example of each type) that the
Agencies observed in financial institutions’
external audit engagement letters. The
inclusion in external Audit engagement
letters or agreements related to Audits of any
of the illustrative provisions (which do not
represent an all-inclusive list) or any other
language that would produce similar effects
is considered an unsafe and unsound
practice.
1. ‘‘Release From Liability for Auditor
Negligence’’ Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees not to hold the audit firm
liable for any damages, except to the extent
determined to have resulted from willful
misconduct or fraudulent behavior by the
audit firm.
Example: In no event shall [the audit firm]
be liable to the Financial Institution, whether
a claim be in tort, contract or otherwise, for
any consequential, indirect, lost profit, or
similar damages relating to [the audit firm’s]
services provided under this engagement
letter, except to the extent finally determined
to have resulted from the willful misconduct
or fraudulent behavior of [the audit firm]
relating to such services.
2. ‘‘No Damages’’ Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees that in no event will the
external audit firm’s liability include
responsibility for any compensatory
(incidental or consequential) damages
claimed by the financial institution.
Example: In no event will [the audit firm’s]
liability under the terms of this Agreement
include responsibility for any claimed
incidental or consequential damages.
3. ‘‘Limitation of Period To File Claim’’
Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees that no claim will be
asserted after a fixed period of time that is
shorter than the applicable statute of
limitations, effectively agreeing to limit the
financial institution’s rights in filing a claim.
Example: It is agreed by the Financial
Institution and [the audit firm] or any
successors in interest that no claim arising
out of services rendered pursuant to this
agreement by, or on behalf of, the Financial
Institution shall be asserted more than two
years after the date of the last audit report
issued by [the audit firm].
4. ‘‘Losses Occurring During Periods
Audited’’ Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees that the external audit
firm’s liability will be limited to any losses
occurring during periods covered by the
external audit, and will not include any
losses occurring in later periods for which
the external audit firm is not engaged. This
provision may not only preclude the
collection of consequential damages for harm
in later years, but could preclude any
recovery at all. It appears that no claim of

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liability could be brought against the external
audit firm until the external audit report is
actually delivered. Under such a clause, any
claim for liability thereafter might be
precluded because the losses did not occur
during the period covered by the external
audit. In other words, it might limit the
external audit firm’s liability to a period
before there could be any liability. Read more
broadly, the external audit firm might be
liable for losses that arise in subsequent years
only if the firm continues to be engaged to
audit the client’s financial statements in
those years.
Example: In the event the Financial
Institution is dissatisfied with [the audit
firm’s] services, it is understood that [the
audit firm’s] liability, if any, arising from this
engagement will be limited to any losses
occurring during the periods covered by [the
audit firm’s] audit, and shall not include any
losses occurring in later periods for which
[the audit firm] is not engaged as auditors.
5. ‘‘No Assignment or Transfer’’ Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees that it will not assign or
transfer any claim against the external audit
firm to another party. This provision could
limit the ability of another party to pursue a
claim against the external auditor in a sale or
merger of the financial institution, in a sale
of certain assets or a line of business of the
financial institution, or in a supervisory
merger or receivership of the financial
institution. This provision may also prevent
the financial institution from subrogating a
claim against its external auditor to the
financial institution’s insurer under its
directors’ and officers’ liability or other
insurance coverage.
Example: The Financial Institution agrees
that it will not, directly or indirectly, agree to
assign or transfer any claim against [the
audit firm] arising out of this engagement to
anyone.
6. ‘‘Knowing Misrepresentations by
Management’’ Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution releases and indemnifies the
external audit firm from any claims,
liabilities, and costs attributable to any
knowing misrepresentation by management.
Example: Because of the importance of
oral and written management representations
to an effective audit, the Financial Institution
releases and indemnifies [the audit firm] and
its personnel from any and all claims,
liabilities, costs, and expenses attributable to
any knowing misrepresentation by
management.
7. ‘‘Indemnification for Management
Negligence’’ Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees to protect the external
auditor from third party claims arising from
the external audit firm’s failure to discover
negligent conduct by management. It would
also reinforce the defense of contributory
negligence in cases in which the financial
institution brings an action against its
external auditor. In either case, the
contractual defense would insulate the
external audit firm from claims for damages
even if the reason the external auditor failed

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to discover the negligent conduct was a
failure to conduct the external audit in
accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards or other applicable professional
standards.
Example: The Financial Institution shall
indemnify, hold harmless and defend [the
audit firm] and its authorized agents,
partners and employees from and against
any and all claims, damages, demands,
actions, costs and charges arising out of, or
by reason of, the Financial Institution’s
negligent acts or failure to act hereunder.
8. ‘‘Damages Not to Exceed Fees Paid’’
Provision
In this type of provision, the financial
institution agrees to limit the external
auditor’s liability to the amount of audit fees
the financial institution paid the external
auditor, regardless of the extent of damages.
This may result in a substantial
unrecoverable loss or cost to the financial
institution.
Example: [The audit firm] shall not be
liable for any claim for damages arising out
of or in connection with any services
provided herein to the Financial Institution
in an amount greater than the amount of fees
actually paid to [the audit firm] with respect
to the services directly relating to and
forming the basis of such claim.
Note: The Agencies also observed a similar
provision that limited damages to a
predetermined amount not related to fees
paid.
Appendix B
SEC’s Codification of Financial Reporting
Policies, Section 602.02.f.i and the SEC’s
December 13, 2004, FAQ on Auditor
Independence
Section 602.02.f.i—Indemnification by
Client, 3 Fed. Sec. L. (CCH) ¶ 38,335, at
38,603–17 (2003)
Inquiry was made as to whether an
accountant who certifies financial statements
included in a registration statement or annual
report filed with the Commission under the
Securities Act or the Exchange Act would be
considered independent if he had entered
into an indemnity agreement with the
registrant. In the particular illustration cited,
the board of directors of the registrant
formally approved the filing of a registration
statement with the Commission and agreed to
indemnify and save harmless each and every
accountant who certified any part of such
statement, ‘‘from any and all losses, claims,
damages or liabilities arising out of such act
or acts to which they or any of them may
become subject under the Securities Act, as
amended, or at ‘common law,’ other than for
their willful misstatements or omissions.’’
When an accountant and his client,
directly or through an affiliate, have entered
into an agreement of indemnity which seeks
to assure to the accountant immunity from
liability for his own negligent acts, whether
of omission or commission, one of the major
stimuli to objective and unbiased
consideration of the problems encountered in
a particular engagement is removed or greatly
weakened. Such condition must frequently
induce a departure from the standards of

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objectivity and impartiality which the
concept of independence implies. In such
difficult matters, for example, as the
determination of the scope of audit
necessary, existence of such an agreement
may easily lead to the use of less extensive
or thorough procedures than would
otherwise be followed. In other cases it may
result in a failure to appraise with
professional acumen the information
disclosed by the examination. Consequently,
the accountant cannot be recognized as
independent for the purpose of certifying the
financial statements of the corporation.
(Emphasis added.)
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission;
Office of the Chief Accountant: Application
of the Commission’s Rules on Auditor
Independence Frequently Asked Questions;
Other Matters—Question 4 (issued December
13, 2004)
Q: Has there been any change in the
Commission’s long standing view (Financial
Reporting Policies—Section 600—602.02.f.i.
‘‘Indemnification by Client’’) that when an
accountant enters into an indemnity
agreement with the registrant, his or her
independence would come into question?
A: No. When an accountant and his or her
client, directly or through an affiliate, enter
into an agreement of indemnity that seeks to
provide the accountant immunity from
liability for his or her own negligent acts,
whether of omission or commission, the
accountant is not independent. Further,
including in engagement letters a clause that
a registrant would release, indemnify or hold
harmless from any liability and costs
resulting from knowing misrepresentations
by management would also impair the firm’s
independence. (Emphasis added.)
Dated: February 1, 2006.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision,
John M. Reich,
Director.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, February 1, 2006.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated at Washington, DC, the 2nd day of
February, 2006.
By order of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on January 31, 2006.
Mary F. Rupp,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated: February 1, 2006.
John C. Dugan,
Comptroller of the Currency.
[FR Doc. 06–1189 Filed 2–8–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODES 6720–01–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P;
7535–01–P; 4810–33–P

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