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At the National Conference on Banks and Savings Institutions, American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants, Washington, D.C.
November 7, 2002

Effective Accounting and Disclosure for Financial Transactions and
Financial Institutions
Good morning. I appreciate the invitation to speak today at this important conference of the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). This last year has been an
extraordinary time for the accounting profession. Large corporate bankruptcies, significant
restatements of financial reports, weak corporate governance practices, a criminal
conviction of an accounting firm for obstruction of justice, and the perceived failure of
auditors elevated accounting to the front pages of our nation's newspapers. A recent
Government Accounting Office report states that about 10 percent of all listed companies
announced at least one restatement from January of 1997 through June of 2002. As you
know, this resulted in billions of dollars in lost market capitalization and in serious concerns
about the quality of accounting and auditing practices and the integrity of management,
auditors, and analysts. These unprecedented problems fueled a bipartisan congressional
effort to help restore investor confidence in U.S. capital markets through legislative reforms
affecting both the accounting profession and corporate management and directors.
During the past few months, accounting has become a far more regulated profession, a major
accounting firm was destroyed, and the once-glistening CPA designation as certified public
accountant has been tarnished. We know that quality and integrity cannot be legislated, and
although the leaders of the profession were not the driving force in the recent reforms, it
will, nevertheless, be their challenge-as preparers, auditors, and analysts--to improve their
quality control processes and restore lost confidence in the profession.
The Federal Reserve Board has long supported sound accounting and auditing practices and
meaningful public disclosure by banking and financial organizations, with the objectives of
improving market discipline and fostering stable financial markets. Before joining the Board,
I served as a corporate chief financial officer and risk and audit manager, primarily in the
banking industry, and as a member of the Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) of the
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), so I share your interest in improving
accounting, auditing, and disclosure.
In my comments today, I will address four areas. First, disclosure practices should evolve
from sound risk management. Banks have expertise in assessing and managing risks, and
they should actively participate in improving the scope and types of disclosures necessary to
provide for the enhanced transparency the market is demanding. Second, I plan to touch on
the topic of fair value accounting for financial transactions as it relates specifically to banks.
As I will explain, certain aspects of this approach may not provide transparent accounting
for banks. Third, I will discuss the potential benefit of moving toward principles-based
accounting standards when these are implemented in conjunction with cultural changes in

the accounting profession that strengthen oversight and auditing processes. And my fourth
topic will be the need for greater integrity in the audit process, which is a critical element in
restoring investor confidence in the capital markets. These four broad topics are of
increasing importance to standards setters, bankers, auditors, and regulators both in the
United States and internationally.
Risk Disclosures
The last decades of the twentieth century were, without doubt, a period of dramatic change
in financial engineering, financial innovation, and risk-management practices. Over this
period, firms acquired effective new tools for managing financial risk, such as securitization
and derivatives. As corporations, and banks, continue to increase in size and complexity,
investors are finding it harder to understand financial performance and risk exposures.
The surprises that have occurred at banks are due to the nature of risk exposure and the
quality of risk management practices, including use of off-balance-sheet vehicles. To keep
both boards of directors and investors aware of these unseen risks, bankers should turn to
their internal control and risk-reporting systems. Banks are taking a leading role in the
evolution of risk management, and this discipline can provide a framework for better
disclosure.
Public disclosure consistent with the information used internally by risk managers could be
very useful to market participants, as would information on the sensitivity of risk profiles to
changes in underlying assumptions. Companies should do more than meet the letter of the
standards that exist; they should be sure that their financial reports and other disclosures
focus on what is really essential to help investors and other market participants understand
their businesses and risk profiles.
Thus, bankers should be leading the development of more transparent financial reporting and
disclosures. Disclosures required by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)
tend to be focused on point-in-time information. These point-in-time snapshots fail to
convey information to readers of financial statements that helps them understand the quality
of earnings and the risk exposure of the firm going forward.
I particularly want to emphasize that disclosure need not be in a standard accounting
framework or exactly the same for all--otherwise we would be certain to create statistical
artifacts and the impression that safe harbors exist. Rather, each entity should disclose what
its stakeholders need to evaluate its risk profile. The uniqueness of risks and business lines in
complex organizations means that some disclosures--to be effective--should be different.
That is the approach recommended by the private-sector Shipley Group last year and it is the
approach being taken in developing the Basel II Capital Accord. While comparability among
firms is important, disclosure rules that are built too rigidly while risk-management processes
evolve may make them less effective in describing the risk profile of a specific organization.
But if bankers do not voluntarily improve disclosures, new rules will be written by
accounting and regulatory authorities. Indeed, we are seeing this already this year after
massive accounting and disclosure problems came to light. For example, the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act requires new management certifications of the financial reports of public companies and
directs the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue new rules on disclosure of
off-balance-sheet transactions.
Fair Value Accounting
The FASB has stated that it believes that all financial instruments should be reported at fair
value when the conceptual and measurement issues of fair value are resolved. Resolution of

those issues is a formidable task, especially given the nature of financial instruments held in
a typical bank's loan portfolio and the nature of non-interest- bearing deposits. For example,
the Federal Reserve has raised concerns about the potential unreliability of fair value
estimates for financial instruments for which no active markets exist. The lack of reasonably
specific standards for the estimation of fair values for non-traded, illiquid instruments could
lead to problems for auditors and bank supervisors in verifying the accuracy of fair value
estimates. We have also questioned whether the quality of financial reporting is strengthened
when a firm reports increased profits as its own creditworthiness deteriorates because of the
mark-to-market approach for liabilities. Therefore, the Federal Reserve has questioned the
usefulness of comprehensive fair value accounting for all financial assets and liabilities in the
primary financial statements.
We see benefit in fair value information as it relates to financial instruments intended to be
traded or sold. Nevertheless, if the purpose is to provide meaningful information that
investors can use to assess bank risk profiles and performance and determine the quality of a
bank's earnings, we need to ask ourselves if fluctuations in fair market values provide
information leading to the transparency that we desire for investors. In other words, will the
change in fair market valuation of certain financial instruments give users of financial
statements additional insight into the nature of the bank's revenue streams? On certain
transactions, including those involving substantial servicing activities, fair value accounting
could serve to front-end income that is better recognized over time.
Principles-Based Accounting Standards
During my six years as a member of the FASB's Emerging Issues Task Force, I developed a
better appreciation for the challenges that standards-setters face when dealing with topics
that are becoming increasingly complex.
Informed and objective professionals can legitimately disagree on the best accounting
standard to apply to new types of transactions. That is part of the challenge of keeping
accounting standards current. The rapid pace of business innovation makes it impractical to
have rules in place to anticipate every business transaction. Rather, the more complex and
dynamic the business world becomes, the more important it is that accounting be based on
strong principles that are sufficiently robust to provide the framework for proper accounting
of new types of transactions.
But improvements in accounting and auditing standards are also needed to address other
problems that have been identified. In particular, it would be very helpful if fundamental
principles and standards could be revised to emphasize that financial statements should
clearly and faithfully represent the economic substance of business transactions. Standards
should also ensure that companies give appropriate consideration to the substantive risks and
rewards of ownership of their underlying assets in identifying whether risk exposures should
be reflected in consolidated financial statements.
To effectively implement such accounting principles, every corporate accountant and every
outside auditor must follow clear, overriding professional standards. Corporate accountants
and external auditors should be required to ask themselves whether a particular accounting
method adequately represents the economic substance of the transaction and whether it
provides readers with sufficient information to evaluate the impact of the transaction on a
company's risk profile, cash flows, and financial condition and performance. If not, it is
likely that the procedure is not the best accounting method to apply.
In a proposal recently issued for comment, the FASB acknowledged that the amount of

implementation guidance provided has increased significantly, adding to the complexity in
applying accounting standards. Thus, it is considering adopting a principles-based approach
to U.S. standards-setting, one similar to the approach used in developing International
Accounting Standards and accounting standards used in other developed countries, such as
the United Kingdom.
This proposal is timely and important to consider in the profession's environment of reform
and could result in more-effective accounting standards. Successful implementation of a
principles-based approach is, however, dependent on cultural changes occurring in the
accounting and auditing profession and effective oversight. Without these two factors, a
principles-based system could easily be used as the basis for manipulating financial
information for reasons other than improving its quality and transparency. Principles alone,
however, do not ensure good financial reporting, which leads me to the integrity of the audit
process.
Integrity of the External Audit Process
At the heart of questions about the quality of accounting, auditing, and disclosure practices
of major U.S. companies are weaknesses in the external audit process. Many auditors have
been too focused on cross-selling new services to corporations and have lost sight of the fact
that the credibility of their independent opinion regarding the fairness of a financial
statement is the core value that they bring to the marketplace. Congress and others have
determined that the industry cannot regulate itself, and the implementation of regulatory
reform now rests with the SEC and the new Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.
It is in your professional interest to support this new entity as it endeavors to strengthen the
auditing process.
Let me be clear about my message. The root causes of the breakdown in corporate
accounting practices that have been widely disclosed in the past few months are ineffective
corporate governance, financial reporting, and risk-management practices. The lessons from
recent events are not new. Rather, recent events should serve as a wake-up call to corporate
boards, management, corporate accountants, and auditors to follow through on their
fundamental and traditional professional and ethical standards of conduct and control
processes. Although the issues are not new, the scope and frequency of breakdowns are of
concern. As new reports and congressional investigations on various aspects of the
breakdowns occur, corporations and auditors should address the issues raised so that they do
not compromise the reputation of their organizations.
At Enron and other companies, weak corporate governance practices apparently permitted
managers to engage in sham transactions and misleading financial reporting. Some outside
auditors erred in trying too hard to please an important client, to the point of engaging in
criminal conduct. They seem to have lost sight of their professional role of assuring users of
financial reports that the statements fairly represent the condition of the corporation and of
the fact that reports should communicate, not conceal, the level of risk. Some observers
have asserted that new accounting standards--or, as I have discussed, a principles-based
method of setting standards--are needed. In some ways that may be true. But judging from
publicly available information, I believe that what we need is to restore the integrity of
corporate governance, company accountants, and the audit process, rather than impose
extensive new rules.
Recent abuses of corporate accounting practices and other matters provide good lessons in
risk management for bankers, as they try to increase earnings by cross-selling more products.

We have seen, for example, how conflicts of interest and errors in corporate governance
within a major accounting firm contributed to its downfall. Similarly, banks that compensate
line officers on the basis of sales and cross-selling must guard against the adverse incentives
that those compensation structures can provide. There, too, a strong corporate governance
function is essential. Given the dominant role of credit risk at banks, the chief credit officer
should ensure that pressures to increase fee income do not lead to unacceptable levels of
credit risk through maintaining independence of credit administration from line functions.
To bolster the independence of external auditors, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act prohibits them
from providing certain internal audit and other consulting services to their clients. It created
the new Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, independent of the accounting
industry, to regulate audits of public companies. These are all changes for the better.
One reason that accounting in the United States has become so rule-based is that we tend to
add new accounting standards when abuses occur, even when the abuses resulted from
corporate accounting and independent audit failures. Rather than creating new accounting
rules, forming the new Public Company Accounting Oversight Board established by
Sarbanes-Oxley may be a better approach and help refocus public accountants on core
principles and away from more-aggressive and misleading practices. Given human nature
and the complexity of many accounting issues, we must expect that rules will sometimes be
broken or misapplied. But a new, authoritative oversight board--combined with
more-rigorous reviews by corporate boards--should be able to discourage and address severe
abuses.
For its part, the Federal Reserve is also willing to challenge accounting practices that it sees
as too aggressive. By no means do we intend to supplant accounting authorities in making
rules, but we do intend, however, to provide discipline, when necessary, in the application of
their guidance--particularly in the context of publicly available regulatory reports and in light
of the weaknesses in quality-assurance processes in public accounting firms. For example,
the Federal Reserve required nonperforming loan pools at one large banking organization to
be re-consolidated into its financial statements when it was determined that the risks and
control of the assets were not removed from that organization through the creation of
special-purpose vehicles, as required by GAAP.
In another example, the banking regulators have jointly issued for comment new guidance
related to credit cards. This guidance not only deals with unacceptable practices, but also
clarifies that earnings recognition of fees billed to customers should reflect the expected
ability to collect those fees.
We have also recently seen a number of cases in which internal control weaknesses and a
general lack of documentation were identified through the examination process, but not
through the audit attestation process. These situations were significant enough to raise safety
and soundness concerns. Accordingly, in considering these matters, we are reviewing the
workpapers of external auditors, in order to get a better understanding of how the attestation
process can best meet our objectives. In some cases, auditor attestation reports on internal
controls, as required by FDICIA, have become too routine. With Sarbanes-Oxley requiring
these reports for all public companies, it is time for the banking industry and accounting
profession to revitalize procedures and efforts in this area.
While evaluating the risk of inaccurate or incomplete financial information, we have
traditionally placed a high degree of reliance on the work of the external auditor--as well as

the internal auditor for that matter. So I urge you today to redouble your efforts in examining
financial statements and evaluating internal control systems, as well as insisting on adequate
levels of documentation.
Accounting and Auditing in a Global Arena
The topics that I have addressed in my presentation today are receiving increased attention
not only in the United States but also internationally. Indeed, the international accounting
profession is proceeding at a rapid pace on a global scale to enhance standards and practices.
The European Union plans to require its publicly traded companies to adopt the standards of
the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) in 2005. The international auditing
standards-setter-the International Audit and Assurance Standards Board-is also engaged in
efforts to improve governance, audit standards, and transparency. High-quality control
practices by member firms continue to be sought by the International Federation of
Accountants. We have been actively working with these organizations, primarily through the
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, to promote the adoption and implementation of
standards, which will improve global banks' accounting, auditing, and disclosure practices.
Internationally, the Federal Reserve actively participates in the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision's Accounting Task Force and the Transparency Group that are seeking to
enhance international accounting, auditing and disclosure standards and practices for global
banking organizations. For example, our chief accountant was the Basel Committee's lead
representative at meetings of the former international accounting standards-setter and is a
member of the IASB's Standards Advisory Council, which advises the IASB and its Trustees
on the IASB's agenda, proposals, and standards. The Basel Committee has also issued
numerous policy papers, surveys, and other releases that address bank transparency,
enhanced practices for loan-loss reserves and credit risk disclosure, sound bank internal and
external audit programs, and sound risk-disclosure practices. Moreover, the Basel
Committee's approach to its new Capital Accord, with its market-discipline component in
Pillar 3, signals that sound accounting and disclosure will continue to be important aspects of
our supervisory approach for many years to come.
Many U.S. banking organizations have assumed that international accounting standards are
essentially irrelevant to their financial reporting activities. However, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
includes a directive that U.S. accounting standards should seek convergence internationally.
In view of this, the FASB and the IASB announced in October 2002 a major agreement to
intensify their projects that seek international convergence and harmonization of accounting
standards. The SEC and the Federal Reserve strongly support efforts to harmonize
international accounting standards in ways that achieve high-quality standards for global
firms, including banking organizations. I believe that U.S. banking organizations and their
auditors should focus more attention on the initiatives of the IASB in view of these
developments and the requirements of the new legislation.
In Conclusion
In conclusion, steps to restore public confidence in the U.S. capital markets have begun, yet
the need for a cultural change in the accounting profession, in addition to more regulation, is
evident. We have seen all too well that the actions of a few can easily bring down a firm
built primarily of good practitioners. Although I've been critical of the profession, in many
cases the public doesn't look beyond the reputation of our firms, and in some cases
individuals, when they evaluate the integrity of the profession. It is, therefore, up to auditors
to embrace the professional standards and ethics that have made their attestation function so
effective and accepted in the past.

A cultural change in the profession today is a prerequisite for an effective principles-based
system of standards that can serve to guide us through accounting for new and innovative
financial transactions. Along with enhanced disclosures based on sound risk-management
information, high-quality financial information will become the rule and not the exception in
the eyes of the public.
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Last update: November 7, 2002