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At the Financial Managers Society Finance and Accounting Forum for Financial
Institutions, Washington, D.C.
June 22, 2004

Trends in Risk Management and Corporate Governance
Thank you for the invitation to participate in the 2004 Finance and Accounting Forum of the
Financial Managers Society. The agenda for this year's forum included a significant number
of sessions devoted to corporate governance, which is a change from prior years. As senior
members of the accounting, auditing, or management functions within your financial
institutions, you are probably at the forefront of your institutions' discussion of governance
matters. You are also probably spending a considerably greater amount of time and energy
implementing revisions to your governance process than you did just three years ago. Even if
your institution is not publicly traded, this increased activity is certainly the result of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. However, the practice of corporate governance at U.S.
financial institutions is not new and did not begin with Sarbanes-Oxley. U.S. financial
institutions, both publicly traded and privately held, have a tradition of taking their
responsibilities for ensuring effective governance seriously, and those with total assets of
$500 million or more have been subject to section 112 of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation Improvement Act (FDICIA) for more than ten years.
In my comments today, I will focus primarily on the state of corporate governance at
financial institutions. I'll discuss the assessments some of the consultants and public
accountants are giving the banking industry, and I'll contrast those assessments with what we
are observing through the examination process. I'll also touch on some of the developing best
practices in corporate governance, internal controls, and operational risk management. It
seems that many of these best practices are being developed by professionals such as
yourselves, who are implementing the mandates of Sarbanes-Oxley in a manner that is
relevant for your individual businesses and corporate structure. At the Federal Reserve, we
tend to favor best-practice approaches for corporate governance rather than a one-sizefits-all approach.
Corporate Governance Perspective of Consultants
Over the past few years, there has been a marked increase in the number of corporate
governance surveys at both publicly traded and privately held financial institutions.
Recently, several of the major consulting and accounting firms reported on the governance
practices at financial services firms, including federally regulated banks. Although the
survey questions varied somewhat by consulting or accounting firm, the survey results seem
to have a certain amount of commonality. They all begin by recognizing the progress
financial services firms have made in the areas of director independence, audit committee
oversight, and overall board awareness of governance issues within their organizations. They
all cite a growing sensitivity to governance issues among employees and a heightened
awareness among senior management and the board. They cite improvements in

governance-type disclosures to shareholders and stakeholders and increased vigilance on the
part of the regulatory agencies. However, they almost all conclude by saying that banks and
other financial services firms have a long road ahead of them if they are to achieve the goal
of effective corporate governance--which sounds as if the firms believe that financial
institution governance practices are deficient.
Why is this? According to a global survey of financial institutions conducted by
PricewaterhouseCoopers, financial institution governance practices need improvement in
part because most institutions equate effective governance with meeting the demands of
regulators and legislators. 1 That is, they tend to look at this as another compliance exercise.
The study goes on to state that the compliance mentality is limiting these institutions' ability
to achieve strategic advantages through governance.
I agree that any institution that views corporate governance as merely a compliance exercise
is missing the mark. We all are aware of companies in various industries who have
successfully presented their strategic vision to investors but later stumbled because the
execution of that strategy did not meet expectations. Although shortfalls can occur for many
reasons, one of the more common shortcomings is focusing the strategy itself too much on
market and financial results without giving adequate attention to the infrastructure necessary
to support and sustain the strategy.
Corporate strategies often focus on the most likely future scenario and the benefits of a
strategic initiative. Creation of a sound governance, risk-management, and internal control
environment starts by making it part of the strategic-planning exercise. That is, while the
strategy is being considered, managers and board members should be asking a number of
questions: What are the major risks of this plan? How much risk exposure are we willing to
accept? What mitigating controls need to be in place to effectively limit these risks? How
will we know if these controls are working effectively? In other words, by considering risks
as part of the planning process, controls can be built into the design, the costs of errors and
reworking in the initial rollout can be reduced, and the ongoing initiative can be more
successful because monitoring can reveal when activities and results are missing their
intended goals, so that corrective actions can be initiated more promptly.
Similarly, as these strategies are being implemented, all managers and employees in the
organization must have an understanding of the risk exposures and controls in their
particular areas of responsibility. Furthermore, management should assign ownership of each
control in the various areas to appropriate individuals. From past experience, we know the
more common causes of ineffective controls occur when a properly designed control is
monitored by an individual who has an incomplete understanding of how the control helps to
mitigate risk exposures or fails to assume full responsibility for the operation of the control,
or misinterprets the operating effectiveness of the control. In short, controls are only as good
as the individuals who operate and monitor their effectiveness.
Many of these surveys note that it is very difficult for outsiders to determine the
effectiveness of corporate governance. Unfortunately, it takes significant breaks in internal
controls for the public to be aware of weaknesses in the process. The disclosure of deficient
business and governance practices can then lead to lower share prices, the likelihood of
shareholder lawsuits and enforcement actions, loss of credibility and damage to a bank's
reputation, and the payment of higher spreads to access capital markets. The magnitude of
the detrimental impact that can result from a serious breach in governance puts the costs of
improved governance in perspective.

Several studies reveal that institutions are spending more on corporate governance today
than in the past. According to Grant Thornton's Eleventh Annual Survey of Community
Bank Executives,2 it isn't just large organizations that are feeling the financial impact of
corporate governance. Institutions that are not subject to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and
FDICIA incurred or are expected to incur increases in costs for a number of services and
functions related to corporate governance. Seventy-three percent of these banks surveyed
expected to incur increases in general audit fees, 62 percent expected to incur increases in
director and officer liability insurance premiums, 32 percent expected to incur increases in
financial education costs for directors, and 12 percent expected to incur increases in costs
associated with attracting and retaining board members.
In response to this survey, a logical question is whether the benefits outweigh the costs.
Many of you are reflecting on the first-half 2004 discussion of your operating results, budget
estimates, and income projections for the future that were presented at recent board and
staff meetings. True, these costs reduced some of your current profitability goals. But
corporate managers have demonstrated over the years that focusing on better process
management can enhance financial returns and customer satisfaction. They have learned
that correcting errors, downtime in critical systems, and lack of training that enables staff to
promptly handle their changing tasks, all create higher costs, unhappy customers and lost
revenue opportunities. I challenge you to consider the development of a corporate
governance structure appropriate to your institution's unique business strategy and scale as
an important investment, and consider returns on that investment in terms of avoidance of
the costs of poor internal controls.
Corporate Governance Perspective of Regulators
Now I would like to discuss the regulatory community's assessment of corporate governance
practices at certain community banks. Regulators typically measure effectiveness by some
sort of examination assessment. Using the current CAMELS-type of assessment, a review of
recent Federal Reserve examination results indicate that most community banks have
effective corporate governance. Eighty-four percent of the banks reviewed were highly
rated on their risk-management practices, including corporate governance. This is not to say
that we don't see the need for improvement in certain areas. Examination findings routinely
cite ways in which risk management, including corporate governance, could be improved.
However, it is apparent that the senior management, boards, and audit committees in these
highly rated organizations are setting annual agendas that focus attention on the high-risk
and emerging-risk areas within their banks while continuing to provide appropriate oversight
to the low-risk areas. Internal auditors, or equivalent functions at these banks, are testing to
determine whether the risk- management program is effective and are communicating the
results to the board and audit committee.
So, the examination results appear to indicate that the vast majority of banks are getting the
message on the basics of sound governance. I would like to stop my speech here and
conclude by saying, "All is well in the banking industry." However, we also performed a
review of the corporate governance at the subset of banks with weak or unsatisfactory
ratings. Not surprisingly, the review identified the major challenges facing these banks to be
poor asset quality and corporate governance issues, such as policies, planning, management,
audits, controls, and systems. Eighty-nine percent of the banks in this group experienced
serious asset-quality problems, which was the most significant factor in their low rating.
Sixty percent of the banks in this group experienced significant deficiencies in corporate

governance. The corporate governance deficiencies could broadly be described as internal
control weaknesses, weak or inadequate internal audit coverage, significant violations of
law, accounting system weaknesses, and information technology issues.
Obviously, poor asset quality and ineffective corporate governance are not mutually
exclusive. When we find significant asset-quality problems, we usually find corporate
governance problems--particularly inadequate internal controls. Similarly, when we find
significant control deficiencies, significant asset-quality or financial-reporting problems are
generally present. So what is the message we should take away from these statistics?
On the one hand, we could pat ourselves on the back and say that things are generally going
very well for most of the industry and we can finally tone down all of the corporate
governance rhetoric. Or, we could say that those negative statistics apply only to the boards
and senior managers at a small group of poorly rated institutions, which now have to pay the
price. Or, yet again, we could say that effective corporate governance is a continuous
process that requires ongoing vigilance on the part of the board, audit committee, senior
management, and others within your bank. I hope you are thinking along the lines of this last
sentiment.
As you know, once an organization gets lax in its approach to corporate governance,
problems tend to follow. Many of you can recall the time and attention management devoted
to section 112 of FDICIA, which first required management reports and auditor attestations
in the early 1990s. Then the process became routine, delegated to lower levels of
management, and no longer relevant to the way businesses were being run. That is when the
breakdown in internal controls began to occur. Unfortunately, trying to change the culture
again is taking an exceptional amount of senior management and directors' time--time taken
away from building the business. It is also taking more time from line managers and their
staff. The challenge, therefore, is to ensure that banks' corporate governance practices keep
pace with the changing risks that you will face in the coming years.
Another consequence of so much public attention on the breakdowns in controls at a few
organizations is difficulty in finding good directors. One common theme we have heard
during our examinations is the challenge facing banks of all sizes to retain, or attract, board
members with the appropriate depth of understanding and commitment to sound corporate
governance practices. Many potential directors who have the experience needed are
cautious about the potential liability they face. Also, they would rather join a board on which
they are able to balance their time among all of the areas of oversight--strategy, marketing,
financial performance, human resource development, community involvement, and so
on--and not just governance, compliance, audits, and internal controls. This is another result
of inconsistent attention over time to good governance practices.
Operational Risk
In addition to corporate governance, the Federal Reserve System is also focusing on
operational risk, conducting selected reviews for operational risk at community banks. By
operational risk, I mean "the risk of direct or indirect loss resulting from inadequate or failed
internal processes, people and systems or from external events," which is the definition used
by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. The Federal Reserve's increasing focus on
operational risk is due, in part, to the significant improvements we have seen in the last two
decades in the management of interest-rate and credit risk. Thus, operational risks and
weaknesses in governance and internal controls become more apparent.

For example, at one of our Reserve Banks we are conducting a pilot program specifically
geared toward the operational-risk activities of smaller community banks, those with less
than $500 million in assets. One of the objectives of the program is to identify and test the
key internal controls used by banks to mitigate operational risk exposures. The reviews focus
on specific business processes with high operational risk--for example, the wire transfer and
loan administration areas. The bankers involved have responded very favorably to the
program and indicated they have received measurable benefits. Moreover, the program has
identified some common operational-control weaknesses to which we believe community
banks should pay particular attention. Let's use wire transfers and loan administration as
examples.
With wires and similar transactions, the bank could suffer a significant financial loss from
unauthorized transfers, as well as incur considerable damage to its reputation if
operational-risk factors are not properly mitigated. A few recurring recommendations from
our reviews are to: (1) establish reasonable approval and authorization requirements for
these transactions to ensure that an appropriate level of management is aware of the
transaction and to establish better accountability; (2) establish call-back procedures,
passwords, funds transfer agreements, and other authentication controls related to customer
wire-transfer requests; and (3) pay increased attention to authentication controls, since this
area may also be particularly susceptible to external fraud.
Loan administration is an area in which a bank could suffer a significant financial loss from
the lack of appropriate segregation of duties or dual controls and could incur considerable
damage to its reputation if operational-risk factors are not properly mitigated. A few
recommendations that have arisen from our reviews are to (1) ensure that loan officers do
not have the ability to book and maintain their own loans; (2) limit employee access to loan
system computer applications that are inconsistent with their responsibilities; and (3) provide
line staff with consistent guidance in the form of policies and procedures, on how to identify
and handle unusual transactions.
Several other recommendations resulted from these reviews, and we have a number of
operational-risk initiatives under way. We expect to summarize these findings and provide
further updates and guidance to the industry as we move forward. But given the examples of
best practice I just mentioned, these are not revolutionary insights. Well-run organizations
have these or similar controls in place. We hope these studies serve as reminders to bank
managers to keep the focus on continuous improvements in internal controls as part of the
normal business process.
Observations on Best Practices
Finally, I want to focus on some best practices for corporate governance at your institutions.
Rather than talk broadly about best practices, I'll focus on certain aspects of internal controls
and operational-risk management.
Best Practice 1: Adopt a recognized internal control framework that works for the bank.
All financial institutions have some framework for internal control. What I'm suggesting as a
best practice is to adopt a version of the Internal Control--Integrated Framework
commissioned by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) of the Treadway
Commission.3 Don't be put off by the title of this framework. It is flexible enough to work
effectively at a $25 million bank or a multibillion dollar financial institution and describes

how each internal control element can be tailored to smaller and less-complex organizations.
For example, if the COSO framework is used as a best practice, you should modify the five
following elements of internal control to meet your organization's needs.
Control environment. Board members and senior managers should identify the bank's
key business strategies, objectives, and goals and tailor the COSO framework to
influence the bank's management philosophy, culture, and ethics to establish and
maintain an appropriate control environment. Line managers and employees should be
able to articulate how specific objectives and goals are addressed in their business
areas.
Risk assessment. Managers should look at the risks inherent in the businesses and
processes they manage, determine the bank's risk appetite, and establish
risk-measurement practices that are appropriate for their organization. All employees
in the area should have a good sense of acceptable risks and have a process for
communicating apparently unacceptable risk taking to appropriate levels of
management.
Control activities. Managers should establish and maintain controls and monitoring
processes to ensure that they will be effective in achieving the organization's profit
and other objectives, based on a designated level of risk. Managers should monitor the
organization's business plan to assess how risk exposures are changing and determine
whether new controls, or changes in existing controls, are needed to manage that level
of risk. Employees should have a detailed understanding of the purpose of each group
of controls in their areas of responsibility and a good understanding of how the
controls contribute to the institution's ability to achieve its operating objectives and
accurate financial reporting.
Information and communication. Information required to achieve the organization's
control objectives should typically be accumulated in a management information
system and should be communicated through reliable channels to all responsible
parties--from tellers to board members. Normal bank communication channels should
usually be adequate for this purpose. However, new channels may be necessary if the
type of information is too sensitive to communicate over existing channels or if
communicating that information poses a risk to the individual making the
communication (in other words, if the individual is a whistle blower with knowledge of
an incident of identified fraud).
Monitoring. Monitoring should typically be the role of internal audit. A number of
small institutions do not have a permanent internal audit department. Each institution
must therefore develop a review (audit) function that is appropriate to its size and the
nature and scope of its activities.
As you may know, COSO is just about to release a revised framework that will incorporate
enterprise risk management (ERM). When this is issued, the best practices in these five
elements will need to be re-evaluated to address ERM.
Best Practice 2: Adopt a program for independently assessing the effectiveness of internal
controls at least annually.
Boards of directors and audit committees are responsible for ensuring that their
organizations have effective internal controls that are adequate to the nature and scope of

their businesses and are subject to an effective audit process. Effective internal control is the
responsibility of line management. Line managers must determine the acceptable level of
risk in their line of business and must assure themselves that they are getting an appropriate
return for this risk and that adequate capital is being maintained. Supporting functions such
as accounting, internal audit, risk management, credit review, compliance, and legal should
independently monitor and test the control processes to ensure that they are effective.
Implementing management reports on internal controls comparable to those required under
Sarbanes-Oxley and FDICIA 112 can also help boards of directors and audit committees of
institutions that are not subject to these acts obtain a better understanding of the controllable
risks within their organizations and the quality of the controls over those risks that are in
place. Sarbanes-Oxley and FDCIA 112 require an annual management assessment of
internal control effectiveness and an attestation of management's assessment and the
effectiveness of controls by the bank's external auditor. Management at institutions that are
not subject to Sarbanes-Oxley and FDICIA 112 could perform their own periodic assessment
of internal control effectiveness, including a report. Another group of employees within the
institution could perform an independent evaluation of management's report.
When I say independent, I do not necessarily mean that an external auditor should be
engaged to issue a report. In this sense, independent may mean that internal audit is brought
in to perform something similar to an external auditor's attestation. The details of such an
approach need to be worked out. The important point is that the audit committee should
have some reasonably independent assessment of management's report. Audit committee
members could use these reports to set the audit plan for the next year, to track how risks
have changed and are changing within the organization, and to facilitate discussion of which
controls should be added.
Best Practice 3: Adopt a framework for assessing operational risk.
Over the past few years, the discussion of operational-risk management has increased
significantly in banking circles. In 2003, the Basel Committee released a paper, "Sound
Practices for the Management and Supervision of Operational Risk."4 This paper sets forth a
set of broad principles that should govern the management of operational risk at banks of all
sizes. Although operational risk is nothing new to financial institutions, the prospect of
addressing this risk in a structured framework with measurable results is something new.
The broad variety of products and services that institutions provide, the evolution of
business processes, and changes in the ethical environment in which we live have all
contributed to more observable exposures to this type of risk. Managers and boards are
beginning to gather the information necessary to monitor and understand the growing risks
inherent in their operations. Supervisors are developing approaches to measuring and
evaluating operating risk. At the Federal Reserve, we are studying different approaches and
have a project underway to develop guidance on how to address this risk. In the near future,
we plan to compare our observations on best practices in the area of internal controls and
operational risk management with yours to develop some useful resource materials for good
corporate governance at the banks we supervise.
Conclusion
In conclusion, financial institutions are further improving their traditional focus on strong
corporate governance. Those institutions leading the way recognize that the culture of

governance, ethics, and controls cannot readily be switched on and off. They build a culture
of accountability and ethics to make governance a part of every strategic plan and daily
operation. These organizations are also beginning to focus more attention on operational-risk
issues, which are an essential part of the overall risk-management plan of the organization.
The Federal Reserve has a number of initiatives underway, and we plan to work with
banking organizations to continue to identify emerging best practices.
Footnotes
1. PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Economist Intelligence Unit, "Governance: From
Compliance to Strategic Advantage,"(436 KB PDF) (April 2004). Return to text
2. Grant Thornton, LLP, Eleventh Annual Survey of Community Bank Executives (January
2004). Return to text
3. Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, Internal Control-Integrated Framework (American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, 2002). Return
to text
4. Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, "Sound Practices for the Management and
Supervision of Operational Risk"(99 KB PDF) (February 2003). Return to text
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Last update: June 22, 2004