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AUDITING
How the PCAOB Shields the Big Four
Posted by Alix Stuart | CFO.com | US
January 18, 2007 5:15 PM ET

In remarks before the Boston FEI chapter last night, PCAOB founder and board member Bill Gradison shed a bit — and only a bit — of light on the high percentage of audit quality problems among the Big Four firms that my colleague Tim estimated in a previous blog. He confirmed (as one of our savvy readers pointed out) that the PCAOB takes a risk-based approach to auditing, so that "if we do our job right, we probably do come up with a higher percentage [of problems] than if we just took a random sample."

A courtly white-haired gentleman, Gradison politely reckoned Tim's 25% estimate too high. But of course he couldn't say what the actual rate was, since the PCAOB doesn't reveal the number of inspections it does at very large firms (even though it does for smaller ones).

Why? Gradison didn't answer that one directly in his remarks. But elevation through obfuscation seems to be the name of the game. Noting that the PCAOB considers itself a supervisory body rather than an enforcement ogre, he said the mission of the agency is to work with firms to restore "integrity" and even "luster" to the profession. That means it prefers giving audit firms a 12-month grace period to quietly fix problems rather than make them public when they happen, since "reputation is so important in a field like auditing." Mmm. I bet CFOs who have had the SEC and DOJ jump all over them (especially those who have later been exonerated) wouldn't mind a little of that forbearance.

Comments (5)


Comments | Post a Comment
Dear PCAOB:

Michael Corleone once said, "You cannot fool a Corleone." You cannot fool a convicted felon whose actions helped contribute to your creation.

I suggest you stop playing the side step game with your spin. It is not working. You are supposed to promote transparency in capitalism and not build any walls. I see no prohibition in the statute that prevents you from releasing statistics on the amount of inspections on a per firm basis.

If I am incorrect, cite the specific language in the statute and as great Americans seek to change it. The accounting firms who are inspected heed this advice too. You are great Americans (much better than me) and can release this information to show you are better than the PCAOB.

Respectfully,

Sam E. Antar (former Crazy Eddie CFO & convicted felon)
Posted by Sam Antar | January 19, 2007 12:49am

I see no prohibition in the statute that prevents you from releasing statistics ...

Nor do I see that you are required to do so. It is your choice.
Posted by Roland Cycan | January 19, 2007 09:05am

Am I missing something? Wouldn't PCAOB documents be subject to a FOIA request? They're established by the SEC - a governmental body - right?
Posted by Jerome Kern | January 19, 2007 01:36pm

If I'm not mistaken, the PCAOB does not have to submit to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. The PCAOB is a private-sector, non-profit corporation. As a private organization, why would it be subject to the Freedom of Information Act?
Posted by Hassen Al-Shawaf | January 22, 2007 05:10pm

It is true that the PCAOB has been established, at least in name, as a "private-sector, non-profit corporation." Since the PCAOB was established by Sarbanes-Oxley '02, and is funded and overseen by the SEC, it seems that their "private-sector, non-profit corporation" designation is just smoke and mirrors, allowing them to reject FOIA requests. Maybe I'm just paranoid.
Posted by Jerome Kern | January 25, 2007 10:23am

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