From CFO Magazine

Is the regulatory response to past scandals softening? In the last few months, the SEC has eased guidance on Sarbox 404, the PCAOB has announced a potential repeal of AS2, the Department of Justice has renounced some of the tactics used to prosecute companies, and banking regulators have dropped plans to have banks police their corporate customers. Even a new Democratic Congress seems willing to consider changes to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. What.s more, the number of securities-fraud class-action lawsuits plunged last year (though settlement amounts are still rising). CFO.com tracks the regulatory pendulum.s swing at: www.cfo.com/pendulum


Related Posts

  1. Possible changes to Sarbanes-Oxley within the next year
  2. Some basics about Sarbanes-Oxley
  3. Changes to Sarbanes-Oxley rejected by Senate
  4. 5 years of Sarbanes-Oxley
  5. Audit fees and Sarbanes-Oxley

Leave a Comment

Comments containing profanity, personal attacks, threats, abuse, hate speech, or otherwise objectional content will not be published. Do not assume that the author of this blog agrees with or endorses any comments made by commenters. Promotion of MLM companies is not permitted, and that includes linking to MLM sites and making unsubstantiated earnings claims.