The American securities regulators have a problem with China, expressed in their hand-wringing laments (e.g., here and here): their counterparts forbid inspecting the work and accessing the work papers of the auditors of Chinese public companies whose securities trade on America’s capital markets.
“Why so?” is the mystery. The SEC and the PCAOB have the effective means by which to relieve their frustrations, which – whether lacking vision, will, or coherent policy -- they have been unwilling to deploy. Instead, a “President’s Working Group” led by Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin reported on July 24 a proposal that is muddled in concept, inefficient in structure, and destined to be ineffective even if eventually put into place.
It’s an exercise in “Potemkin regulation” – to create a façade of legitimacy, like the faux villages supposedly built by Grigory Potemkin to impress Empress Catherine II on her visit to the Crimea in 1787. Here’s why:
Empowered by the Sarbanes-Oxley law of 2002, the SEC and the PCAOB have been packing, but have kept securely holstered, a double-barreled weapon:
- Auditors of public companies whose securities trade in the US can be de-registered (Sarbanes-Oxley § 105) for failure to submit to PCAOB inspection including the obligatory production of working papers (§ 104(a)).
- Companies reporting to the SEC that fail to file accounts bearing the opinion of a registered auditor (§ 102(a) and SEC Reporting Manual § 4115.1) are subject to exclusion from issuance or sale of their securities in the US.
Only if used, these would combine in a swift and efficient two-step: the PCAOB de-registers a non-compliant auditor, then the SEC bars a company failing to file compliant financial statements. QED.
Not so simple, in the Potemkin village. For unknown reasons, rather than break out the available armaments, the PWG proposes:
Instead of a straight-forward trading ban imposed directly by the SEC, rule-making would invite the American securities exchanges to pursue their own de-listing process (PWG report, p. 9) – an awkward and unnecessarily complex “solution” that would, among other inefficiencies, not reach the possibility that companies would simply retreat to non-exchange trading in the over-the-counter market.
To supplant a Chinese audit firm beyond the reach of PCAOB inspection, a Chinese company would obtain its audit report from the Chinese auditor’s US affiliate, deemed a “co-audit firm” – a term unknown in the professional vocabulary and having no defined scope or meaning (PWG report, p. 8). Such a process would fail, for two separate reasons:
- First, risk managers in the American firms should be aghast. Their firms are not licensed to practice in China, nor do they have the language, local technical knowledge nor cultural and political awareness to perform there. The extent of a US firm's necessary reliance on the personnel, work and documentation of its Chinese brethren would render it a “letter-box,” by which it would offer up its name, reputation and financial resources to unknown and unmeasurable exposures.
- Second, the PWG blithely assumes that in fulfillment of the PCAOB’s inspection process, the American “co-audit firm” would obtain and produce the work papers evidencing the actual work performed in China – a notion both mis-placed and naïve, given the long-standing access refusal of the Chinese regulators who would view such a ruse as risibly transparent.
To the contrary, for two decades the consistent Chinese have swaddled the American regulators in blankets of woolly rhetoric, which in their credulous diplomatic ineptitude the Americans have believed to be real and dependable promises. There is no reason to expect a fundamental change in the Chinese position.
Nor does the PWG’s construct address the key political issue, namely the collateral effects of threatening the US listings of a roster of Chinese companies estimated at a market capitalization of $ 1.7 trillion (PWG report, p. 7).
That is, while the Chinese themselves might welcome the opportunity to capture the exchange listings of such global giants as Alibaba, PetroChina and China Life, the panjandrums of the American capital markets and the managers of the investment funds holding those companies in their portfolios might feel otherwise – as would those who believe in the desirability of promoting rather than antagonizing the enormity of the Sino-American trading relationship.
Put briefly, there is no perspective from which the PWG[1] proposal can be wrestled into rationality. Not surprisingly, it has perplexed commentators literally around the globe, from Paul Gillis’s China Accounting Blog to the Financial Times in London.
It is not impossible, of course, that Secretary Mnuchin is cranking a fog-making machine as cover for the inconsistent and unpredictable POTUS –- or that the administration is simply vamping for time through the up-coming election.
Either way, the interests of effective operation of the capital markets deserve better.
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[1] As a side observation for the language geeks, this body’s label joins a short list of rare three-fold oxymorons. The classic has long been “Holy Roman Empire” – a polity deserving none of those descriptions. My own offering has been “Italian justice system,” as my work experience up and down that congeries of ancient trading states showed their jurisprudence to be neither just nor systematic. Here, there is no evidence of substantive presidential guidance, and the PWG as a “group” oddly does not include the chairman of the PCAOB, the agency most involved and affected; readers are left to conclude as to the fitness of its report under the rubric of “work. ” Submissions of other such triplets are invited.