All Securities and Exchange Commission articles – Page 54
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ArticleInsider threats often are hardest to detect
In his latest editorial, Compliance Week Editor in Chief Dave Lefort applies what he learned at CW West to recent insider scandals and provides several compliance-related takeaways.
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Article
Lumber Liquidators to pay $33M for securities fraud
Lumber Liquidators Holdings, a discount retailer of hardwood flooring, will pay a total of $33 million in criminal and regulatory penalties for misleading investors concerning the sale of its laminate flooring from China to its customers in the United States.
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Article
Companies tie loose ends on leasing, prepare ongoing accounting
Companies generally are expected to be ready to report under new lease accounting rules but still face some added work to prepare for ongoing compliance.
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ArticleSEC’s Peirce supports reconsideration of SOX 404(b)
As internal control heartburn persists for many public companies, at least one member of the SEC would welcome changes to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
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Article
BB&T Securities to pay $5.7M for misleading clients
BB&T Securities has reached a $5.7 million settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission to settle charges that a firm it acquired misled its advisory clients.
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ArticleFestivus, Fortnite, and the SEC’s relationship with institutional investors
SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce’s speech before the Council of Institutional Investors spring conference used two pop culture touchpoints as a means to clarify her relationship with the audience the group represents.
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Blog
SEC names its first chief risk officer
The Securities and Exchange Commission has named its first ever chief risk officer. The position, to be held Gabriel Benincasa, was created by SEC Chairman Jay Clayton to strengthen the agency’s risk management and cyber-security efforts.
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ArticleCompanies face first reporting under new hedge rules
Hedge accounting rules, now taking effect, may have fallen under the radar as companies wrestled bigger changes to revenue recognition, leasing, and credit losses.
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BlogSEC modifies timing for non-public fund reports
With an eye toward improving data management and cyber-security oversight, the SEC has approved changes to the submission deadlines for registered investment companies filing non-public monthly reports.
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BlogSEC says Musk disregarded terms of Tesla settlement
The SEC is asking a federal judge to decide whether Elon Musk, founder and CEO of Tesla, violated the terms of a recent consent agreement and should be held in contempt of court.
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Blog
Kraft Heinz discloses probe, takes $15.4B impairment charge
Following a string of accounting and reporting problems, Kraft Heinz Co. disclosed it is under investigation by the SEC and reported a $15.4 billion impairment charge.
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BlogSEC proposes to expand ‘test-the-waters’ perk to all issuers
The SEC has proposed expanding the “test-the-waters” accommodation—currently available to emerging growth companies—to all issuers, including investment company issuers.
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Blog
Cognizant to pay $25M to resolve FCPA violations
Cognizant Technology Solutions has agreed to pay a civil penalty of $25 million to settle charges that it violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Additionally, two former executives of Cognizant were charged for their roles in facilitating the payment of millions of dollars in a bribe to an Indian government ...
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ArticleSEC once again dragged into fight over mandatory arbitration
The SEC was spared setting mandatory arbitration policy when New Jersey’s attorney general argued a shareholder initiative proposed for Johnson & Johnson would be illegal.
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Blog
Deloitte Japan settles $2 million independence charge
Deloitte Japan has agreed to a $2 million penalty to settle charges with the SEC over auditor independence violations.
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Blog
Legislation demands SEC disclosures for corporate political spending
The newly reintroduced Corporate Political Disclosure Act seeks to require publicly traded companies to disclose their political expenditures through the SEC.
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Blog
Court orders $1B judgment against operators of Woodbridge Ponzi scheme
A federal court in Florida has ordered Woodbridge Group of Companies and its former owner to pay $1 billion in penalties and disgorgement for operating a Ponzi scheme that targeted retail investors.
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Blog
Companies adjust revenue disclosures, grapple costs
Companies are changing their revenue recognition approach as they move from quarter to quarter, and they’re tallying higher-than-expected costs, poll says
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Blog
IOSCO report gives marching orders to audit committees
Securities regulators globally have banded together to call on audit committees to take a fresh look at their role in promoting and supporting quality audits.
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Blog
SEC settles with 4 companies over prolonged control lapses
Apparently thumbing their noses at internal control requirements, four public companies have now settled charges with the SEC over prolonged failures to maintain ICFR.


