Week Five Personal Michael Nelson University of Phoenix LAW/421 Timothy Bodily Week Five Personal The article I reviewed was called The Sarbanes-Oxley Act: A Cost-Benefit Analysis Using the U.S. Banking Industry from authors from the Journal of Applied Business. The article discussed the detrimental effect the SOX Act has had on the American banking system. Reports collected by the Federal Reserve show that returns on assets (ROA) and returns on equity (ROE) for nonregistered (SEC reporting)
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Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 Student ACC/561 June 8‚ 2015 Professor Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 Introduction The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX) was established after many corporate scandals such as Enron‚ WorldCom‚ and AIG cost investors billions of dollars. Financial fallout from these scandals reduced the American public ’s trust in the economy. The enactment of SOX in 2002 holds corporations to higher standards in reporting financial statements to internal and external users. Even though the
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Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 ACC 290 Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) originated on July 29‚ 2002 due to fraudulent bookkeeping practices and misleading financial reports from large corporations. These practices created a number of accounting scandals‚ which resulted in this in the government creating such an act. The purpose was to prevent and punish corporate corruption and‚ along the way‚ try to repair investor confidence. The law was passed by congress after well-known
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2002‚ Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act‚ known in the industry as SOX‚ as a measure to improve transparency in financial accounting and to prevent fraud. SOX consists of 11 chapters‚ or titles‚ which establish wideranging new regulations for auditors‚ CEOs and CFOs‚ boards of directors‚ investment analysts‚ and investment banks. These regulations are designed to ensure that (a) companies that perform audits are sufficiently independent of the companies that they audit‚ (b) a key executive in
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Unit 4 Assignment Abstract In this assignment I will be looking at what Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 is and why it came to be. How SOX has affected the accounting and auditing industry and what the benefits and costs are and what changes have happened or should happen moving into the future with SOX. Unit 4 Assignment A family man has invested a portion of his retirement into a growing stock
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The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act‚ Pub.L. 107-204‚ July 30‚ 2002‚ 116 Stat. 745‚ July 30‚ 2002) was enacted by Congress in the wake of corporate and accounting scandals that led to bankruptcies‚ severe stock losses‚ and a loss of confidence in the Stock Market. The act imposes new responsibilities on corporate management and criminal sanctions on those managers who flout the law. It makes Securities fraud a serious federal crime and also
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Whistleblowing and Sarbanes-Oxley Daniel A. Sievers Professor: Joe McGirt Strayer University LEG 500 10/20/2014 Abstract The purpose of this paper is to discuss the essential characteristics of whistleblowers and how organizations take action against them. Whistleblower is a person who exposes unethical behavior or criminal activity occurring in an organization. Companies deal with whistleblowing in many different ways‚ and it effects the company and the employee in significant ways. Companies
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Student’s Name | __________________ | Professor’s Name | __________________ | Course Title | __________________ | Date | __________________ | SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002(SOX) Introduction to SOX: Financial Analysis involves evaluation of business‚ budgets‚ projects etc to ensure stability‚ liquidity‚ and solvency and at last profitability of the business in presence of domestic and global macro-economic environment to determine suitability of investment. This evaluation is not completely
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Isolating Sarbanes-Oxley Section 404(b) effect on audit fees and market liquidity: a natural experiment. Premalata Sundaram* PDBP 2010 University of Florida August 23‚ 2010 Abstract Since the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) of 2002‚ a large body of evidence has accumulated on the costs this legislation has imposed on public companies in the United States. Estimates of the direct costs of the law have been fairly straightforward to measure‚ but the indirect costs of the legislation
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Sarbanes-Oxley Act Matthew Greenwell Professor Eric Weitner XACC-291 January 23‚ 2015 In any society there will be people that will do anything to succeed in life which includes breaking the law or even finding loop holes within laws. Now the Sarbanes-Oxley Act is a federal law to try and protect shareholders and the general public from fraudulent practices but in the end it is just a law and all laws can be broken. Some critics have pointed out the “Madoff scandal as a prime example of how the
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