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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

STATEMENT OF HARVEY L. PITT, CHAIRMAN

PREPARED STATEMENT

Senator HOLLINGS. The committee will next hear from Harvey L. Pitt, the Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Chairman Pitt, the committee welcomes you, and we would be delighted to receive your statement at this time in its entirety, if you wish, or you can file it and highlight it, as you wish.

Mr. PITT. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, and Senator Gregg. I would ask that my full statement be included in the record, and I have a few opening remarks, if that is okay.

Senator HOLLINGS. Yes, sir.

[The statement follows:]

PREPARED STATEMENT OF HARVEY L. PITT

Chairman Hollings, Senator Gregg, and Members of the Subcommittee: Thank you for the opportunity to testify before you today on behalf of the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding the President's fiscal 2003 budget request. This is the first time I have appeared before this Subcommittee, and I want to begin by expressing my gratitude, and that of the entire SEC, for the tremendous bipartisan support this Subcommittee has given the Commission over the years. I look forward to continuing this strong and positive working relationship.

The past year has tested the mettle and resiliency of our country, our markets, and the investing public's confidence. At a time when the complexity of our financial markets continues to grow unabated, and the number of Americans who participate in them is steadily increasing, the Commission must ensure that its traditional high standards are not compromised. The goal of the SEC is to ensure that our financial markets are transparent and fair to all investors, and to do so, we must make certain that the public is adequately informed about investing and that corporate America provides the disclosure investors need to make fully informed decisions based on sound and reliable information. An integral part of our investor protection efforts is the SEC's aggressive law enforcement program, which protects investors from fraudulent and unfair practices. Given this backdrop, it is therefore critical that the SEC have the resources it needs to fulfill its multiple missions.

I was privileged to spend the first ten years of my career as a lawyer at the SEC. When I returned there last fall, 23 years later, I had hoped to have the opportunity to perform an in-depth review of the Commission's operations, effectiveness, and resource needs prior to beginning the fiscal 2003 budget process. With the events of September 11th, the destruction of our Northeast Regional Office, and the recent bankruptcy of Enron, I have not had this chance. Yet all of these events have demonstrated just how critical the Nation's capital markets are to national security, and the essential role of the SEC.

FUNDING LEVEL

The President's budget requests an appropriation of $466.9 million for the Commission in fiscal 2003. This amount excludes $13 million that would be provided to the SEC to fund the Administration's retirement accrual proposal, if enacted. The

2003 appropriation request is therefore approximately 6.6 percent more than our fiscal 2002 budget of $437.9 million.1

This proposed funding level provides the SEC with a "zero-growth” budget in that it provides no new staff and only modest amounts for the SEC's e-government and information technology initiatives, telecommunications systems, and security enhancements. The Commission has not received a staffing increase in the last two years, despite the additional responsibilities we have received as a result of enactment of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley financial services modernization act. If the SEC remains at its current staffing level, the agency will be required to continue to divert resources from other program areas to meet our enforcement needs and to address the additional initiatives we are undertaking to improve financial reporting and disclosure.

PAY PARITY

Although the Commission requested full funding for "pay parity" in fiscal 2003, as authorized by the “Investor and Capital Markets Fee Relief Act” (Public Law 107-123), enacted this January, the Administration's proposed funding level provides no new money to implement this vitally important program. We estimate that an additional $76 million is needed to provide pay parity for the agency in fiscal 2003.2 At this critical time for the Nation's financial markets, the SEČ must be able to keep our most experienced, talented, valuable and productive employees. The only way I believe we can do that is to provide staff with pay parity at levels comparable to those with whom they regularly work at the other federal financial regulatory agencies.

Since the Senate confirmed me this past August, pay parity has been and remains my highest budget priority. In making this funding request, I am grateful to have bipartisan backing from the Chairman and Ranking Member of the SEC's Senate oversight body, the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. Notably, in the past month, Chairman Paul Sarbanes and Senator Phil Gramm both have called for full funding of pay parity. Chairman Sarbanes and Senator Gramm have pointed out that this is a crucial time in the development and strategic future direction of our capital markets. The SEC cannot afford to continue suffering the staffing crisis it has endured for the past decade at such an important juncture. Pay parity provides benefits we truly need to meet the increasing regulatory challenges we face. If we receive funding for pay parity, I want to assure you that the SEC intends to make responsible increases in staff salaries and benefits to ensure the appropriate use of merit and performance-based principles. Our $76 million cost estimate represents a conservative approach that is lower than the amount that we believe would be required to match what several of the banking agencies currently provide. A fully implemented system identical to the FDIC model, for example, could easily cost more than $100 million. We do not intend to provide large-scale, across-theboard increases. Instead, we intend to base our system on the intent of Congress and begin a modest, considered approach to pay parity that we can assess responsibly before including additional benefits. Merit will be an integral component of any program we put in place.

However, I want to make emphatically clear that failure to fund pay parity now would only exacerbate the problems that the legislation passed by Congress last December was intended to cure. By raising expectations and hopes in anticipation of finally achieving pay parity, I believe we will face even greater employee losses and suffer greater irreparable harm to morale if pay parity is not funded in fiscal 2003, and thereafter. Even if we can cobble together a pay parity program for the remainder of this fiscal year, which OMB has said it would support, the threat of either terminating the program in fiscal 2003 or terminating approximately 700 employees-the number we estimate would have to be cut from the agency to continue the program-would cripple many of the projects we have underway, which are important for the protection of investors and Americans whose retirement accounts are invested in the securities of public companies.

So, if there is one message I can leave with you today, it is: Please, please fully fund pay parity for the SEC in fiscal 2003.

1In fiscal 2002, the Commission also received a supplemental appropriation of $20.7 million to cover some of the costs associated with rebuilding our Northeast Regional Office and increasing security agency-wide.

2 In fiscal 2001, the Commission received approval and funding to implement "special pay" to help begin addressing our recruitment and attrition problems. In fiscal 2002, we also received funding to continue special pay. The appropriation proposal for fiscal 2003 provides $19 million to fund special pay. We estimate that an additional $76 million is needed to fund pay parity for fiscal 2003.

ADDITIONAL STAFFING NEEDS

Because of recent events, we need to restore full confidence in our capital markets, and I believe we cannot do that without additional personnel. Accordingly, in addition to requesting additional funds needed to implement pay parity, I am requesting that the 2003 staffing level be increased by 100 positions to meet our im.mediate resource needs. Although I intend to make a strategic, agency-wide assessment of resource needs over the next several months in preparation for the fiscal 2004 budget, with the goal of identifying efficiencies that we can introduce, I have been able to identify some immediate needs that I hope this Subcommittee will consider funding in fiscal 2003. These 100 positions would allow us to add: -35 accountants and lawyers in the Division of Enforcement to deal with the increasing workload from financial fraud and reporting cases. To give you a sense of scale of this increasing workload, consider that over the first two months of this year, the Division of Enforcement has opened 49 cases investigating financial fraud and reporting, compared to 18 cases that were opened over the same time period last year.

-30 professional staff, including accountants and lawyers, in the Division of Corporation Finance to expand, improve and expedite our review of periodic filings. Our Division of Corporation Finance has undertaken to monitor the annual reports submitted by all Fortune 500 companies that file periodic reports with the Commission in 2002. This new initiative, which we announced in December, significantly expands the Division's review of financial and non-financial disclosures made by public companies.

-35 accountants, lawyers, and other professionals in the other divisions-including the Office of Chief Accountant-to deal with new programmatic needs and policy.

Under a pay parity system, this increased staffing level will require an additional $15 million to our budget request. These are the minimum staffing levels I believe we require to deal with our immediate post-Enron needs. I will be examining closely our need for resources throughout the agency and expect that our 2004 budget request, even with identified efficiencies, may reflect other increases, particularly in our examination program to meet our goals for timely and frequent on-site exams of investment companies and advisers, broker-dealers, and the exchanges. The remainder of my testimony addresses initiatives we are undertaking in the areas of enforcement, corporate disclosure and accounting, investor education and technology.

REAL-TIME ENFORCEMENT

One of our major new initiatives-"real-time" enforcement-is an important component of our fiscal 2003 budget. Our goal is to provide quicker, and more effective, protection for investors, and better oversight of the markets with our limited enforcement resources. As recent experience has reinforced, the SEC must resolve cases and investigations before investors' funds vanish forever; that means we must act more quickly, both in identifying violations and taking prompt corrective action to protect investors. Faster enforcement can help prevent continued fleecing of public investors and dissipation of assets, and will promote investor confidence in the integrity of our markets. As a result, you will see us moving faster to obtain temporary restraining orders, freezes of assets, and appointment of court monitors to oversee enterprises that commit, or used to commit, securities fraud. These efforts necessarily require resources, the most important of which is appropriate staffing. An immediate staffing increase of 35 accountants and lawyers in our Division of Enforcement, which I have already outlined, would strengthen our real-time enforcement program, especially in the area of financial fraud and reporting cases, which involve complex and time-consuming investigations.

DISCLOSURE AND ACCOUNTING

Recent events also have underscored the need for public companies to have a strong commitment to full disclosure, accounting and compliance with all regulatory regimes to which their companies are subject. In his State of the Union Address, the President appropriately demanded "stricter accounting standards and tougher disclosure requirements." He also stated that he wants corporate America to "be made more accountable to employees and shareholders and held to the highest standard of conduct." The SEC shares and embraces these principles, and I am firmly committed to making them a reality.

Recently, we announced our intention to propose changes in corporate disclosure rules as the first in a series of steps designed to improve our financial reporting and

disclosure system. The proposed rules would require companies to report additional critical information on a current basis and in a complete manner, such as transactions by company insiders, critical accounting policies, and changes in rating agency decisions. They also would expedite the filing of existing periodic reports. While these proposed rules would only be a first step, they will provide the most dramatic and significant improvements in our disclosure system in at least two decades, and they can be implemented quickly while other, more sweeping proposals are considered. During the remainder of 2002, we anticipate proposing further comprehensive reform proposals covering financial reporting and disclosure requirements, accounting standard setting, regulation of the auditing process and profession and corporate governance. These initiatives include the following:

-A "current" disclosure system.-Investors need current information, not just periodic disclosures. We want investors to have an accurate and current view of the posture of their company, as seen through the eyes of management. Public companies should be required to make affirmative disclosures of unquestionably material information in real time, including providing updates to prior disclosures. -Public company disclosure of significant current "trend" and "evaluative" data.— Providing current trend and evaluative data would enable investors to assess a company's evolving financial posture. This information, upon which corporate executives and bankers already base critical decisions, can be presented without confusing or misleading investors, prejudicing legitimate corporate interests or exposing companies to unfair assertions of liability.

-Clear and informative financial statements.-Investors, and employees concerned with preserving and increasing their savings and retirement funds, deserve comprehensive financial reports they can easily and quickly interpret and understand.

-Conscientious identification and assessment of critical accounting principles.— Public companies should be required to identify the most critical accounting principles upon which a company's financial status depends, and which involve the most complex, subjective, or ambiguous assessments. Investors should be told, concisely and clearly, how these principles are applied, and should be informed about a range of possible effects in differing applications of these principles. -More meaningful investor protection by audit committees.-Audit committees must be proactive, not merely reactive, to ensure the quality and integrity of corporate financial reports. Especially critical is the need to improve interaction between audit committee members and senior management and outside auditors. Audit committees must understand why critical accounting principles were chosen, how they were applied, and have a basis to believe the end result fairly presents the company's actual status.

-Effective oversight of those who audit public_companies.—-We are firmly committed to taking a lead role in assuring that the accounting profession functions properly, expeditiously and in the public interest. To that end, we are addressing how best to restructure the regulatory system that governs the accounting profession. We envision a regulatory body that will assume responsibility for auditor and accountant discipline and quality control. A substantial majority of its members would be unaffiliated with the accounting profession, and the oversight body would be funded not by the accounting profession but from the pri-Ensuring those entrusted with the important public responsibility of auditing public companies are single-minded in their devotion to the public interest, and not subject to conflicts that might confuse or divert them.-Those who perform audits must be truly independent and in particular must not be subject to the conflict of increasing their own compensation at the risk of ensuring the public's protection. Their fidelity to the cause of full, fair and understandable financial reporting must be ironclad and unequivocal.

vate sector.

These are just some of the initiatives that we are working on, both on our own and together with Congress, the President's Working Group, investor groups and other SEC constituents to improve corporate disclosure and accounting. These initiatives, if done properly and responsibly, will require additional resources to plan and implement, if we are to keep up with our existing, on-going responsibilities at the same time.

Regrettably, at this time, I cannot give you even an estimate of those costs. As I stated at the outset of my testimony, I plan to conduct a top-to-bottom review of the way the Commission currently allocates its resources, with the intention of making better use of our existing resources. But, in light of the events of the past six

months, I think it is foreseeable that the SEC will require additional funding to implement improvements to our corporate disclosure and accounting systems.

INVESTOR EDUCATION

Even with our shift toward real-time enforcement and our current efforts to improve financial disclosure, the first line of defense against fraud is always an educated investor. The Commission works with numerous public and private organizations to foster investor educational programs. Our staff gives presentations to countless schools, religious organizations, and investor clubs, explaining basic investing concepts and answering questions. We also host "Investor Town Meetings" across the United States, that bring together industry, federal, and local government officials to educate investors on basic financial concepts. And this spring we will host our first "Investor's Summit," to discuss policies and proposals that impact them. We want to give all Americans an opportunity and an avenue to weigh in on the broad policy objectives that ultimately could impact their ability to send their children to college or retire comfortably. We plan to use the Internet to broadcast the summit so that anyone can participate. We also are asking people to write us and call us so that we can hear the broadest possible range of viewpoints. We want to hear the concerns and aspirations of America's investors.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Like the rest of the government, our needs in the area of information technology continue to increase. Given the critical and increasing role of technology in the financial markets, the President's budget requests $4.0 million to fund the SEC's egovernment initiatives. This is an area where the Commission needs to improve, both internally and externally. Technology is constantly altering the landscape of our markets, and SEC staff must have the necessary tools at their disposal to successfully meet the increasing demands that we face. In particular, funds proposed for fiscal 2003 will allow the SEC to get better and more timely enforcement information from the markets, enhance our intrusion detection capabilities, and meet the President's security requirements for information technology. These initiatives are a small, but important, first step toward meeting the Commission's technology needs.

With the advent of alternative trading systems that have grown from only a handful to over 60 today, and as a result of the Internet, the SEC also must consider what effect our regulatory actions and decisions have on the industry's use of technology. To respond to this need, we are seeking a Chief Technology Officer to provide the Commission with the technical expertise and advice necessary to improve the Commission's oversight of the markets. On February 4, 2002, I sent you a reprogramming request that lays out in detail the proposed activities of this office. Generally, this office will be responsible for ensuring that the SEC's regulatory, disclosure, examination, and law enforcement programs are implemented with the benefit of a state of the art understanding of technology. Through this process, the agency can be confident that what we implement or approve is technologically sound and cost effective to the private sector.

FUNDING STRUCTURE

Last, I would be remiss if I did not take this chance to thank you for your support in helping enact the fee reduction/pay parity legislation that I discussed earlier in my testimony. This new law is extremely important to the SEC and the securities industry, which has consistently supported both fee reduction and pay parity. The new legislation not only reduces potential excess fees paid by investors and provides authority for pay parity for the Commission's staff, but also provides the SEC with a stable, long-term funding structure, which is consistent with the original fee structure implemented to fund the SEC.

Under the fee reduction/pay parity legislation, the Commission is slated to collect a total of $1.33 billion in offsetting collections in fiscal 2003, $180 million more than this year's estimate. Even after funding pay parity and the additional positions described above, the Commission will still collect $772 million more in fees than its fiscal 2003 budget request.

The fee reduction/pay parity legislation requires the Commission to adjust fee rates on a periodic basis after consulting with the Congressional Budget Office and the Office of Management and Budget. While the fee rates are going to be higher than anticipated in the short term, due to changes in the economy and declines in market indices since CBO developed its original dollar volume estimates over a year ago, we firmly believe that over the longer term the fee reduction legislation will provide the investing public with the benefits and security it was designed to pro

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