99-150. Supervisory Committee Audits and Verifications  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 3 (Wednesday, January 6, 1999)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 776-784]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-150]
    
    
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    Proposed Rules
                                                    Federal Register
    ________________________________________________________________________
    
    This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of 
    the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these 
    notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in 
    the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
    
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    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 3 / Wednesday, January 6, 1999 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
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    NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
    
    12 CFR Parts 701, 715 and 741
    
    
    Supervisory Committee Audits and Verifications
    
    AGENCY: National Credit Union Administration.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Credit Union Membership Access Act has amended certain 
    audit and financial reporting requirements of the Federal Credit Union 
    Act. The National Credit Union Administration solicits public comment 
    on proposed rules implementing those amendments. The amendments specify 
    the minimum annual audit a credit union is required to obtain according 
    to its charter type and asset size, the licensing authority required of 
    persons performing certain audits, the auditing principles which apply 
    to certain audits, and the accounting principles which must be followed 
    in reports filed with the NCUA Board.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 8, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to Becky Baker, Secretary of the 
    Board. Mail or hand deliver comments to: National Credit Union 
    Administration Board, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 22314-3428. You 
    may fax comments to (703) 518-6319. You may E-mail comments to 
    boardmail@ncua.gov. Please send comments by one method only.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen Kelbly, Program Officer, Office 
    of Examination and Insurance, at (703) 518-6360, or Steven W. Widerman, 
    Trial Attorney, Office of General Counsel, at (703) 518-6540, at the 
    above address.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Current Supervisory Committee Audit Requirements
    
        Two of the duties that Sec. 115 of the Federal Credit Union Act 
    (FCUA), 12 U.S.C. 1761d, imposes on the Supervisory Committee of a 
    federally-insured credit union are: (1) to ``make or cause to be made 
    an annual audit'' of the credit union; and (2) to ``cause the passbooks 
    and accounts of the members to be verified with the records of the 
    treasurer from time to time, and not less frequently than once every 
    two years.'' Current Sec. 701.12 of NCUA's rules and regulations, 12 
    CFR 701.12, sets forth the Supervisory Committee's responsibilities in 
    meeting the audit and verification requirements of FCUA 115.
        Current Sec. 701.12 requires a Supervisory Committee to perform, or 
    engage another to perform an annual supervisory committee audit. The 
    scope of the audit must include a level of audit testing based on the 
    Supervisory Committee's assessment of control risk. Sec. 701.12(c)(3). 
    If the Committee engages an independent, compensated auditor to perform 
    the credit union's audit, the terms and conditions must be memorialized 
    in an engagement letter. Sec. 701.12(d). Whether produced by the 
    Committee itself or received from an independent auditor, a written 
    report of the audit must be submitted to the board of directors and, 
    upon request, to NCUA. Sec. 701.12(e). The Committee is responsible for 
    maintaining the audit working papers and/or ensuring that they will be 
    accessible to NCUA. Sec. 701.12(e). It also must conduct a verification 
    of members' accounts against the records of the credit union using 
    prescribed sampling methods. Sec. 701.12(h). The requirements of 
    Sec. 701.12 apply to Federally-insured State-chartered credit unions 
    (``FISCUs''), 12 CFR 741.202, both as a prerequisite for share 
    insurance and under NCUA's administrative powers. 12 U.S.C. 1781(b)(9), 
    1789(a)(11). The NCUA may impose sanctions against a credit union which 
    violates these audit rules. Sec. 701.12(f).
        Additional audit remedies are available against federal credit 
    unions by statute, 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(A), as added by the Financial 
    Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act, Pub. L. No. 101-73, 
    103 Stat. 482 (1989). Current Sec. 701.13 of NCUA's rules and 
    regulations, 12 CFR 701.13, establishes three conditions under which 
    the NCUA Board may compel a federal credit union to use an outside, 
    independent State-licensed auditor, Sec. 701.13(a)(1)-(2). One of these 
    conditions also may be the basis for compelling a federal credit union 
    to obtain a financial statement audit (performed by an independent 
    State-licensed auditor). Sec. 701.13(a)(3), (b)-(c). These sanctions 
    also are available against FISCUs under current Sec. 701.12(f)(ii). 
    NCUA is permitted to treat the failure to use an independent State-
    licensed auditor or to obtain a financial statement audit, when ordered 
    to do so, as an unsafe and unsound practice for purposes of terminating 
    the credit union's insurance. 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(B) and 1786(b).
    
    B. New Statutory Audit Requirements
    
        Section 201(a) of the Credit Union Membership Access Act (CUMAA), 
    Pub. L. No. 105-219, 112 Stat. 918 (1998), has now added two new 
    subsections to section 202(a)(6) of the FCUA, 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(C) 
    and (D). Subsection (C) addresses accounting principles; it generally 
    requires credit unions having assets of $10 million or more to follow 
    generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in all reports or 
    statements filed with the NCUA Board.\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(C). The 
    NCUA Board, and State credit union supervisors under applicable 
    statutes, are given the authority to require credit unions having less 
    than $10 million in assets to follow GAAP. 12 U.S.C. 
    1782(a)(6)(C)(iii).
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        \1\ In lieu of GAAP, the NCUA Board may prescribe ``an 
    accounting principle * * * that is no less stringent than [GAAP].'' 
    12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(C)(ii).
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        Subsection (D) imposes audit requirements for large federally-
    insured credit unions-those having assets of $500 million or more. A 
    credit union at or above that level of assets, whether State- or 
    Federally-chartered, is required to obtain an annual independent audit 
    of its financial statements performed in accordance with generally 
    accepted auditing standards (GAAS). Furthermore, that audit must be 
    performed by an independent certified public accountant or public 
    accountant licensed to do so by the appropriate State or jurisdiction. 
    12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(D)(i). (This audit engagement is popularly termed 
    an ``opinion audit,''
    
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    but is hereinafter referred to as a ``financial statement audit.'')
        A federally-chartered credit union having total assets of less than 
    $500 million but more than $10 million is subject to only one 
    requirement under subsection (D). If that credit union elects to obtain 
    the financial statement audit required of a credit union having assets 
    of $500 million or more, the audit must be performed consistent with 
    the accountancy laws and licensing requirements of the appropriate 
    State or jurisdiction.\2\ 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(D)(ii). The appropriate 
    State or jurisdiction normally will be the State in which the credit 
    union is located.
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        \2\ According to the CCH Accountancy Law Reporter, State-
    licensing requirements for persons who perform audits are as 
    follows:
         4 states permit anyone to render accounting and 
    auditing services but restrict the use of the titles ``Certified 
    Public Accountant'' (CPA) and Public Accountant (PA) to persons 
    licensed as such (Arizona, Kansas, North Carolina, and Wyoming).
         36 states have a ``grandfathered'' class of licensed 
    accountants--non CPAs who were practicing public accounting on the 
    effective date of their current accountancy laws.
         10 states license a class of accountants in addition to 
    CPAs variously entitled ``accounting practitioner,'' ``registered 
    public accountant,'' ``licensed public accountant,'' or ``public 
    accountants'' (Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Montana, 
    Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, and Vermont).
         All 50 states allow unlicensed persons to provide the 
    general public with a variety of accounting and bookkeeping 
    services, including the preparation of financial statements without 
    reports, provided that such individuals do not use certain titles, 
    perform services prohibited by law, or otherwise hold themselves out 
    as licensed by the State.
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        Subsection (D) imposes no audit requirements on federally-chartered 
    credit unions having total assets of less than $500 million but more 
    than $10 million which do not voluntarily elect to obtain a financial 
    statement audit performed in accordance with GAAS (as credit unions 
    having assets of $500 million or more must obtain under subsection 
    (D)(i)). See Sec. 715.2(f) (GAAS definition). Only in the case of a 
    financial statement audit performed in accordance with GAAS, whether by 
    choice or by law, do State accountancy laws and licensing requirements 
    apply.\3\ Subsection (D) is silent regarding audits of federally-
    chartered credit unions having assets of $10 million or less, and 
    FISCUs having assets of less than $500 million.
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        \3\ Section 202(a)(6)(D)(ii), 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(D)(ii), 
    provides: ``If a Federal credit union that is not required to 
    conduct an audit under clause (i), and that has total assets of more 
    than $10,000,000 conducts such an audit for any purpose, using an 
    independent auditor who is compensated for this or her audit 
    services with respect to that audit, the audit shall be performed 
    consistent with the accountancy laws of the appropriate State or 
    jurisdiction, including licensing requirements.'' (emphasis added.) 
    ``Such an audit'' refers back to ``an audit under clause (i)'' of 
    section 202(a)(6)(D). A clause (i) audit is a financial statement 
    audit performed in accordance with GAAS. The clause (ii) requirement 
    to follow State accountancy and licensing laws is triggered only 
    when a credit union voluntarily chooses a financial statement audit.
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        The threshold set by subsection (D) at $500 million for requiring a 
    financial statement audit puts federally-insured credit unions in 
    parity with other federally-insured depository institutions. 
    Institutions supervised by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 
    the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Office of Comptroller of the 
    Currency, and the Federal Reserve Board are required to obtain a 
    financial statement audit if they have assets of $500 million or 
    more.\4\ 12 CFR part 363. For institutions having assets of less than 
    $500 million, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council 
    (FFIEC) recently proposed audit options identical or similar to those 
    proposed here. FFIEC, Policy Statement on External Auditing Programs of 
    Banks and Savings Associations, 63 FR 7796 (Feb. 17, 1998) (FFIEC 
    Policy Statement).
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        \4\ The statute authorizing 12 CFR 363, originally established a 
    $150 million asset floor for requiring a financial statement audit. 
    12 U.S.C. 1831m(j)(2). However, the banking agencies exercised their 
    statutory authority to increase the asset floor to $500 million, 
    thereby exempting two-thirds of all institutions required under 
    Sec. 1831m to obtain a financial statement audit. 12 CFR 363.1(a); 
    58 FR 31332 (June 2, 1993).
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    II. Section-Within-Subject Analysis of Proposed Rule
    
        For ease of access to the proposed rules implementing section 201 
    of CUMAA, NCUA has consolidated and restructured its current audit 
    rule. Current sections 701.12 [supervisory committee audits and 
    verifications] and 701.13 [requirements for an outside audit] have been 
    eliminated and the surviving provisions of each have been combined in a 
    proposed new Part 715 of NCUA's rules and regulations [supervisory 
    committee audits and verifications], 12 CFR 715. Part 715 incorporates 
    the statutory auditing requirements introduced in CUMAA. The references 
    within section 741.202 have been revised to apply Part 715 to FISCUs. 
    See 12 U.S.C. 1781(b)(9), 1789(a)(11) (application to FISCUs). Section 
    741.6 [financial and statistical and other reports], 12 CFR 741.6, 
    remains intact but for the revision of Call Report filing dates in 
    subsection (a) and the introduction of new subsections (b) and (c) 
    requiring the use of GAAP in those reports.
    
    A. Scope and Definitions
    
        Section 715.1--Scope of This Part. For the convenience of the 
    reader, this section provides a guide to what is, and is not, covered 
    in proposed Part 715. Citations to statutory authority are included. 
    This section makes clear that both the new and existing auditing 
    regulations are combined within the scope of this Part. It directs the 
    reader to Part 741.6 for regulations revising certain Call Report 
    filing dates and mandating GAAP as the measurement requirement for Call 
    Reports.
        Section 715.2--Definitions Used In This Part. This section imports 
    all of the defined terms from current Sec. 701.12(a) that will be used 
    in this Part. All but one of the imported definitions are virtually 
    identical in form and substance to their predecessors. The exception is 
    the definition of ``State-licensed person'' at Sec. 715.2(k), which has 
    been revised to reflect the statutory language in 12 U.S.C. 
    1782(a)(6)(D). Two new terms are introduced in this section which refer 
    to new audit options in Sec. 715.9(a)-(b)--``balance sheet audit'' as 
    defined at Sec. 715.2(a), and ``review and evaluation of internal 
    controls'' as defined at Sec. 715.2(j). This section identifies 
    alternative terms which are popularly used in place of defined 
    technical terms, although popular terms are not used in this Part. See, 
    e.g., Sec. 715.2(d) and (l). In many instances within the substantive 
    text of the rules a defined term is expanded to include a phrase from 
    the definition of that term. The purpose of this is to reduce the need 
    for readers to cross-reference this section for definitions when 
    reading the substantive provisions of this Part.
    
    B. Supervisory Committee Responsibilities
    
        Section 715.3--General Responsibilities of the Supervisory 
    Committee. This section divides the Supervisory Committee's 
    responsibilities into three categories. Subsection (a) sets forth the 
    Committee's two basic, overall duties--to ensure that required 
    financial reporting objectives are met and safeguards are in place to 
    protect members' assets. To carry out these basic responsibilities, 
    subsection (b) sets forth four specific criteria which the Committee 
    must oversee--internal controls, accurate preparation of records and 
    reports, administration of plans, policies and control procedures, and 
    the adequacy of those plans, policies and procedures to protect the 
    credit union against wrongdoing. Finally, subsection (c) sets forth 
    four specific actions the Supervisory Committee must take to
    
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    fulfill its responsibilities--ensure that management properly prepares 
    and files reports with the NCUA Board (e.g., Forms 5300 and 5310 Call 
    Reports per 12 CFR 741.6), obtain a supervisory committee audit 
    annually, conduct a verification of members' passbooks and accounts, 
    and ensure that the credit union complies with this Part. This section 
    is similar in substance to current Sec. 701.12(b) except for revisions 
    to conform to the supervisory committee audit options in Sec. 715.9(c).
        Section 715.4--Audit Responsibility of the Supervisory Committee. 
    This section sets forth the specific audit responsibilities of the 
    Supervisory Committee of a federally insured credit union. Subsection 
    (a), which restates the annual audit requirement in 12 U.S.C. 1761d, 
    parallels current Sec. 701.12(c)(1). Subsection (b) is the first of 
    several places in this Part which point out that, regardless of the 
    asset and charter criteria in the immediately following sections, a 
    financial statement audit is always considered to fall within the 
    definition of a supervisory committee audit, Sec. 715.2(m) , and if 
    performed adequately, will always satisfy a credit union's audit 
    responsibility. For those credit unions that do not choose to obtain a 
    financial statement audit, subsection (c) introduces minimum audit 
    requirements according to asset size and charter type. For the 
    convenience of the reader, these are summarized in a diagram preceding 
    Sec. 715.5, the first of four sections setting forth minimum audit 
    requirements.
    
    C. Minimum Audit Requirements
    
        Section 715.5--Audit of Federally-Insured Credit Unions Having 
    Total Assets of $500 Million or Greater. This section sets forth the 
    new ``large credit union audit requirement'' imposed by CUMAA. 12 
    U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(D)(i). Credit unions having total assets of $500 
    million or greater, whether State-or Federally-chartered, must obtain a 
    financial statement audit to satisfy their supervisory committee audit 
    responsibility. By definition, a financial statement audit must be 
    performed in accordance with GAAS, and must be performed by a person 
    who is licensed to do so by an appropriate State or jurisdiction, i.e., 
    in which the credit union is located. This section imposes the single 
    most significant revision to current Sec. 701.12--establishing the 
    financial statement audit as the minimum audit for large credit unions. 
    The effect of this section is to codify the level of audit engagement 
    that nearly all of the affected credit unions already obtain 
    voluntarily.
        Section 715.6--Audit of Federally-Insured State-Chartered Credit 
    Unions Having Total Assets of Less Than $500 Million. This section 
    addresses Federally-insured State-chartered credit unions (FISCUs) 
    only, which have total assets of less than $500 million and thus are 
    not considered to be ``large credit unions'' for purposes of 
    Sec. 715.4. CUMAA is silent regarding audits of credit unions in this 
    category. Accordingly, this section provides that a FISCU having assets 
    of less than $500 million may fulfill its supervisory committee audit 
    responsibility either by ``obtain[ing] an annual supervisory committee 
    audit as prescribed in section 715.9 or 715.4(b), or an audit as 
    prescribed by the State or jurisdiction in which the credit union is 
    located, whichever is more stringent.'' \5\ (Emphasis added.) 
    Theoretically, this presents the FISCU with a choice among three audit 
    options-a financial statement audit, one of the Sec. 715.9 options, or 
    a State-prescribed audit. Unless the credit union voluntarily chooses 
    to obtain a financial statement audit, however, the result is 
    effectively predetermined simply by whether the audit prescribed by 
    State law or regulation is ``more stringent'' than that available under 
    Sec. 715.9(c).\6\
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        \5\ The doctrine of Federal preemption permits NCUA to establish 
    minimum audit requirements for federally-insured credit unions, as 
    Sec. 715.9 does, which preempt conflicting audit requirements 
    prescribed by State law or regulation. However, this does not 
    preclude the States from imposing additional,non-conflicting audit 
    requirements on FISCUs, making their audits ``more stringent'' that 
    those NCUA prescribes.
        For purposes of clarification to aid the reader, this preamble 
    and proposed rule expressly references certain powers that Federal 
    law and NCUA regulations grant to the States (or their credit union 
    supervisors),  e.g., Secs. 715.6, 741.6(b); 12 U.S.C. 
    1782(a)(6)(C)(iii). The absence of express reference to State powers 
    elsewhere in this preamble and proposed rule does not diminish or 
    preclude the power of States to act pursuant to State laws that do 
    not conflict with Federal law or NCUA rules. See, e.g., Colo. Rev. 
    Stat. Sec. 11-30-106(3); Wash Rev. Code Sec. 31.12.569 (authorizing 
    Statute supervisory authority to require FISCUs to follow GAAP or 
    other standards).
        \6\ NCUA does not define ``stringent'' except to suggest that it 
    might involve enhanced audit scope and depth. ``Stringent'' is not 
    defined in 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(C)(iii), which refers to an 
    accounting principle that is ``no less stringent'' than GAAP.
        In comparison to NCUA's current supervisory committee audit 
    rule, Sec. 701.12, State-prescribed audits for credit unions 
    generally fall into three categories: (1) States which prescribe 
    audits substantially similar to 12 U.S.C. 1761d and/or Sec. 701.12; 
    (2) States which prescribe audits which differ in some respects from 
    12 U.S.C. 1761d and/or Sec. 701.12, but which are not necessarily 
    ``more stringent,'' including four States which determine the type 
    of audit by asset size, e.g., Mich. Comp. Laws Sec. 490.11(2); and 
    (3) States in which a financial statement audit is prescribed for 
    certain credit unions.
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        Section 715.7--Audit of Federally-Chartered Credit Unions Having 
    Total Assets of Less Than $500 Million But More Than $10 Million. This 
    section addresses Federally-chartered credit unions only, which have 
    total assets of less than $500 million but more than $10 million. It 
    provides that a credit union which does not choose to obtain a 
    financial statement audit under Sec. 715.4(b) must obtain a supervisory 
    committee audit under Sec. 715.9. Credit unions in this category are 
    allowed to voluntarily obtain a financial statement audit. If a credit 
    union voluntarily chooses to obtain a financial statement audit, the 
    audit must be performed consistent with the accountancy laws and 
    licensing requirements of the State in which the credit union is 
    located. See supra note 3 and accompanying text. By its terms, this is 
    the only requirement that 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(D)(ii) imposes on credit 
    unions in this category. Nothing in that provision restricts a credit 
    union from using the alternatives to a financial statement audit that 
    are available in Sec. 715.9.
        Section 715.8--Audit of Federally-Chartered Credit Unions Having 
    Less Than $10 Million. CUMAA is silent about audits of federally-
    chartered credit unions having less than $10 million in assets. 
    Accordingly, this section requires credit unions in this category to 
    obtain a supervisory committee audit under Sec. 715.9.
        Section 715.9--Supervisory Committee Audit Requirements If Not A 
    Financial Statement Audit. This section applies to federally-insured 
    credit unions that are not required, and have not chosen, to obtain a 
    financial statement audit. Three options are provided for credit unions 
    in this category to fulfill their supervisory committee audit 
    responsibility, two of which are analogous to options proposed by the 
    FFIEC for other Federally-insured financial institutions.
        The first option is an ``opinion on the balance sheet'' of the 
    credit union. Sec. 715.9(a). Like a financial statement audit, this 
    engagement must be performed in accordance with GAAS by a person who is 
    licensed by State law to do so. This engagement consists of an 
    examination of assets, liabilities and equity and requires an opinion 
    by the auditor on the fairness of the balance sheet only. (In contrast, 
    a financial statement audit requires an opinion addressing additional 
    financial statements such as the income statement, statement of changes 
    in equity (including comprehensive income) and statement of cash 
    flows.) This option is identical to that of the same name proposed by 
    the FFIEC. FFIEC Policy Statement, 63 FR at 7797, 7800.
    
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        The second option is a ``review and evaluation of internal controls 
    over Call Reporting,'' Sec. 715.9(b), which is available to all credit 
    unions but those deemed ``complex'' under 12 U.S.C. 1790d(d)(1) for 
    purposes of prompt corrective action.\7\ This engagement consists of an 
    examination of management's written assertions concerning the 
    effectiveness of internal controls over data reported in Call Reports 
    (NCUA Form 5300) which addresses the following high risk areas: loans, 
    investments, and cash and deposit activity. The result of this 
    engagement is a report by the auditor on management's assertions on the 
    effectiveness of internal controls on the data limited to these high 
    risk areas. This option is comparable to the FFIEC-proposed option of 
    an ``attestation report on internal control assertions.'' 63 FR at 
    7797, 7800.
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        \7\ NCUA is required to adopt rules defining a ``complex'' 
    credit union for prompt corrective action purposes no later than 
    August 7, 2000, to become effective January 1, 2001. CUMAA 
    Sec. 301(d)(2)(B) and (e)(2).
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        The principal difference between NCUA's ``review and evaluation of 
    internal controls over Call Reporting'' and FFIEC's ``attestation 
    report on internal control assertions'' concerns who is qualified to 
    perform the engagement. NCUA's ``review and evaluation'' may be 
    performed by an independent, State-licensed person or other ``qualified 
    person'' unless the credit union is deemed ``complex'' under 12 U.S.C. 
    1790d(d)(1) (in which case only an independent, State-licensed person 
    may perform the engagement). In contrast, FFIEC's ``attestation 
    report'' option always must be performed by an independent, State-
    licensed person. The reason for relaxing the level of qualification for 
    persons performing NCUA's ``review and evaluation of internal controls 
    over Call Reporting'' is that its scope is far narrower than that of 
    FFIEC's ``attestation report.'' The NCUA ``review and evaluation'' is 
    limited to certain data reported in three Call Report schedules--that 
    which concerns loans, investments, and cash and deposit activity. In 
    contrast, FFIEC's ``attestation report'' goes much further--it 
    encompasses ``all or specified schedules of the institution's 
    regulatory reports'' concerning loans and lease financing receivables; 
    past due and nonaccrual loans, leases, and other assets; allowance for 
    credit losses; securities; and in some cases trading assets and 
    liabilities and off-balance sheet items. 63 FR 7800. Accordingly, for a 
    credit union which is not deemed ``complex,'' NCUA permits a ``review 
    and evaluation of internal controls over Call Reporting'' to be 
    performed by a ``qualified person,'' which includes the Supervisory 
    Committee itself, the credit union's internal auditor (provided that 
    person reports directly to the Committee), or by an independent, State-
    licensed person.\8\
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        \8\ Because there are no specific standards to follow in a 
    ``review and evaluation of internal controls over Call Reporting,'' 
    this engagement is subject to an NCUA examiner's finding that the 
    auditor's report is unacceptable on a subjective basis due to, for 
    example, insufficient scope or depth. In that event, the credit 
    union may be required by NCUA to have its audit re-done, either by 
    the same person or by an independent State-licensed person, or to 
    obtain a financial statement audit engagement. Secs. 715.13(a)(2), 
    715.14.
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        The final option offered by NCUA is the audit program prescribed in 
    NCUA's Supervisory Committee Guide (Guide), as revised to conform to 
    Part 715. Sec. 715.9(c). This engagement is similar to a ``Directors' 
    Examination'' used by some Federally-insured banks. Like the ``review 
    and evaluation of internal controls over Call Reporting,'' a Guide 
    engagement may be performed by an independent, State-licensed person or 
    other ``qualified person.'' The Guide will be amended to detail the 
    minimum scope and procedures of the engagement, and to clearly 
    distinguish a Guide engagement from a financial statement audit 
    engagement.
        Credit unions having assets of $500 million or more now must obtain 
    a financial statement audit, and June 1998 NCUA Call Report data shows 
    that 80% of Federally-insured credit unions above $50 million in assets 
    already do so by choice. NCUA encourages all credit unions, regardless 
    of asset size, to obtain financial statement audits,\9\ but recognizes 
    that financial statement audits may not be practical for all credit 
    unions. Accordingly, NCUA seeks to preserve less burdensome audit 
    alternatives for credit unions which do not obtain financial statement 
    audits. NCUA believes this section accomplishes that objective without 
    compromising the Supervisory Committee's ability to carry out its 
    oversight responsibilities.
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        \9\ Credit unions (through their voluntary boards of directors) 
    should recognize that they will receive greater degree of comfort 
    from a financial statement audit performed by a State-licensed 
    person who must follow specific auditing standards, is subject to 
    peer reviews (available for inspection prior to hiring a licensed 
    auditor), and is required to satisfy continuing education 
    requirements in order to remain licensed.
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        This section is a significant departure from the supervisory 
    committee audit standards and scope set forth in current section 
    701.12(c). But it is consistent with the overall objective of proposed 
    Part 715 to clearly delineate the differences in scope, and therefore 
    in burden, between a financial statement audit--which is warranted for 
    large credit unions--and the alternatives for a supervisory committee 
    audit, which are suited to credit unions of moderate and smaller size.
    
    D. Verification of Accounts
    
        Section 715.10--Requirements for Verification of Accounts and 
    Passbooks. As mandated by 12 U.S.C. 1761d, this section requires the 
    Supervisory Committee to conduct a verification of the passbooks and 
    accounts of the members against the records of the credit union at 
    least once every two years. This section is identical to current 
    Sec. 701.12(h) except that it has been restructured and reworded to 
    enhance clarity.
    
    E. Other Audit Requirements
    
        Section 715.11--Assistance From Outside Compensated Person. This 
    section sets the independence and engagement letter requirements that 
    are triggered when the Supervisory Committee engages an outside person 
    who is compensated to perform, or to assist in the performance of, a 
    supervisory committee audit under this Part. Subsection (a), which 
    concerns the auditor's independence from credit union officials, is 
    identical in substance to current Sec. 701.12(g), but has been reworded 
    to enhance clarity and eliminate the need to cross-reference the 
    ``Definitions'' section of this Part. Subsection (b) sets forth the 
    general requirement for an engagement letter between the Supervisory 
    Committee and the outside auditor memorializing the terms and 
    conditions of the audit engagement. It is identical to current 
    Sec. 701.12(d)(1), except that a sentence has been relocated to this 
    section to emphasize that ``the engagement must be contracted directly 
    with the Supervisory Committee.'' The purpose of this addition is to 
    clarify that the engagement must be with the Supervisory Committee, not 
    the credit union's board of directors or management. However, this does 
    not preempt State laws requiring the board of directors to authorize 
    compensation for auditing assistance sought by the Supervisory 
    Committee. See, e.g., Colo. Rev. Stat. Sec. 11-30-109(1)(i). Subsection 
    (c) sets forth the required contents of an engagement letter; it 
    retains all eight items in current Sec. 701.12(d)(i)-(viii) with minor 
    revisions to conform to Sec. 715.9.
        Subsections (d) and (e) together retain an innovation from current 
    Sec. 701.12(d)(2)-(3) that has effectively solved the problem of after-
    the-fact
    
    [[Page 780]]
    
    disputes between the credit union and its outside auditor over which 
    components of an audit were to be included in the engagement, and which 
    were to be excluded. Thus, subsection (d) requires that the auditor 
    give notice in the engagement letter when all items within the scope of 
    an audit will be addressed in the engagement, thus yielding a complete 
    supervisory committee audit under Sec. 715.9(b) or (c). Conversely, 
    subsection (e) requires the engagement letter to identify any items 
    that will be excluded from the engagement, and which will render the 
    supervisory committee audit incomplete unless the Supervisory Committee 
    itself addresses the excluded items.
        Section 715.12--Audit Report and Working Paper Maintenance and 
    Access. This section combines two sets of requirements--the procedure 
    for distributing the audit report produced either by the Supervisory 
    Committee or by an outside person who performed the audit, and the 
    responsibility for maintenance of, and access to, the auditor's 
    ``working papers'' once the engagement is complete. Subsection (a), 
    which concerns distribution of the audit report, is identical to 
    current Sec. 701.12(e)(1) with a single exception--it expressly states 
    that credit union members must be provided with a report of the results 
    of an audit (which can be oral or written) if not with a copy of the 
    audit report itself. This revision conforms to 12 U.S.C. 1761d and 
    reflects current practice. It is consistent with the view that most 
    members are interested in the results of the audit, but not in 
    receiving a report of the audit. Subsection (b), which concerns 
    maintenance and access to audit working papers, is identical in form 
    and substance to current Sec. 701.12(e)(2).
    
    F. Sanctions and Remedies
    
        Section 715.13--Sanctions For Failure To Comply With This Part. 
    This section imposes sanctions when a Supervisory Committee or its 
    independent compensated auditor violates a provision of this Part or of 
    an engagement letter prescribed by this Part. A Regional Director is 
    permitted to reject an audit or to impose the same conditions on the 
    audit as Sec. 715.4 prescribes, and the NCUA Board is permitted to seek 
    formal administrative sanctions such as a cease and desist order or a 
    civil money penalty. This section is identical in form and substance to 
    current Sec. 701.12(f).
        Section 715.14--Statutory Audit Remedies for Federal Credit Unions. 
    This section provides the NCUA Board with a pair of additional remedies 
    which, if certain conditions are met, apply to federally-chartered 
    credit unions by statute, 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(A), and to State-
    chartered credit unions by regulation. Sec. 701.13(a)(2). The remedies 
    are the authority to compel a credit union in this category to have its 
    audit performed by a State-licensed person, Sec. 715.14(a), or to 
    compel the credit union to obtain a financial statement audit even when 
    it is not otherwise required to do so. Sec. 715.14(b). This section is 
    identical to current Sec. 701.13, with two exceptions. First, 
    subsection (b), which makes ``serious and persistent recordkeeping 
    deficiencies'' a basis for compelling a credit union to obtain a 
    financial statement audit, now includes a sentence describing the 
    objective of such an audit: ``to reconstruct the records of the credit 
    union sufficient to allow an unqualified or, if necessary, a qualified 
    opinion on the credit union's financial statements. An adverse opinion 
    should be the exception rather than the norm.'' Second, subsection (c), 
    which defines ``serious and persistent recordkeeping deficiencies,'' is 
    restructured to define ``serious'' and ``persistent'' separately.
    
    G. Call Reporting Requirements
    
        Section 741.6--Financial and Statistical and Other Reports. This 
    section sets deadlines for filing Call Reports with NCUA. The proposed 
    rule revises filing dates in subsection (a), adds two new subsections 
    (b) and (c), and redesignates current subsection (b) as a new 
    subsection (d). In subsection (a), the filing dates for semiannual Call 
    Reports are changed from ``on or before January 31 and on or before 
    July 31'' to ``on or before January 22 and on or before July 22,'' 
    respectively, to reflect current practice. New subsection (b) 
    incorporates accounting principles mandated by 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(C) 
    for reports or statements required to be filed with the NCUA Board 
    under subsection (a). Call Reports filed by credit unions having assets 
    of $10 million or more now must adhere to measurement principles 
    consistent with GAAP. 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(C)(i); see also supra note 
    1. This includes Call Reports filed by corporate credit unions. State 
    credit union supervisors may require Federally-insured State-chartered 
    credit unions to follow GAAP regardless of asset size. 12 U.S.C. 
    1782(a)(6)(C)(iii); see supra note 7 and accompanying text. For the 
    convenience of affected credit unions, subsection (c) cross-references 
    the definition of GAAP at Sec. 715.2(d), distinguishes GAAP from GAAS, 
    and identifies authoritative sources for the pronouncements of GAAP.
    
    Regulatory Procedures
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires NCUA to prepare an analysis 
    to describe any significant economic impact a proposed regulation may 
    have on a substantial number of small credit unions (primarily those 
    under $1 million in assets). The NCUA Board has determined and 
    certifies that the proposed rule, if adopted, will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small credit 
    unions. Thus, a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is not required.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Paperwork Reduction Act imposes no additional information 
    collection requirements beyond those in the current rule. Therefore, no 
    Paperwork Reduction Act analysis is required.
    
    Executive Order 12612
    
        Executive Order 12612 requires NCUA to consider the effect of its 
    actions on state interests. The proposed amendment will not have a 
    substantial direct effect on the states, on the relationship between 
    the national government and the states, or on the distribution of 
    rights and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    12 CFR Parts 701 and 741
    
        Credit unions, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    12 CFR Part 715
    
        Audits, Credit unions, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Supervisory committee.
    
        By the National Credit Union Administration Board on December 
    17, 1998.
    Becky Baker,
    Secretary of the Board.
    
        Accordingly, it is proposed that 12 CFR, parts 701, 715 and 741 be 
    amended as set forth below:
    
    PART 701--ORGANIZATION AND OPERATION OF FEDERAL CREDIT UNIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 701 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1752(5), 1755, 1756, 1757, 1759, 1761a, 
    1761b, 1766, 1767, 1782, 1784, 1787, 1789 and 1798. Section 701.6 is 
    also authorized by 31 U.S.C. 3717. Section 701.31 is also authorized 
    by 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 1981 and 3601-3610. Section 
    701.35 is also authorized by 42 U.S.C. 4311-4312.
    
    [[Page 781]]
    
    Secs. 701.12 and 701.13  [Removed]
    
        2. Sections 701.12 and 701.13 are removed.
        3. Part 715 is added to read as follows:
    
    PART 715--SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE AUDITS AND VERIFICATIONS
    
    Sec.
    715.1  Scope of this part.
    715.2  Definitions used in this part.
    715.3  General responsibilities of the Supervisory Committee.
    715.4  Audit responsibility of the Supervisory Committee.
    715.5  Audit of Federally-insured credit unions having total assets 
    of $500 million or greater.
    715.6  Audit of Federally-insured State-chartered credit unions 
    having total assets of less than $500 million.
    715.7  Audit of Federally-chartered credit unions having total 
    assets of less than $500 million but more than $10 million.
    715.8  Audit of Federally-chartered credit unions having total 
    assets of $10 million.
    715.9  Other Supervisory Committee audit requirements if not 
    financial statement audit.
    715.10  Requirements for verification of accounts and passbooks.
    715.11  Assistance from outside, compensated person.
    715.12  Audit report and working paper maintenance and access.
    715.13  Sanctions for failure to comply with this part.
    715.14  Statutory audit remedies for Federal credit unions.
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1761d, 1782(a)(6).
    
    Sec. 715.1  Scope of this part.
    
        This part implements section 202(a)(6)(D) of the Federal Credit 
    Union Act, 12 U.S.C. 1782(a)(6)(D), as added by section 201(a) of the 
    Credit Union Membership Access Act, Pub. L. No. 105-219, 112 Stat. 918 
    (1998). This part prescribes the responsibilities of the Supervisory 
    Committee to obtain an annual audit of the credit union according to 
    its charter type and asset size, and to conduct a verification of 
    members' accounts. Revised filing dates and required accounting 
    principles for Call Reports (NCUA Forms 5300 and 5310) can be found in 
    Sec. 741.6 of this chapter.
    
    
    Sec. 715.2  Definitions used in this part.
    
        As used in this part:
        (a) Balance sheet audit refers to the examination of a credit 
    union's assets, liabilities, and equity under generally accepted 
    auditing standards (GAAS) by an independent public accountant for the 
    purpose of opining on the fairness of the presentation on the balance 
    sheet. The opinion under this type of engagement would not address the 
    fairness of the presentation of the credit union's income statement, 
    statement of changes in equity (including comprehensive income), or 
    statement of cash flows.
        (b) Compensated person refers to any accounting/auditing 
    professional, excluding a credit union employee, who is compensated for 
    performing more than one supervisory committee audit and/or 
    verification of members' accounts per calendar year.
        (c) Financial statements refers to a presentation of financial 
    data, including accompanying notes, derived from accounting records of 
    the credit union, and intended to disclose a credit union's economic 
    resources or obligations at a point in time, or the changes therein for 
    a period of time, in conformity with GAAP, as defined herein, or 
    regulatory accounting procedures. Each of the following is considered 
    to be a financial statement: a balance sheet or statement of financial 
    condition; statement of income or statement of operations; statement of 
    undivided earnings; statement of cash flows; statement of changes in 
    members' equity; statement of assets and liabilities that does not 
    include members' equity accounts; statement of revenue and expenses; 
    and statement of cash receipts and disbursements.
        (d) Financial statement audit (popularly known as an ``opinion 
    audit'') refers to an audit of the financial statements of a credit 
    union performed in accordance with GAAS by an independent auditor who 
    is licensed by the appropriate State or jurisdiction. The objective of 
    a financial statement audit is to express an opinion as to whether 
    those financial statements of the credit union present fairly, in all 
    material respects, the financial position and the results of its 
    operations and its cash flows in conformity with GAAP, as defined 
    herein, or regulatory accounting practices.
        (e) GAAP is an acronym for ``generally accepted accounting 
    principles'' which refers to the conventions, rules, and procedures 
    which define accepted accounting practice. GAAP includes both broad 
    general guidelines and detailed practices and procedures, provides a 
    standard by which to measure financial statement presentations, and 
    encompasses not only accounting principles and practices but also the 
    methods of applying them.
        (f) GAAS is an acronym for ``generally accepted auditing 
    standards'' which refers to the standards approved and adopted by the 
    American Institute of Certified Public Accountants which apply when an 
    ``independent, licensed certified public accountant'' audits financial 
    statements. Auditing standards differ from auditing procedures in that 
    ``procedures'' address acts to be performed, whereas ``standards'' 
    measure the quality of the performance of those acts and the objectives 
    to be achieved by use of the procedures undertaken. In addition, 
    auditing standards address the auditor's professional qualifications as 
    well as the judgment exercised in performing the audit and in preparing 
    the report of the audit.
        (g) Independent means the impartiality necessary for the 
    dependability of the compensated auditor's findings. Independence 
    requires the exercise of fairness toward credit union officials, 
    members, creditors and others who may rely upon the report of a 
    supervisory committee audit report.
        (h) Internal controls refers to the process, established by the 
    credit union's board of directors, officers and employees, designed to 
    provide reasonable assurance of reliable financial reporting and 
    safeguarding of assets against unauthorized acquisition, use, or 
    disposition. A credit union's internal control structure consists of 
    five components: control environment; risk assessment; control 
    activities; information and communication; and monitoring. Reliable 
    financial reporting refers to preparation of Call Reports (NCUA Forms 
    5300 and 5310) that meet management's financial reporting objectives. 
    Internal control over safeguarding of assets against unauthorized 
    acquisition, use, or disposition refers to prevention or timely 
    detection of transactions involving such unauthorized access, use, or 
    disposition of assets which could result in a loss that is material to 
    the financial statements.
        (i) Reportable conditions refers to a matter coming to the 
    attention of the independent, compensated auditor which, in his or her 
    judgment, represents a significant deficiency in the design or 
    operation of the internal control structure of the credit union, which 
    could adversely affect its ability to record, process, summarize, and 
    report financial data consistent with the representations of management 
    in the financial statements.
        (j) Review and evaluation of internal controls over Call Reporting 
    refers to an engagement under which management reviews its internal 
    controls over Call Reporting with a concentration in the following high 
    risk areas: loans, investments and cash and deposit activity, and 
    documents its review. Management would then provide a written assertion 
    stating whether it
    
    [[Page 782]]
    
    believes its internal controls are effective. The credit union's 
    auditor would examine management's assertion and provide an appropriate 
    report assessing that assertion.
        (k) State-licensed person refers to a person who is licensed by the 
    State or jurisdiction where the credit union is located to perform 
    accounting or auditing services for that credit union.
        (l) Supervisory committee refers to a supervisory committee as 
    defined in Section 111(b) of the Federal Credit Union Act, 12 U.S.C. 
    1786(r). For some federally-insured state chartered credit unions, the 
    ``audit committee'' designated by state statute or regulation is the 
    equivalent of a supervisory committee.
        (m) Supervisory committee audit refers to an examination under 
    either Sec. 715.4(b) or Sec. 715.9 of this part. An financial statement 
    audit, as defined herein, fulfills the requirements of a ``supervisory 
    committee audit.''
        (n) Working papers refers to the principal record, in any form, of 
    the work performed by the auditor and/or supervisory committee to 
    support its findings and/or conclusions concerning significant matters. 
    Examples include the written record of procedures applied, tests 
    performed, information obtained, and pertinent conclusions reached in 
    the engagement, proprietary audit programs, analyses, memoranda, 
    letters of confirmation and representation, abstracts of credit union 
    documents, reviewer's notes, if retained, and schedules or commentaries 
    prepared or obtained by the independent, compensated auditor.
    
    
    Sec. 715.3  General responsibilities of the supervisory committee.
    
        (a) Basic. The supervisory committee is responsible for ensuring 
    that the board of directors and management of the credit union meet 
    required financial reporting objectives and establish practices and 
    procedures sufficient to safeguard members' assets.
        (b) Specific. To carry out the responsibilities set forth in 
    paragraph (a) of this section, the supervisory committee must determine 
    whether:
        (1) Internal controls are established and effectively maintained to 
    achieve the credit union's financial reporting objectives which must be 
    sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the supervisory committee 
    audit, verification of members' accounts and its additional 
    responsibilities;
        (2) The credit union's accounting records and financial reports are 
    promptly prepared and accurately reflect operations and results;
        (3) The relevant plans, policies, and control procedures 
    established by the board of directors are properly administered; and
        (4) Policies and control procedures are sufficient to safeguard 
    against error, conflict of interest, self-dealing and fraud.
        (c) Mandates. In carrying out the responsibilities set forth in 
    paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the supervisory committee must:
        (1) Adhere to the measurement and filing requirements for reports 
    filed with the NCUA Board under Sec. 741.6;
        (2) Ensure that the credit union fulfills its responsibility to 
    obtain a supervisory committee audit, as prescribed in Sec. 715.4 of 
    this part;
        (3) Ensure that the credit union verifies members' passbooks and 
    accounts against the records of the credit union, as prescribed in 
    Sec. 715.10 of this part;
        (4) Act to avoid sanctions for failure to comply with the 
    requirements of this part, as prescribed in Secs. 715.13 and 715.14 of 
    this part.
    
    
    Sec. 715.4  Audit responsibility of the supervisory committee.
    
        (a) Annual audit requirement. A federally-insured credit union is 
    required to obtain an annual supervisory committee audit which occurs 
    at least once every calendar year (period of performance) and must 
    cover the period elapsed since the last audit period (period 
    effectively covered).
        (b) Financial statement audit option. Any federally-insured credit 
    union, whether federally- or State-chartered and regardless of asset 
    size, may choose to fulfill its supervisory committee audit 
    responsibility by obtaining an annual audit of its financial statements 
    performed in accordance with GAAS by an independent person who is 
    licensed to do so by the State or jurisdiction in which the credit 
    union is located. (A ``financial statement audit'' is distinct from a 
    ``supervisory committee audit,'' although a financial statement audit 
    is included among the options for fulfilling the supervisory committee 
    audit requirement. Compare Sec. 715.2(c) and (j).)
        (c) Other audit options. A federally-insured credit union which 
    does not choose to obtain a financial statement audit as permitted by 
    subsection (b) must fulfill its supervisory audit responsibility under 
    either of Secs. 715.6, 715.7 or 715.8 of this part, as required. See 
    Table 1.
    
                           Table 1.--Minimum Audit Requirements by Charter Type and Asset Size
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Minimum audit required to fulfill
              Type of charter                   Asset size              supervisory committee audit        Part 715
                                                                             responsibility \1\            section
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Federal or State..................  $500 Million or more......  Financial statement audit per GAAS         715.5
                                                                     by independent, State-licensed
                                                                     person.
    State.............................  Less than $500 Million....  Supervisory committee audit per            715.6
                                                                     Sec.  715.9 or State-prescribed
                                                                     audit, whichever is more stringent.
    Federal...........................  Less than $500 Million but  Supervisory committee audit per            715.7
                                         greater than $10 Million.   Sec.  715.9.
    Federal...........................  $10 Million or less.......  Supervisory committee audit per            715.8
                                                                     Sec.  715.9.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ The Supervisory Committee audit responsibility under part 715 can always be fulfilled by obtaining a
      financial statement audit. Sec.  715.4(b).
    
    Sec. 715.5  Audit of federally-insured credit unions having total 
    assets of $500 million or greater.
    
        To fulfill its supervisory committee audit responsibility, a 
    federally-insured credit union, whether federally- or State-chartered, 
    having total assets of $500 million or greater must obtain an annual 
    audit of its financial statements performed in accordance with GAAS by 
    an independent person who is licensed to do so by the State or 
    jurisdiction in which the credit union is located.
    
    
    Sec. 715.6  Audit of federally-insured State-chartered credit unions 
    having total assets of less than $500 million.
    
        To fulfill its supervisory committee audit responsibility, a 
    federally-insured State-chartered credit union having total assets of 
    less than $500 million must obtain an annual supervisory committee
    
    [[Page 783]]
    
    audit as prescribed under either Sec. 715.9 or Sec. 715.4(b), or an 
    audit as prescribed by the State or jurisdiction in which the credit 
    union is located, whichever is more stringent.
    
    
    Sec. 715.7  Audit of federally-chartered credit unions having total 
    assets of less than $500 million but more than $10 million.
    
        To fulfill its supervisory committee audit responsibility, a 
    federally-chartered credit union having total assets of less than $500 
    million but more than $10 million which does not choose to obtain an 
    audit under Sec. 715.4(b), must obtain an annual supervisory committee 
    audit as prescribed in Sec. 715.9.
    
    
    Sec. 715.8  Audit of federally-chartered credit unions having total 
    assets of $10 million or less.
    
        To fulfill its supervisory committee audit responsibility, a 
    federally-chartered credit union having total assets of $10 million or 
    less must obtain an annual supervisory committee audit as prescribed in 
    Sec. 715.9.
    
    
    Sec. 715.9  Other Supervisory Committee audit requirements if not a 
    financial statement audit.
    
        A credit union which is not required to obtain a financial 
    statement audit may fulfill its supervisory committee responsibility by 
    having its Supervisory Committee or other qualified person perform any 
    one of the following engagements:
        (a) Balance sheet audit. A balance sheet audit, as defined by 
    Sec. 715.2(a), performed by a person who is licensed to do so by the 
    State or jurisdiction in which the credit union is located; or
        (b) Review and evaluation of internal controls over call reporting. 
    A ``review and evaluation of internal controls over Call Reporting'' 
    (NCUA Form 5300), as defined in Sec. 715.2(j) (except that this 
    engagement may be performed only by an independent, State-licensed 
    person if the credit union is deemed ``complex'' pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 
    1790d(d)(1)); or
        (c) Audit per supervisory committee Guide. An audit performed in 
    accordance with the procedures prescribed in NCUA's Supervisory 
    Committee Guide published after final adoption of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 715.10  Requirements for verification of accounts and passbooks.
    
        (a) Verification obligation. The supervisory committee shall, at 
    least once every two years, cause the passbooks (including any book, 
    statements of account, or other record approved by the NCUA Board) and 
    accounts of the members to be verified against the records of the 
    treasurer of the credit union.
        (b) Methods. Any of the following methods may be used to verify 
    members' passbooks and accounts, as appropriate:
        (1) Controlled verification. A controlled verification of 100 
    percent of members' share and loan accounts;
        (2) Statistical method. A sampling method which provides for:
        (i) Random selection;
        (ii) A sample which is representative of the population from which 
    it was selected;
        (iii) An equal chance of selecting each dollar in the population;
        (iv) Sufficient accounts in both number and scope to provide 
    assurance that the General Ledger accounts are fairly stated to meet 
    management's financial reporting objectives; and
        (v) Additional procedures to be performed if the auditor concludes 
    that evidence provided by confirmations alone is not sufficient.
        (3) Non-statistical method. When the verification is performed by 
    an independent auditor licensed by the State or jurisdiction in which 
    the credit union is located, the auditor may choose among the sampling 
    methods set forth in paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section and non-
    statistical sampling methods consistent with GAAS if such methods 
    provide for:
        (i) Sufficient accounts in both number and scope to provide 
    assurance that the General Ledger accounts are fairly stated in 
    relation to the financial statements taken as a whole;
        (ii) Additional procedures to be performed if the auditor concludes 
    that evidence provided by confirmations alone is not sufficient; and
        (iii) Documentation of the sampling procedures used and of their 
    consistency with GAAS (to be provided to the NCUA Board upon request).
        (c) Retention of records. The supervisory committee must retain the 
    records of each verification of members' passbooks and accounts until 
    it completes the next verification of members' passbooks and accounts.
    
    
    Sec. 715.11  Assistance from outside, compensated person.
    
        (a) Unrelated to officials. A compensated auditor who performs a 
    supervisory committee audit on behalf of a credit union shall not be 
    related by blood or marriage to any employee, or member of either the 
    board of directors, the supervisory committee or the credit committee, 
    or loan officer of that credit union, or to the spouse, child, parent, 
    grandchild, grandparent, brother or sister of such employee, member or 
    officer.
        (b) Engagement letter. The engagement of a compensated auditor to 
    perform all or a portion of the scope of a financial statement audit or 
    supervisory committee audit shall be evidenced by an engagement letter. 
    In all cases, the engagement must be contracted directly with the 
    supervisory committee. The engagement letter must be signed by the 
    compensated auditor and acknowledged therein by the Supervisory 
    Committee prior to commencement of the engagement.
        (c) Contents of letter. The engagement letter shall:
        (1) Specify the terms, conditions, and objectives of the 
    engagement;
        (2) Identify the basis of accounting to be used;
        (3) If not a financial statement audit or balance sheet audit, 
    include an appendix setting forth the procedures to be performed;
        (4) Specify the rate of, or total, compensation to be paid for the 
    audit;
        (5) Provide that the auditor shall, upon completion of the 
    engagement, deliver to the Supervisory Committee a written report of 
    the audit and notice in writing, either within the report or 
    communicated separately, of any internal control reportable conditions 
    and/or irregularities or illegal acts, if any, which come to the 
    auditor's attention during the normal course of the audit (i.e., no 
    notice required if none noted);
        (6) Specify a target date of delivery of the written reports;
        (7) Certify that NCUA staff and/or the State credit union 
    supervisor, or designated representatives of each, will be provided 
    unconditional access to the complete set of original working papers, 
    either at the offices of the credit union or at a mutually agreed upon 
    location, for purposes of inspection; and
        (8) Acknowledge that working papers shall be retained for a minimum 
    of three years from the date of the written audit report.
        (d) Complete scope. If the engagement is to perform a supervisory 
    committee audit that will address all of the requirements of 
    Sec. 715.9(b) or (c), the engagement letter shall certify that the 
    audit addresses the complete scope of a supervisory committee audit.
        (e) Exclusions from scope. If the engagement is to perform a 
    supervisory committee audit which will exclude any item required by 
    Sec. 715.9(b) or (c), the engagement letter shall:
        (1) Identify the excluded items;
        (2) State that, because of the exclusion(s), the resulting audit 
    will not, by itself, fulfill the scope of a supervisory committee 
    audit; and
    
    [[Page 784]]
    
        (3) Caution that the supervisory committee will remain responsible 
    for fulfilling the scope of a supervisory committee audit with respect 
    to the excluded items.
    
    
    Sec. 715.12  Audit report and working paper maintenance and access.
    
        (a) Audit report. Upon completion and/or receipt of the written 
    report of a financial statement audit or a supervisory committee audit, 
    the Supervisory Committee must verify that the audit was performed and 
    reported in accordance with the terms of the engagement letter 
    prescribed herein. The Supervisory Committee must submit the report(s) 
    to the board of directors, and submit a report of the results of the 
    audit to the members of the credit union at the next annual meeting of 
    the credit union. The Supervisory Committee shall, upon request, 
    provide to the National Credit Union Administration a copy of each of 
    the audit reports it receives or produces.
        (b) Working papers. The supervisory committee shall be responsible 
    for preparing and maintaining, or making available, a complete set of 
    original working papers supporting each supervisory committee audit. 
    The supervisory committee shall, upon request, provide NCUA staff 
    unconditional access to such working papers, either at the offices of 
    the credit union or at a mutually agreeable location, for purposes of 
    inspecting such working papers.
    
    
    Sec. 715.13  Sanctions for failure to comply with this part.
    
        (a) Sanctions. Failure of a supervisory committee and/or its 
    independent compensated auditor or other person to comply with the 
    requirements of this section, or the terms of an engagement letter 
    required by this section, is grounds for:
        (1) The regional director to reject the supervisory committee 
    audit;
        (2) The regional director to impose the remedies available in 
    Sec. 715.14 of this part, 12 CFR 715.14, provided any of the conditions 
    specified therein is present; and
        (3) The NCUA Board to seek formal administrative sanctions against 
    the supervisory committee and/or its independent, compensated auditor 
    pursuant to section 206(r) of the Federal Credit Union Act, 12 U.S.C. 
    1786(r).
        (b) State charters. In the case of a federally-insured State-
    chartered credit union, NCUA shall provide the state regulator an 
    opportunity to timely impose a remedy satisfactory to NCUA before 
    seeking to impose a sanction permitted under paragraph (a) of this 
    section.
    
    
    Sec. 715.14  Statutory audit remedies for Federal credit unions.
    
        (a) Independent auditor required. The NCUA Board may compel a 
    federal credit union to obtain a supervisory committee audit which 
    meets the minimum requirements of Sec. 715.4(c), and which is performed 
    by an independent person who is licensed by the State or jurisdiction 
    in which the credit union is located, for any fiscal year in which any 
    of the following three conditions is present:
        (1) The supervisory committee has not obtained an annual financial 
    statement audit or performed a supervisory committee audit; or
        (2) The supervisory committee has obtained a financial statement 
    audit or performed a supervisory committee audit which does not meet 
    the requirements of part 715 including those of Sec. 715.10.
        (3) The credit union has experienced serious and persistent 
    recordkeeping deficiencies as defined in paragraph (c) of this section.
        (b) Financial statement audit required. The NCUA Board may compel a 
    federal credit union to obtain a financial statement audit performed in 
    accordance with GAAS by an independent person who is licensed by the 
    State or jurisdiction in which the credit union is located (even if 
    such audit is not required by section 715.5), for any fiscal year in 
    which the credit union has experienced serious and persistent 
    recordkeeping deficiencies as defined in paragraph (c) of this section. 
    The objective of a financial statement audit performed under this 
    subsection is to reconstruct the records of the credit union sufficient 
    to allow an unqualified or, if necessary, a qualified opinion on the 
    credit union's financial statements. An adverse opinion should be the 
    exception rather than the norm.
        (c) ``Serious and persistent recordkeeping deficiencies.'' A 
    recordkeeping deficiency is ``serious'' if the NCUA Board reasonably 
    believes that the board of directors and management of the credit union 
    have not timely met financial reporting objectives and established 
    practices and procedures sufficient to safeguard members' assets. A 
    serious recordkeeping deficiency is ``persistent'' when it continues 
    beyond a usual, expected or reasonable period of time.
    
    PART 741--REQUIREMENTS FOR INSURANCE
    
        4. The authority citation for part 741 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1757, 1766, and 1781-1790. Section 741.4 is 
    also authorized by 31 U.S.C. 3717.
    
        5. Section 741.6 is amended to change the phrase in paragraph (a) 
    from ``before January 31 and on or before July 31'' to ``before January 
    22 and on or before July 22''; and to redesignate paragraph (b) as 
    paragraph (d) and to add paragraphs (b) and (c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 741.6  Financial and statistical and other reports.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Consistency with GAAP. The financial statements and reports 
    required to be filed quarterly or semiannually under paragraph (a) of 
    this section must reflect measurement principles consistent with GAAP 
    if the credit union has total assets of $10 Million or greater, but may 
    reflect measurement principles which differ from GAAP if the credit 
    union has total assets of less than $10 Million (except that a 
    Federally-insured State-chartered credit union may be required by its 
    state credit union supervisor to follow GAAP regardless of asset size).
        (c) GAAP sources. GAAP means generally accepted accounting 
    principles, as defined in Sec. 715.2(e) of this chapter. GAAP is 
    distinct from GAAS, which means generally accepted auditing standards, 
    as defined in Sec. 715.2(f) of this chapter. Authoritative sources of 
    GAAP include, but are not limited to, pronouncements of the Financial 
    Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and its predecessor organizations, 
    the Accounting Standards Executive Committee (AcSEC) of the American 
    Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), the FASB's Emerging 
    Issues Task Force (EITF), and the applicable AICPA Audit and Accounting 
    Guide.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 741.202  [Amended]
    
        6. Section 741.202 is amended to change: the references in 
    paragraph (a) from ``Secs.  701.12 and 701.13'' to ``Sec. 715.2 through 
    Sec. 715.6 and Sec. 715.9 through Sec. 715.14''; to add at the ending 
    of paragraph (a) after ``of this chapter'' the phrase ``or applicable 
    state law, if more stringent.''; and to change references in paragraph 
    (b) from ``Secs. 701.12(e) and 701.13'' to ``Secs. 715.10, 715.13, and 
    715.14''.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-150 Filed 1-5-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7535-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/06/1999
Department:
National Credit Union Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
99-150
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before March 8, 1999.
Pages:
776-784 (9 pages)
PDF File:
99-150.pdf
CFR: (23)
12 CFR 715.2(a)
12 CFR 715.9(b)
12 CFR 701.12(d)(1)
12 CFR 701.12(d)(2)-(3)
12 CFR 701.12(h)
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