SEC Showing Its Claws With Increased Focus On Recouping Executive Comp

Published date20 September 2022
Subject MatterAccounting and Audit, Corporate/Commercial Law, Accounting Standards, Corporate and Company Law, Securities
Law FirmHolland & Knight
AuthorScott Mascianica and Javan Porter

The government's focus on clawbacks is at a fever pitch. At the Practicing Law Institute's SEC Speaks conference earlier this month, senior officials within the SEC's Division of Enforcement emphasized the agency's increasing use of the executive compensation clawback provision under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX). This comes on the heels of the SEC - once again - reopening comment on a proposed rule for securities exchanges to require listed companies to adopt clawback policies and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco's recent comments around compensation clawbacks. In response, we want to provide an overview of the compensation clawback provision within SOX (Section 304), a brief history of the SEC's use of the provision and key applicability considerations.

Overview of SOX Section 304

Under SOX Section 304:

If an issuer is required to prepare an accounting restatement due to the material noncompliance of the issuer, as a result of misconduct, with any financial reporting requirement under the securities laws, the chief executive officer and chief financial officer of the issuer shall reimburse the issuer for

  1. any bonus or other incentive-based or equity-based compensation received by that person from the issuer during the 12-month period following the first public issuance or filing with the commission (whichever occurs first) of the financial document embodying such financial reporting requirement
  2. any profits realized from the sale of securities of the issuer during that 12-month period.1

A review of the legislative history for the provision emphasizes that this remedy was created to address concerns about management retaining "profits they receive as a result of misstatement of their company's financials..."2 As one court noted, an analysis of the legislative history reveals that the purpose of the statute was not to punish individual wrongdoing, but rather to create an equitable remedy that prevented executives from benefitting from company misconduct.3 A broader analysis of the Senate legislative history reveals the more expansive purpose behind the provision:

Recent events have raised concern about management benefitting from unsound financial statements, many of which ultimately result in corporate restatements. The President has recommended that "CEOs or other officers should not be allowed to profit from erroneous financial statements," and that "CEO bonuses and other incentive-based forms of compensation [sh]ould be disgorged in cases of accounting restatement and misconduct."

Title III includes provisions designed to prevent CEOs or CFOs from making large profits by selling company stock, or receiving company bonuses, while management is misleading the public and regulators about the poor health of the company. The bill requires that in the case of accounting restatements that result from material non-compliance with SEC financial reporting requirements, CEOs and CFOs must disgorge bonuses and other incentive-based compensation and profits on stock sales, if the non-compliance results from misconduct...4

As one court held, "the amount or reimbursement is not limited to income attributable to the wrongdoing of others."5 This meshes with the rule's purpose that corporate officers "cannot simply keep their own hands clean, but must instead be vigilant in ensuring there are adequate controls to prevent misdeeds by underlings."6

SEC Use of SOX Section 304

Although the provision was implemented in 2002 in response to major corporate and accounting scandals, the SEC was initially reluctant to use the provision.7 As one court noted, "[f]or reasons best known to the SEC, the Commission has been historically reluctant to utilize '304 in the ten years since [SOX] was enacted."8 The SEC first utilized the provision in 2007 - and did so with a bang - when it disgorged nearly $470 million from the former CEO and Chairman of a public health company in connection with a stock backdating matter.

After that, the SEC utilized the provision with greater frequency under Chairs Mary Shapiro and Mary Jo White, filing scores of settled and litigated actions involving Section 304 clawback claims. Moreover, the agency started to bring more "standalone" claims under Section 304, meaning the CFO and/or CEO in question were not alleged to have engaged in any wrongdoing.9 However, under prior SEC Chairman Jay Clayton, the SEC utilized the provision far less, bringing only a dozen SOX Section 304 claims and pursuing only one standalone claim during his three-plus years at the helm.

Not surprisingly, the tide has shifted under SEC Chairman Gary Gensler. Under his leadership, the SEC has increasingly...

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