Brief History Of Bank Regulations And Overview Of FDICIA And SOX -BY AtoZ Compliance.

Tuesday, Aug 29, 2017 at 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM EST

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Tuesday, Aug 29, 2017 at 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM EST

Key Take Away:

 

Attendees will: 

 

Analyze important milestones in the US banking history 

Appreciate links to past historical events

Compare and contrast economic and political events and how they shaped US banking

Master the purposes of key legislation 

Understand key events such as:

The barter system

Monetarizing gold and silver

Gersham’s Law

McCullough vs. Maryland Supreme Court Decision (1819)

Era of free banking (1836 to 1863)

Creation of the OCC

Dual banking

“Checkbook” money

 Depression of 1893

Financial panic of 1907

Crash of 1929

Deposit Insurance and creation of FDIC (1933)

 

Overview:

 

The webinar identifies and explains historical events and legislative milestones. It especially focuses on two major recent legislative milestones: 

 

FDICIA of 1991

SOX of 2002

History covers:

First and Second Banks of the US

Failure to have a Third Bank of the US

Free banking

National banking

Dual banking

Depression and panic

Federal Reserve Act of 1913

Monetary Control Act of 1980

S&L crisis and bailout

FDICIA

SOX

Current environment

Latest crisis 

FDICIA of 1991 covers: 

FDIC insurance changes 

Restrictions on real estate lending

Improved capital standards and new capital classifications

Extension of credit to “insiders”

FDIC authority to take action

Enhanced examination process 

Accounting aspects of FDICIA

Audit committee issues 

Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) of 2002 covers: 

The CPA and independence 

Audit partner rotation

Audit committee financial expert

SEC review of periodic disclosures by issuers 

PCAOB – new quasi-governmental inspectors

Internal control  

 

Why Should You Attend:

 

Participants should attend for the following reasons: 

 

To learn fundamentals that created the banking system of today

To understand pivotal points in history that changed the direction of banking

To dispel fears that banking is not logical and well thought out

To clarify mistaken beliefs about banking 

To comprehend the most important pieces of banking regulations

To focus on, SOX and FDICIA

To eliminate misconception that bank regulators are simply a bureaucratic nuisance 

To establish need for legislation that is the protective umbrella 

To broaden bank knowledge about key laws and regulations 

To understand internal control

To learn what significant changes fixed problems in banking 

To focus on real estate problems 

To understand need to expand capital levels

To comprehend basic FDICIA issues that set forth the foundation that later would be the underlying basics for Basel III 

To clarify confusion about loans to “insiders” 

To understand exactly what the FDIC can do to return entities to a sound capital footing

To review operational and managerial standards 

To understand the federal examination (audit) process 

To focus on accounting changes 

To learn about the expanded requirements of audit committees 

To compare the difference between FDICIA and SOX

To understand that SOX is not specifically banking related 

To focus on the significant changes in the CPA profession that were created by SOX

To comprehend new requirements of the SEC and the new PCAOB

 

Areas Covered In This Webinar:

 

This session emphasizes how banking events and bank regulations have made a significant impact on the overall US banking industry over the years. 

 

The session explores significant, industry-changing banking legislation that has occurred over the years such as the following laws: 

 

Federal Reserve Act of 1913

The Banking Act of 1933

The Monetary Control Act of 1980

Particular attention is placed on: 

 

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA) 

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX)

The session explains and discusses important parts of those laws and how they affected and continue to affect bank internal controls and bank accounting. 

 

This session allows attendees to view their banking knowledge within the framework of key legislation in the industry. It shows how such legislation has changed the way we do banking in the US. 

 

From the early days of the country up to today the banking environment has gone through significant changes. When accountants, auditors, financial analysts and others involved in banking fully appreciate the existing banking environment and how it got to be that way, their job becomes easier with knowledge of past events in banking history.

 

The bank compliance training reviews the overview of US banking by focusing on the following periods in history:

 

The Beginnings

The First Bank of the US

The War of 1812

The Second Bank of the US 

The Era of Free Banking

National Banking

The Dual Banking System

The National Banking Problems

Depression and Panic

The Federal Reserve Act of 1913

The Collapse of the Financial Markets – 1929

The Banking Act of 1933

The Monetary Control Act of 1980

Savings Bank Legislation

The S&L Crisis and Government “Bailout”

FDICIA (detailed coverage)

SOX (detailed coverage)

The Current Environment

The latest crisis

 

Learning Objectives:

 

Learn about the history of banking in the US

Understand the events that lead to various pieces of legislation

Analyze the key laws that are in place and designed to regulate the banking

Comprehend how the cornerstone to much of the legislation is the attempt to “protect the public”

Analyze internal control issues and how those issues are impacted by FDICIA and SOX

Compare and contrast the difference between FDICIA and SOX

Appreciate the need for accountants, auditors, regulators and others to be aware of the overall purpose of significant bank legislative activity

 

Who Will Benefit;

 

Financial professionals in the banking industry (financial analysts, controllers, treasures etc.)

Internal auditors

External auditors

Legal personnel

Compliance personnel 

Risk managers

 

For more information, please visit : http://bit.ly/2uEVXNb

Email: support@atozcompliance.com 

Toll Free: +1- 844-414-1400

Tel: +1-516-900-5509

 

Speakers Profile:

 

Paul J. Sanchez

Paul J. Sanchez, CPA, CBA, CFSA, CGMA conducts a small CPA practice in Port Washington, New York. He is also the owner of Professional Service Associates (PSA), a consulting and professional training and development business servicing corporate clients (auditors, controllers, etc.), CPA firms, professional associations and others. He was an assistant professor at Long Island University - C.W. Post Campus as well as an adjunct lecturer at City University of New York. Prior to starting PSA, he was the Vice President-Professional Development for the Audit Division of a regional bank and Director of Professional Practices and Vice President of a money-center bank, where he directed the professional practice development and training for internal auditors. He also was on the technical staff of the Auditing Standards and Examinations Divisions of the AICPA. He practiced public accounting in the New York office of Deloitte where he also was a firm recruiter and in-house professional development instructor. He was an owner and auditing and accounting seminar leader for the Person/Wolinsky CPA Review Courses, a company that prepared candidates to pass the Uniform CPA Examination. He is a frequent lecturer and seminar leader for accounting, auditing, banking, risk assessment and other professional presentations. He is the author of the textbook, “Accounting Basics for Community Financial Institutions” (Financial Managers Society, 2nd edition, Chicago, 2009) and the “Ideas an Analysis Letter: The Sanchez Take” (see www.sanchez-psa.com).  As a contributing author, his chapter on ‘An Auditor’s Approach to Risk-Based Auditing: What to Audit and When,’ is included in the textbook, “Effective Auditing for Corporates: Key Developments in Practice and Procedures,” (Bloomsbury Information, Ltd, London, 2012).

AtoZ Compliance; is an online compliance webinar training organization based in New Hyde Park, New York. We provide diverse range of quality webinar training programs to all the major segments of industries. Our compliance webinar training programs are designed to meet the changing compliance requirements and we have been successful in conducting high quality training programs to professionals from Fortune 500 to large and medium organizations. We cater to all major industries where FDA regulations and compliance adherence has been extremely critical in the business decision making process. Our compliance webinar training programs focuses on industries such as Life Sciences, Food and Chemicals,Human Resources, Banking and Financial Services,Healthcare and varied other Cross Industry streams. We take extreme care in selecting the topics which are highly relevant to all the industries and are capable of meeting the demands of the complex compliance environment. Our great pool of experienced speakers ensures that your business is up to date with the most relevant and accurate compliance information. At AtoZ Compliance, we focus on our core values - quality, expertise, and customer experience which are the foundation of our business. We believe that our compliance webinar training programs based on our value system can help you grow and succeed in your business.

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