Title: BMO presention RBC CEO conference
1(No Transcript)
2Agenda
- Purpose and design of board and management
committees - Expectations of regulators
- Committee structure example
- Advantages/disadvantages to different structures
- Key accountabilities, members, and
responsibilities of committee - Useful tools/protocols
- Balancing needs of separate legal entities
governed by different regulatory agencies
3Governance and Trust Committee Structures
- Strong management and board oversight is a key
element to a strong internal control and risk
management structure. - A strong governance and trust committee structure
both at the management and the board level allows
for effective oversight and is indicative of a
commitment to risk management and internal
control. - The Fed, the OCC, and the OTS expect institutions
with trust powers to have active executive
management and board involvement. The SEC expects
a strong culture of compliance. - For complex organizations, I believe this is
managed most effectively through a committee
structure. This should be customized at each
institution in terms design and activities, lines
of businesses and legal entities.
4Expectation of Primary Regulator - OCC
- Board and Senior Management have key
responsibilities - Must recognize their responsibility to provide
proper oversight of asset management activities,
and the official records of the board should
clearly reflect the proper discharge of that
responsibility. - Must understand the asset management business,
how asset management activities affect the banks
position and reputation, the banks regulatory
environment, and other external market factors. - Establish the strategic direction, risk tolerance
standards, and ethical culture for asset
management activities. - Adopt and implement an adequate and effective
risk management system. - Monitor the implementation of asset management
risk-taking strategies and the adequacy and
effectiveness of the risk management system in
achieving the companys strategic goals and
financial objectives. - Senior Management responsibility for effective
risk management systems - Ensure the development and implementation of an
adequate and effective risk management system
composed of risk assessment, control, and
monitoring processes. - Board of Directors and Senior Management
Commitment - Establish and guide the strategic direction for
asset management activities by approving
strategic and financial operating plans. - Create a risk management culture that promotes
strong ethics and an environment of
responsibility and accountability that is fully
accepted within the banking organization. - (Asset Management Comptrollers Handbook December
2000)
5Expectation of Primary Regulator - FED
- Board of Directors key responsibilities
- Approve overall fiduciary business strategies and
policies including those related to identifying,
measuring, monitoring and controlling fiduciary
risks. - Understand the nature of the risks significant to
their organization and ensure that management is
taking the steps necessary to manage these risks. - Senior Management key responsibilities
- Implement approved strategies in a way that will
limit fiduciary risks and ensure compliance with
laws and regulations - Fully involved in the fiduciary activities of
their institution - Have sufficient knowledge of all fiduciary
business lines to ensure that necessary policies,
controls and risk monitoring systems are in place
and that accountability and lines of authority
are clearly set forth - Ensure that its lines of fiduciary business are
managed and staffed by persons with knowledge,
experience, and expertise consistent with the
nature and scope of the organization's fiduciary
activities - Before offering new services or introducing new
products, identify fiduciary risks associated
with them and ensures that internal controls are
in place to manage the service or product and the
accompanying risk - Approve appropriate policies, procedures,
recordkeeping systems and reporting systems to
support the fiduciary activities and to help
measure and monitor risks - Establish procedures to keep informed about
changes in fiduciary activities and the
associated risks - (SR 96-10 (SPE) April 24, 1996 - Risk-Focused
Fiduciary Examinations )
6Expectation of Primary Regulator - OTS
- Responsibilities of the Board of Directors and
Management - hiring and retaining competent personnel
- ensuring that adequate management is in place to
control risks - instituting adequate policies, processes and
controls that consider the size and complexity of
the savings associations trust and asset
management activities - establishing effective risk monitoring and
management information systems - Directors are responsible for retaining and
performing general supervision over the exercise
of trust powers - Directors must be sufficiently independent of
corporate affiliates and personal conflicts of
interest to properly serve the interests of the
savings association - Directors are responsible for the prudent
investment and disposition of property held in a
fiduciary capacity - ensuring that an annual audit is conducted
- ensuring that a record of pending litigation is
kept - The board should ensure that the trust
departments management information and data
processing systems are adequate to provide the
type and quantity of reports necessary to assess
and monitor the trust departments performance - The board should ensure that corrective action is
effectively implemented when deficiencies are
reported - (OTS Trust and Asset Management Handbook)
7Expectation of Primary Regulator - SEC
- The Advisers Act incorporates an adviser's
fiduciary duty under Section 206, and envisions
that, in whatever factual scenario, the adviser
will act in the best interests of his clients.
As a fiduciary, an adviser is held to the highest
standards of conduct and must act in the best
interests of its clients. - Compliance Program rule, Rule 38a-1, requires
board approval of the fund's policies and
procedures and those of each investment adviser,
principal underwriter, administrator, and
transfer agent of the fund, and requires an
annual report by the Chief Compliance Officer to
the board. - Recent Investment Advisor request letter suggest
that active management and Board involvement is
an inherent expectation - Registrants overall process for and commitment
to establishing and maintaining an effective
compliance culture (its tone at the top). - A copy of the minutes of any risk committee
meetings that were held during the inspection
period. Please note that advisors are not
required to have a risk committee. - Copy of risk management reports that
show/illustrate the measures used to manage risks
in client accounts, such as leverage, beta,
concentration, and performance attribution
analysis. - Copy of investment management committee
minutes.
8Board and Management Committee Structure Example
9Board Committee Structure Example
- Directors Trust Committee responsibility
- The DTC is responsible for performing duties to
enable the Boards of Directors to fulfill their
oversight responsibilities in relation to
oversight, including proper risk management and
control, of the operation of fiduciary activities
of subsidiaries, and oversight, including proper
risk management and control of the operation of
non-fiduciary investment related activities of
the subsidiaries. In addition, certain fiduciary
and non-fiduciary activities of subsidiaries are
organized and managed in a manner that is closely
intertwined with the activities otherwise within
the purview of the Committee. This Committee
shall oversee such activities to the extent of
such interrelationship. The DTC is granted the
authority to define the general scope, content,
and direction of fiduciary and non-fiduciary
investment-related products and services for the
organization. - Key reporting items
- Material Risks
- Emerging Risks
- Significant Events
- Near misses
10Management Committee Structure Example
- Fiduciary and Investment Related Activities Risk
Management Committee (FRMC) - The Fiduciary and Investment Related Activities
Risk Management Committee is established to serve
as a forum to review, inform, consult, discuss,
and approve significant risk issues and action
plans addressing current and emerging risks that
arise in the course of executing the
organizations strategy in trust, probate,
guardianship, conservatorship, and certain
investment management, investment advisory,
securities and custody activities. It is
established to ensure major risks arising from
these activities are understood, quantified,
documented, mitigated where appropriate, and
constrained by policy and directives as necessary
in order to balance risk and return in such
activities and businesses. - Key reporting items
- Material Risks
- Emerging Risks
- Significant Events
- Near misses
11Management Committee Structure
- Committees can be structured by department, by
legal entity, or by holding company. - By Department or Legal entity
- Advantages
- Allows for focused discussions on key topics
- Allows for open communication
- More control over committee dynamics
- Disadvantages
- Lack of independent view or assessment of issues
- Limited ability to escalate issues
- Lack of tie to board of directors
12Management Committee Structure (contd)
- By holding company - Advantages
- Particularly in light of Enterprise-wide Risk
Management, a committee that crosses legal
entities and department boundaries becomes a
useful tool - The risks of one line of business could affect
another open discussion allows for more
complete analysis and assessment - What may be an acceptable risk at one level may
be unacceptable when aggregated at a higher level - Exam experiences can be shared across entities
- Can be used as a precursor to the holding company
board meeting - Disadvantages
- Additional examiner scrutiny and potential scope
creep - Management may not be comfortable holding open
and frank discussions in presence of other LOBs
or legal entities - Meeting dynamics may become difficult to manage
13Key Committee Accountabilities and
Responsibilities
- Provide oversight
- Governance
- Approve policies, directives, standards
- Approve new and modified products, initiatives,
services, and distribution channels - Review of assessments used to determine adherence
to policies, operating procedures, and strategic
initiatives - Review management reports on operational and
performance results - Cross-enterprise view of topics
- Key elements to be discussed/considered by
committee - Significant risk issues and management
strategies - Significant changes in strategies, products,
services, and distribution channels - Significant changes in organization, policies,
controls, and information systems and - External factors that are affecting services.
14Key Committee Accountabilities and
Responsibilities (contd)
- Escalate issues
- Review of material risks, emerging risks,
significant events, and near misses - Committee used as a forum to facilitate the
resolution of risk issues. Issues arise from - Risk and Control Self Assessments (RCSAs)
- Audits, exams, compliance reviews
- new or modified product recommendations
- changes in laws or regulations
- Code of Ethics
- Conflicts of Interest or
- Litigation
- Issues may not be significant at lower level
subsidiary or department, but when viewed in
aggregate, trends may emerge or issue becomes
more prominent - Committee assesses the responsiveness to
deficiencies and the effectiveness of corrective
action and follow-up activities - The Committee then escalates to Board, Executive
Management, CEO
15Key Committee Accountabilities and
Responsibilities (contd)
- Fix accountabilities
- Each issue raised is assigned an accountable
executive. Ensures resolution of significant
items - Issues are tracked through to resolution
- Report activities that will be escalated to the
board committees - Allows forum to review Board materials to ensure
they are appropriate, complete, accurate
16Key Members
- Who your key members are is determined by the
scope of the committee some examples - Management of areas with fiduciary risk or asset
management responsibilities - Institutional Trust
- Custody
- Land Trust
- Personal Trust
- Employee Benefit Plan area
- Insurance
- Safekeeping
- Retail broker/dealer
- Investment advisor
- Proprietary mutual funds
- Operations
- Management of Corporate Support Areas
- Fiduciary Risk Management
17Useful Tools/Protocols
- Timing of meetings Useful to be 1-2 weeks prior
to Holding Company board and committee meetings - Materials provided to members no less than 3 days
prior to meeting to allow for review - Open items list
- Reports to be presented to provide status on
outstanding items - Outstanding audit, RCSA, exam, compliance issues
- Calendar/Standing agenda including, at a minimum
periodic reports from - Corporate Audit
- Corporate Compliance
- Legal
- Risk Management
- Operations operational risk issues
- Line of Business performance issues/status
- Attendance list, reports of attendance
- Minutes
18Open Items List Example
Date of Meeting Individual Responsible for Item Original Date Due Revised Due Date Source of Item (Audit, Exam, Compliance monitor, RCSA, other (specify)) Action Item Status of Item
02/15/07 J. Smith, Fiduciary Counsel 05/17/07 n/a Regulatory Development Assess impact of Regulation R Broker Push Out Rules and assign responsibility for each unit impacted Meetings have begun. Update to be provided
11/15/06 F. Jones, COO XYZ Subsidiary 02/15/07 5/17/07 Exam Issue (SEC Exam of XYZ subsidiary dated 10/31/06) Ability to readily retrieve emails of employees criticized. Automated solution to be implemented. Implementation more time consuming than anticipated. Extension to 05/17/07 requested.
19Annual Calendar Example
FRMC -- 2007 PLANNER FRMC -- 2007 PLANNER FRMC -- 2007 PLANNER FRMC -- 2007 PLANNER FRMC -- 2007 PLANNER
AGENDA ITEMS 15-Feb-07 17-May-07 16-Aug-07 15-Nov-07
REVIEW OF MINUTES REVIEW OF MINUTES REVIEW OF MINUTES REVIEW OF MINUTES REVIEW OF MINUTES
Approval of Minutes X X X X
Review of sub-Committee minutes X X X X
STANDARD AGENDA ITEMS STANDARD AGENDA ITEMS STANDARD AGENDA ITEMS STANDARD AGENDA ITEMS STANDARD AGENDA ITEMS
Emerging Issues (as required) X X X X
Report of Chief Auditor X X X X
Report of General Counsel X X X X
Report of Chief Compliance Officer X X X X
Report of Chief Risk Officer X X X X
Review of 90 Day Write-Off and Recovery Report X X X X
Quarterly Differences and Losses X X X X
AGENDA ITEMS UNIQUE TO A PARTICULAR MEETING(S) AGENDA ITEMS UNIQUE TO A PARTICULAR MEETING(S) AGENDA ITEMS UNIQUE TO A PARTICULAR MEETING(S) AGENDA ITEMS UNIQUE TO A PARTICULAR MEETING(S) AGENDA ITEMS UNIQUE TO A PARTICULAR MEETING(S)
Business Unit Report of Activities
- Personal Trust X
- Investment Advisor Subsidiary X
- Broker/Dealer sub X
Policies and Procedures Update X
Assessment of New Products and/or Services As Needed As Needed As Needed As Needed
20Sample Report Report of Chief Compliance
Officer
- Chief Compliance Officer utilizes this as a
precursor to reporting to the Audit Committee.
Information is provided in slightly more detail,
discussions are more detailed, and focus for this
committee is fiduciary activity only. - Top 3 issues identified or being monitored
- Results of compliance monitor activities
- Information on Compliance training
- Legislative and Regulatory Developments
- Communication with Regulators Exam activities
- Summary of Corporate Audit and RCSA reports
impacting Compliance
21Balancing needs of separate legal entities
governed by different regulatory agencies
- In large complex banking organizations, it is not
uncommon to have subsidiaries governed by the
OCC, Fed, SEC, NYSE, NASD, and potentially
others. - Can be managed through dual reporting structures
one line to the corporate group, one line to
the legal entity executive - Assess issues and risks at the entity level, then
secondarily assess their impact on the line of
business and organization as a whole - Utilize knowledge gained from exams and audits in
one subsidiary to perform an assessment of other
subsidiaries prior to their own exam or audit. - Ensure there is strong communication and
reporting between the entities and the corporate
area consolidating the information impress upon
the subsidiary the usefulness of being part of a
larger organization - Be cautious/wary of subsidiaries that wish to
operate autonomously, who are not forthcoming,
who do not recognize that they are part of a
larger organization