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Maintaining Proper Internal Controls for Investments in a Downsized Environment

Maintaining Proper Internal Controls for Investments in a Downsized Environment. Presented by Donna Collins Milestone Professional Services. Factors Affecting our Current Environment. Global financial crisis Uncertainty in Unexpected Places (SBA, Municipal Bond Ratings)

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Maintaining Proper Internal Controls for Investments in a Downsized Environment

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  1. Maintaining Proper Internal Controls for Investments in a Downsized Environment Presented by Donna Collins Milestone Professional Services

  2. Factors Affecting our Current Environment • Global financial crisis • Uncertainty in Unexpected Places (SBA, Municipal Bond Ratings) • Increased Regulation and Oversight (Tax Reform, CCOC) leading to diminished control over revenues • Smaller staff due to Budget Cuts

  3. Factors Affecting our Current Environment • Trends in the Audit Community • SAS 112 (documentation of internal controls) • Risk Assessments • Fraud Risks • Oversight at the Federal Level • Transparency

  4. Factors Affecting our Current Environment • Governments are being asked to do more with less. • Money and human resources

  5. Factors Affecting our Current Environment Downsized Environment – Greater Scrutiny

  6. The Clerk’s Responsibility • 28.12  Clerk of the board of county commissioners.--The clerk of the circuit court shall be clerk and accountant of the board of county commissioners. He or she shall keep the minutes and accounts and perform such other duties as provided by law. The clerk shall have custody of the seal and affix the same to any paper or instrument as required by law.

  7. The Clerk’s Responsibility • Clerk of Courts is Accountant for Board under F.S. • Clerk of Courts is charged with responsibility for investment of excess funds • How does the Clerk do a conscientious job in this market? • Focus today - Investments

  8. The Clerk’s Responsibility • 28.33  Investment of county funds by the clerk of the circuit court.--The clerk of the circuit court in each county shall invest county funds in excess of those required to meet expenses as provided in s. 218.415. No clerk investing such funds shall be liable for the loss of any interest when circumstances require the withdrawal of funds placed in a time deposit and needed for immediate payment of county obligations. Except for interest earned on moneys deposited in the registry of the court, all interest accruing from moneys deposited shall be deemed income of the county and may be expended as receipts of the county as approved by the board of county commissioners pursuant to chapter 129.

  9. The Clerk’s Responsibility • One way to fulfill this responsibility with regard to investments is to develop a strong system of internal controls – including appropriate policies and procedures.

  10. Internal Control - Definition • Internal Control is a process, effected by management and other personnel, designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of objectives in the following categories: • Effectiveness and efficiency of operations • Reliability of financial reporting • Compliance with laws and regulations

  11. Internal Control - Definition • Internal control consists of five interrelated components

  12. Internal Control Components • Control Environment • Risk Assessment • Control Activities • Information and Communication • Monitoring

  13. Control Environment • Sets the tone for the government • Influences control consciousness • Foundation for all other control components • Includes: integrity, ethical values, competency, management’s philosophy and the way authority and responsibility is assigned

  14. Practical Application - Control Environment • Establish current policies with regard to ethical behavior (Code of Conduct) • Enforce appropriate discipline for failure to comply with these policies • Ensure personal adherence to strong moral code • Reward competency

  15. Impact of the Control Environment • Don’t underestimate the importance of this part of the control system. All the great control activities in the world will not be effective if employees know that management is not concerned with strong internal control.

  16. Risk Assessment • Risks result from both external and internal sources • These change over time based on economic, regulatory, and operating conditions • Risk Assessment must link identified objectives (liquidity, protection of principal, rate of return) to specific risk factors

  17. Risk Assessment • Risk factors include: • The risk of particular investments • The type of custody arrangement • Active versus passive investment strategy

  18. Risk Assessment • Passive Investment Strategy: investments are generally held to maturity, securities are purchased throughout the year to achieve average weighted yield, securities are low-risk instruments • Active Investment Strategy: investments may be sold before maturity to earn a gain, purchase are more sporadic and timed by market fluctuations, securities are may include higher risk instruments

  19. Practical Application - Risk Assessments • Be realistic about the true risk with regard to a particular investment • Consider all types of risk: inherent, credit risk, interest rate risk, concentration of credit risk, custodial credit risk and liquidity risk

  20. Practical Application - Risk Assessments • Inherent Risk – • Credit Risk – • Interest Rate Risk – • Concentration of Credit Risk – • Custodial Credit Risk - • Liquidity Risk -

  21. Practical Application - Risk Assessments • Remember that use of a third party does not eliminate management’s responsibility for assessing risks. • Structure of agreement is important • Investments must be reconciled to general ledger and transactions reviewed for propriety • Identify “What could go wrong?”

  22. What could go wrong? • Unauthorized investments could be purchased. • Investments could be purchased without proper ownership identification. • Investments could be recorded at incorrect value or fail to be recorded. • Income from investments could be allocated incorrectly.

  23. What could go wrong? • Excessive transaction fees could be charged to the government. • Investments held by the government could be stolen (Certificates of Deposit). • Investments outside the government’s risk tolerance could be purchased and result in loss of principal.

  24. Control Activities • The policies and procedures that ensure management’s directives are followed • The occur at all levels throughout the organization • Include : approvals, authorizations. Verifications, reconciliations, security of assets, segregation of duties and review of operating performance

  25. Practical Application - Control Activities • Address control objectives: existence or occurrence, completeness, valuation or allocation, rights and obligations, accuracy or classification, cutoff and presentation and disclosure • Tie control activities to risks previously identified and address “What could go wrong” scenarios • Balance cost and benefit

  26. Practical Application - Control Activities • Existence or occurrence : • investment revenues, realized and unrealized gains and losses • Recorded short and long-term investments represent investment that exist at the balance sheet date

  27. Practical Application - Control Activities • Completeness: • Income statement effects of all investment transactions • All short and long-term investments are included in the balance sheet investment accounts.

  28. Practical Application - Control Activities • Valuation or allocation: • Investment revenues, realized and unrealized gains and losses are reported amounts • Investments are reported on the balance sheet at fair value, cost, amortized cost, or the amount determined by the equity method, as appropriate for particular investments.

  29. Practical Application - Control Activities • Rights and Obligations: All recorded investments are owned by the reporting entity. • Accuracy and Classification: All recorded investments occurring during the period mathematically correct and entered in the proper accounts.

  30. Practical Application - Control Activities • Cutoff Investment transactions are recorded in the proper accounting period. • Presentation and Disclosure: Investment balances are properly identified and classified in the financial statements. Appropriate disclosures made for investment portfolio.

  31. Key Control Activities • Develop Investment Policy specific to the government (risk tolerances, rate of return goals, level of expertise) • Keep Investment Policy current with government’s objectives • Separate authorization from recording of investment transactions • Reconcile investments per general ledger to statements from trustee/custodian

  32. Key Control Activities • Provide for oversight through Investment Committee (include trustee activities) • Address unusual transactions or variance from expected benchmarks in timely fashion • Utilize disclosure checklist to ensure presentation and disclosure requirements are met

  33. Information and Communication • Includes both internal and external interaction • Requires pertinent information to be identified, captured and communicated in a form and timeframe for employees to carry out their responsibilities • Reports must contain relevant operational, financial and compliance information

  34. Practical Application - Information and Communication • System generated reports must include relevant information • Statements from broker/dealers must be channeled to correct personnel and provided timely • Communication with Investment Committee or other oversight body should include:

  35. Impact of Information and Communication • Communication with Investment Committee or other oversight body should include: • Types of investments held • Average rate of return for period and YTD compared with benchmarks • Average maturity of portfolio • Compliance with investment policy provisions

  36. Impact of Information and Communication • Communication with Investment Committee or other oversight body should include: • Changes in investment strategy (if any) • Interest rate environment changes • Discussion of any unusual transaction or particularly risky investment

  37. Monitoring • Assessing the quality of the internal control system and making modifications as needed • This process is ongoing through the normal course of operation and at separate specific evaluations of a particular process

  38. Practical Application - Monitoring • Controls over investments will change as the makeup of the portfolio changes • Controls should be evaluated when new investments are added to the portfolio • Be responsive to information requests of Investment Committee personnel • Review Investment Policy annually

  39. Practical Application - Monitoring • Example: • Government changes risk tolerance to allow for higher return on investments • Change to investment policy • Change in investment process • Increase oversight of these transactions to ensure no loss of principal and that return is actually warranting the additional risk assumed

  40. Summary • The control environment establishes the importance of internal control. • Risk Assessments must be realistic and performed when changes to investment objectives or portfolio composite occur. • Control Activities should be focused on areas of highest risk. Monitoring controls are effective stopgap for smaller entities.

  41. Summary • Information and Communication must provide relevant information for managing investments. • Monitoring of the internal control system is an ongoing process.

  42. Questions?

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