U.S. Invades Cambodia
Kent State Shootings
IBM Introduces Floppy Disk
Securities Investor Protection Act
In response to the back office crisis, Congress passed the Securities Investor Protection Act, which established the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC). The Act provided for a fund, financed by fees from broker-dealers, which SIPC administered to protect customer accounts at failed brokerage firms.
RICO
The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) allowed private plaintiffs to recover treble damages for injuries by activities, including securities fraud, relating to the conduct of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering. In 1995, RICO was amended to cut back on securities cases.
Banking and Securities Industry Committee
Representatives of the securities industry and the New York Clearing House Bank Association formed the Banking and Securities Industry Committee (BASIC) to expedite resolution of the operational problems facing the securities industry. Among BASIC’s achievements was development of a centralized depository system used to immobilize securities certificates, thus permitting intra-firm transfers by book-entry.
NYSE Corporate Membership
In response to a challenge from the Donaldson, Lufkin and Jenrette brokerage firm, the New York Stock Exchange revised its constitution to allow corporate memberships.
Penn Central Bankruptcy
The failure of Penn Central was then the largest bankruptcy in the United States. The result of the 1965 merger of the New York Central and Pennsylvania railroads, Penn Central acquired many non-rail businesses in the era of conglomerates. The federal government stepped in to preserve needed rail service: Conrail for freight service, Amtrak for passengers. Subsequent revelations that directors were unaware or unconcerned about widespread mismanagement raised concerns about U.S. corporate governance.
Campaign GM
Led by Ralph Nader, activist General Motors shareholders moved to obtain greater proxy access, have directors nominated by various shareholder groups, and require GM to publish information on social policies. While Campaign GM had mixed success, it inspired shareholders at other companies to seek greater influence over corporate policy, especially regarding social responsibility.
Business Combinations and Intangibles
The AICPA Accounting Principles Board issued two controversial Opinions on accounting for acquisitions of businesses, the first including criteria for the purchase and pooling-of-interests methods, the second mandating amortization of acquired goodwill over a period not to exceed forty years. The two Opinions could have been issued as one, but would have included so many qualified assents that it might appear not to have the required two-thirds majority. The issues were separated into two Opinions to allow for dissents rather than qualified assents. The process was criticized, and was a factor in studies leading to the Financial Accounting Standards Board.
Investment Company Amendments Act
As a reform to the Investment Company Act of 1940, the legislation restricted sales charges and front end loads, and put new responsibilities on independent fund directors. Section 36(b) held both a fund adviser and the board to a fiduciary duty in regard to investor fees.
Voting Age Lowered to 18
Pentagon Papers Published
Anti-War Rally in Washington
Idi Amin Coup in Uganda
U.S. Ends Trade Embargo Against China
First Email Sent Across Network
Nasdaq
Institutional Investor Study
NYSE Martin Report
Municipal Securities Insurance
Money Market Funds
Nixon Visits China
Watergate Break-in
Israeli Athletes Killed at Olympic Games
Future Structure Statement
Powell Named to Supreme Court
SEC Restricts Poolings of Interests
Memphis Bond Daddies Investigation
Rule 144
Dow Jones Breaks 1000
Watergate Hearings
Roe v. Wade
Yom Kippur War
OPEC Oil Embargo
U.S. Vietnam Prisoners of War Released
Pinochet Coup in Chile
Chicago Board Options Exchange
Equity Funding Collapse
International Accounting Standards Committee Formed
FASB Succeeds APB
The Financial Accounting Standards Board, a full-time independent body succeeded the AICPA’s part-time Accounting Principles Board, removing standard-setting from the profession. Overseen by the Financial Accounting Foundation, the FASB included seven full-time members, who were not required to be certified public accountants. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued Accounting Series Release No. 150, affirming its policy of looking to the private sector for establishing and improving generally accepted accounting principles, and recognizing that standards issued by the FASB would have substantial authoritative support. The blueprint for the FASB was developed by an AICPA-commissioned study, The Wheat Study on the Establishment of Accounting Principles, headed by former SEC Commissioner Francis M. Wheat.
Trueblood Report - Financial Reports' Purpose
An AICPA study group determined that the primary role of financial reports is to provide information to outside users. The study, Objectives of Financial Statements Report, is known as the Trueblood Report after Touche Ross Chairman Robert M. Trueblood who led the group.
Nixon Resigns – Gerald Ford President
Branch of Regional Office Assistance
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Safe Harbor Rules
ERISA
Illegal Corporate Payments
Corporate Governance Critiques
No-Load Funds
U.S. Pulls Out of Vietnam
Lebanese Civil War
Pol Pot Regime in Cambodia
"Mayday"
Securities Act Amendments
The 1975 Securities Act Amendments gave the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission responsibility for creating a composite quotation system and for promoting the development of a national system for the efficient clearance and settlement of securities transactions. One of the amendments also required the SEC to amend any rule which imposed an unnecessary burden on competition in the securities markets. This amendment was aimed at NYSE Rule 394 which limited the ability of NYSE members to trade a NYSE listed stock in another market.
New York City Bond Crisis
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board
Voluntary Disclosure Program
First GAAP Hierarchy
SEC Staff Accounting Bulletins
Jimmy Carter Elected President
Cohen Commission Report
Composite Tape
Materiality Defined
Materiality, a concept used throughout the securities laws, was defined by the U.S. Supreme Court in TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, Inc., a case involving allegations of proxy fraud. The TSC formulation subsequently was recognized for all ’33 and ’34 Act purposes.
Sunshine Act
Federal Government Responds to New York
MSRB Adopts Uniform Practice Rules
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board’s first rule-making resulted in the Uniform Practice Rules, codifying and standardizing industry practices for municipal securities trade confirmations, clearance and settlement.
Standardized Forms for Registration
NYSE DOT System
Arthur Andersen Petitions SEC
Index Funds
Panama Canal Neutrality
Vietnam Draft Evaders Pardoned
“Gang of Four” Expelled from Chinese Communist Party
Steve Biko Dies in South African Police Custody
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
SEC Moratorium on Options Trading Expansion
Metcalf Subcommittee
The staff of the Subcommittee on Reports, Accounting and Management of the Senate Committee on Government Operations, chaired by U.S. Senator Lee Metcalf (D-MT), issued The Accounting Establishment, dealing with accounting and auditing standard setting, auditor independence and audit quality. The report charged that the “Big 8” audit firms monopolized the auditing of large corporations and the standard-setting process, and recommended that the federal government establish accounting, auditing and independence standards. In 1977, the Metcalf Subcommittee held a series of hearings exploring the report’s findings.
SEC Practice Section and the Public Oversight Board
Oil and Gas Accounting Controversy
FASB Voting
Corporate Governance Reform
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission conducted hearings in and a re-examination of shareholder participation, while Columbia University’s American Assembly public issues forum addressed corporate governance. The next year, the American Law Institute launched its Principles of Corporate Governance project to review corporate law and propose reforms.
Roberta Karmel Appointed SEC Commissioner
Camp David Peace Accord
Pope John Paul II Elected
Jonestown Mass Suicide
First Test-Tube Baby
Rhodesia Agrees to Black-Majority Rule
Director of Regional Operations Created
Auditing Standards Board
Moss Subcommittee
Quote Rule
Rule G-15
Proposition 13
Leviticus Project
Intermarket Trading System
President Carter appointed Roberta Karmel, a partner at Rogers & Wells, as the first woman SEC Commissioner. She had served in the SEC’s New York regional office during the 1960s and as a public director of the New York Stock Exchange.
Special Study of Options Market
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission released its Special Study of the Options Market. While calling for technical and procedural changes, the study concluded that the market functioned effectively. In 1980, the SEC lifted the options moratorium after exchanges made specified reforms.
FASB Conceptual Framework
401(k)
U.S. Hostages Taken in Iran
USSR Invades Afghanistan
Three Mile Island Nuclear Accident
Margaret Thatcher Becomes British Prime Minister
Minahan Report on Internal Control
An AICPA-appointed committee provided guidance to management on assessing and evaluating internal controls and monitoring compliance with established internal control procedures. Entitled Report of the Special Advisory Committee on Internal Accounting Control, but known as the Minahan Report after ARCO Vice President and Controller Eugene J. Minahan, the report concluded that internal accounting control is concerned with the reliability of financial statements and should extend to all external reports of historic financial information.
Audit Profession Removes Competition Restrictions
Treatment of Pension Plans
The question of whether a noncontributory, compulsory pension plan constituted a “security” was answered in the negative by the U.S. Supreme Court in International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. Daniel.
CUSIP Numbers
Specialized Industry Accounting
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recommended that the Financial Accounting Standards Board develop a mechanism for dealing with industry accounting matters in pronouncements from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. The FASB decided to exercise responsibility for all such “specialized” accounting by extracting the principles and practices, and issuing them as FASB statements. Up to then, such principles and practices had been considered as preferable for justifying a change as required by generally accepted accounting principles.