£4m-a-year Sarbox millstone forces ICI to abandon US listing

Sarbox 'no longer makes sense from a cost and administrative perspective' says chemical giant's CFO as ICI prepares to leave New York Stock Exchange

Written by David Jetuah

ICI is gearing up to leave the New York Stock Exchange to free itself from the blight of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance.

The company predicted a £4m annual saving from the de-listing based on the costs 'incurred using external suppliers and auditors to provide ongoing support to the company's Sarbanes-Oxley compliance'.

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Alan J Brown, ICI's CFO said: 'ICI will continue to comply with the Combined Code on Corporate Governance and the UK Listing Authority listing rules and maintain quarterly reporting. However, it no longer makes sense from a cost and administrative perspective to submit to the reporting obligations under the Exchange Act.'

The move will be seen as an embarrasing snub for the US stock market which has come under fire from companies ever since the inception of the demanding internal control requirements.

After setting the wheels in motion by providing the NYSE written notice of its intent to delist today, the corporate plans to wrap up the exit by the mid-June: 'ICI plans to file a Form 25 with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the NYSE on or about 8 June, 2007, to effect the delisting.' The KPMG-audited corporate added: 'The delisting is expected to be effective 10 days after this filing.'

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