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Tuesday, April 08, 2008 All this is about to change. In November 2007, Standard and Poor's announced plans to introduce enterprise risk management into its credit ratings criteria for non-financial companies, a move meant to bring a level of consistency to evaluating not only the resilience and profitability of these firms, but also the quality of management. S&P has been evaluating ERM in the financial sector for some time; now it will apply its ERM ratings criteria to industries as diverse as airlines, pharmaceuticals and retail. While S&P plans to tailor its proposed ERM analysis based on individual companies' unique risks, structure and culture, all companies will be rated against four major criteria that will serve as the framework for analysis—risk management culture and governance, risk controls, emerging risk preparation and analysis of strategic management. It's time to embrace Risk Management Labels: credit rating, enterprise risk management, ERM, Standard and Poors Previous articles PCAOB Addresses Emerging Audit Issues In 2008 Foru...
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