PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania - Alcoa's Board of Directors today adopted a resolution formalizing the company's general practice of retaining an independent accounting firm only for audit, audit-related services, and acquisition and due diligence reviews.
Over the past three years, Alcoa has reduced the ratio of non-audit to audit fees from more than 2:1 in 1999 to almost 1:1 in 2001. According to the "Wall Street Journal," Alcoa's use of auditors for non-audit services was the fourth lowest of the Dow Industrials. In 2001, Alcoa paid PricewaterhouseCoopers $5.7 million for audit services and $6.9 million for other services, which are largely audit-related, including tax advice, preparation of tax returns, audits of benefit plans and advice on accounting matters.
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