Accounting

Accounting News & Professional Insight

Accounting Today delivers news, rankings, thought leadership, and analysis for accounting professionals so they can navigate change in standards, firm strategy, technology adoption, talent, and the overall business environment.

Accounting professionals are facing rapid transformation, including shifting professional standards, demographic change, technology disruption, practice consolidation, and changing expectations for advisory services. Our coverage surfaces these strategic dynamics and provides insights and analysis for firms, leaders, and the accounting profession.

  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board has set a new standard that establishes a long-needed framework on fair value measurement and expands related information in financial reports - and the investor community, according to FASB board member Leslie F. Seidman, is going to love it.Though Statement 157, Fair Value Measurements, does not require any new or additional fair value measurements, it applies to over 40 existing standards that require or permit the measurement of assets and liabilities at fair value.

    October 15
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission's top accountant has added his thoughts on how to properly account for stock options in the historical financial statements of public companies.In a letter sent from his office, SEC Chief Accountant Conrad Hewitt discusses the consequences offered under Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees. The letter, sent to committee chairmen at Financial Executives International and the American Institute of CPAs, discusses dating an option award to predate the actual award date, option grants with administrative delays, the uncertainty as to the validity of prior grants, and other related circumstances.

    October 15
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission will consider recommendations for changes to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act at an open meeting on Dec. 13.

    October 12
  • Improving the accounting and disclosures for mergers and acquisitions by non-profit organizations is the aim of two exposure drafts released by the Financial Accounting Standards Board.

    October 10
  • KPMG International will combine its member firms in the United Kingdom and Germany in an effort to makes its services more consistent and risk-free. The combined firms will operate under the name KPMG Europe LLP and remain a member of KPMG International, which said in a statement that the hope is for other KPMG member firms in Europe to eventually merge into the new entity. Besides giving the combined firm a chance to pool its talent to better serve clients, the business said the KPMG Europe will be able to present a unified voice when it comes to international standards setting. The deal is the first announced by a Big Four firm after the introduction of the European Commission’s Eighth Directive legislation, which will allow cross-border mergers between accounting firms beginning in 2007. Both Germany and Britain are expected to incorporate the directive into national laws some time next year. The Big Four currently operate as networks of national partnerships in Europe because the law in most countries prevents them from being foreign-owned. With combined revenues of more than $2.5 billion in the current fiscal year, a statement from the firm said that KPMG Europe LLP will be the largest professional services firm on the continent. More than 17,000 partners and staff will work in the firm’s 44 offices across the U.K. and Germany. The firm’s head office will be located in Frankfurt and be chaired jointly by KPMG LLP U.K. chairman John Griffith-Jones and the chairman of KPMG Deutsche Treuhand-Gesellschaft AG’s managing board Dr. Rolf Nonnenmacher. Both the German and U.K. boards have already unanimously approved the proposal, but the merger must still be okayed by the firms’ partners in December.

    October 9
  • Apple Computer Inc. said that chief executive Steve Jobs knew about the company’s practice of backdating stock options awarded to executives, but wasn’t aware of the full accounting implications. Apple made the announcement after wrapping up a three-month internal investigation into the timing of stock option grants that resulted in the resignation of former chief financial officer Fred Anderson from its board of directors. Apple also said in a statement that it had expressed concerns to the Securities and Exchange Commission about actions, related to stock option grants, taken by two former officers.

    October 5
  • A “practice privilege” requirement introduced in Illinois -- which would have required out-of-state CPAs to register with a state agency -- appears on the verge of meeting a fate close to a similar proposal in California. That fate being, in this case, compromise. Both the Illinois CPA Society and the American Institute of CPAs had objected to the new registration requirement -- with the society requesting a delay to the law’s Oct. 1 effective date and the institute voicing its concerns over the “onerous” stipulation in a Sept. 28 letter to Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Contained in a broader piece of legislation that made changes to the regulation and licensing of CPAs in the state, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation would have required CPAs from other states to apply for temporary practice privilege or obtain full licensure as a CPA in the state of Illinois, regardless of whether the CPA or client ever entered the state. According to the AICPA, thousands of CPAs from across the country could have been impacted. On Sept. 29, the Illinois regulation department filed an emergency amendment, which read that out-of-state accountants would not have to follow the new requirement, “So long as the individual CPA is temporarily practicing in this state incidental to practice in another state and does not solicit Illinois clients nor have a physical presence in Illinois.” After much debate, a requirement that would have required out-of-state CPAs doing business in California to register with the state’s Board of Accountancy never made it out of committee this past June. Several taxpayer groups said that not requiring the registration could make it easier for accounting firms to market improper tax shelters without proper oversight. Proponents of the bill, including the state Board of Accountancy and the California CPA Society, said that their intention was merely to eliminate unnecessary red tape for neighboring accountants to provide basic services across state lines.

    October 4
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Accounting: Key Questions & Analysis

What are the key trends and strategies emerging from accounting industry leaders?

Top leaders are focused on structural challenges facing firms, including succession planning, evolving service mix, and long-term sustainability of traditional models.

How are accounting firms positioning themselves for the profession’s next phase?

Firm leaders are redefining and evaluating their strategy for growth. This includes investing in people and systems as well as rethinking how firms deliver value to address changing client needs and competition.

What role does professional identity play as accounting continues to change?

Debate continues over how accounting defines itself. This is due to accounting expanding into advisory, consulting, and technology-enabled services. These changes can raise questions about standards, training, and long-term credibility.

How are accounting firms managing leadership and succession risk?

Demographic shifts are accelerating in accounting. This means more firms are confronting leadership transitions and ownership succession which can create critical strategic risks that influence growth, culture, and valuation.