Audit & Accounting

  • SEC Inspector General H. David Kotz told a congressional panel that the Securities and Exchange Commission is ramping up its investigation of Bernard Madoff and his $50 billion Ponzi scheme.

    January 6
  • The economic turmoil of the past year presents a unique opportunity for accountants to broaden their practices to include financial planning.

    January 5
  • A commission is expected to recommend a 50 percent increase in federal gasoline taxes to help fund infrastructure projects.

    January 5
  • The Internal Revenue Service recently gave 403(b) plan sponsors an extra year to comply with new requirements.

    January 5
  • Accounting firm Goldstein Lieberman has introduced a consulting team to help business clients cope with the recession.

    January 5
  • The stock market crash, plummeting real estate values and the credit crunch have created general-purpose anxiety for most CPA clients. But for those with children someday headed for college, that looming burden weighs particularly heavily.According to the most recent College Board survey, the average tab this academic year at a four-year private college is $37,390. And total expenses at four-year public institutions average $18,326 for in-state residents, and $29,193 for out-of-state students.

    January 5
  • Having a long-term financial plan gives your clients' logic a leg up over their emotions during times of market volatility.The past year has seen the stock markets swinging hundreds of points a day in either direction. That roller coaster ride has tested even the most stoic of investors, but those with a professionally prepared, long-term financial plan most likely have fared better than most do-it-yourself investors.

    January 5
  • Fear that the U.S. economic meltdown will encourage corporations to cut accounting corners has helped spur the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to approve a 9 percent budget increase for itself during 2009, to $157.6 million."Current market conditions suggest that our inspectors may be dealing with even more complex issues next year when they review 2008 audits," PCAOB Chairman Mark W. Olson said in announcing the new budget.

    January 5
  • Securities and Exchange Commission Chief Accountant Conrad Hewitt announced that he will leave the regulator as the Obama administration takes over. Also leaving will be John White, the director of the Division of Corporate Finance.SEC Chairman Christopher Cox had said previously that he will leave upon the change in administration.

    January 5
  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board by its own accounts had a very productive 2008, and it looks like its output will be even higher in 2009.Though much of 2008 was dedicated to issuing discussion papers that may eventually lead to standards and documents in 2009, the past year saw new standards on accounting for financial guarantee insurance contracts, the hierarchy of generally accepted accounting principles, and disclosures about derivative instruments and hedging activities.

    January 5