Audit & Accounting

  • Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox said he expects to see the SEC start allowing U.S. companies to file financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards in the year ahead.

    February 5
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board released expanded versions of two reports it had originally issued in 2005 on two audit firms, highlighting problems with technical competence.

    February 4
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has begun a cost-benefit study of the upcoming attestation requirement for smaller companies under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

    February 4
  • Did you know that today most investment advice zeroes in on the development of portfolios that are on the “efficient frontier,” which is one where no added diversification can lower a portfolio’s risk for a given return expectation? At least, that’s according to my friend Larry Swedroe who is the principal and director of research for both Buckingham Asset Management and BAM Advisor Services in St. Louis. He’s also the author of the recently released Wise Investing Made Simple plus a half dozen other best sellers. His words are deemed golden. In any event, working with this efficient frontier, Swedroe says that investment advisors can then tailor portfolios to the individual investor’s unique situation but unfortunately far too many investors and their advisors focus only on the risks of the investments themselves. Swedroe believes that when developing the overall financial plan, there are other risks that are important to consider and that not integrating the management of these risks can cause the best investment plans to fail. These other risks are human capital (which means wage earning), mortality, and longevity. Taking these one at a time, Swedroe notes that as we age and accumulate financial assets and the time we have remaining in the labor force decreases, the percentage of human capital to financial assets shrink. “This shift over time should be considered in terms of the asset allocation decision.” He also considers that with all else being equal, people with a high earning capability have a greater ability to take more financial risk because ether can moiore easily recover from losses. “However, they also have a lower need to take risk.” As to mortality, he believes that protecting the capital via the purchase of life insurance should be part of the overall financial plan. “Life insurance is the perfect hedge for mortality risk as its return is 100 percent negatively correlated with the human capital asset.” Looking at longevity risk, which he defines as the risk that you will outlive the ability of your portfolio to support your desired lifestyle, he suggests that investors might consider purchasing annuities at around 65 years of age and certainly buying them before reaching 85. All in all, in general younger investors with more labor capital should invest more in stocks than older investors and that individuals with safer human capital have a greater ability to invest more in risky assets. Of course, those whose human capital more highly correlates with equity risks should allocate more to safer fixed income investments. Swedroe also believes that individuals should diversify their human capital, minimizing investments in assets that correlate with their labor income and should hedge their human capital risks through the use of insurance contracts such as disability, life and long-term health care. Finally, individuals should consider hedging their longevity risk through the use of payout annuities.

    February 1
  • Accountants Mike Karlins and Glea Ramey have purchased the Woodlands, Texas office of UHY Advisors TX and opened an independent firm, Karlins & Ramey LLC, CPAs.

    February 1
  • The Internal Revenue Service warned taxpayers to beware of several current e-mail and telephone scams that use the IRS name as a lure.The goal of the scams is to trick people into revealing personal and financial information, such as Social Security, bank account or credit card numbers, which the scammers can use to commit identity theft. Typically, identity thieves use a victim's personal and financial data to empty the victim's financial accounts, run up charges on the victim's existing credit cards, apply for new loans, credit cards, services or benefits in the victim's name, file fraudulent tax returns or even commit crimes. Most of these fraudulent activities can be committed electronically from a remote location, including overseas. Committing these activities in cyberspace allows scammers to act quickly and cover their tracks before the victim becomes aware of the theft. The most recent scams brought to IRS attention are the rebate phone call, in which a bogus IRS employee tells the consumer he is eligible for a sizable rebate for filing his taxes early; a link for a refund that is e-mailed to tax-exempt organizations bearing the supposed signature of the IRS Exempt Organizations business division; and an e-mail inviting recipients to click on a series of links to download information on changes in the tax law, but which downloads malware onto the recipient's computer. A new scam, not seen before by the IRS, notifies the recipient by e-mail that his or her tax return will be audited. The e-mail instructs the recipient to click on links to complete forms with personal and account information that the scammers will use to commit identity theft.

    January 31
  • David B. Duncan, former global engagement partner for Enron at the defunct audit firm Arthur Andersen, agreed to an injunction by the Securities and Exchange Commission to settle charges that he broke securities laws when he signed false and misleading audit reports.

    January 30
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board has voted to adopt Auditing Standard No. 6, "Evaluating Consistency of Financial Statements," and an accompanying set of amendments to its interim auditing standards.

    January 30
  • Billy Beane, vice president and general manager of the Oakland A’s, the keynote speaker at the recent Winning Is Everything Conference, explained how mathematics is transforming America’s pastime. Yes, I said mathematics.

    January 29
  • MIAMI NAMES MCGLADREY

    January 28