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E&Y DISMISSED AS CYGNE AUDITORCygne Designs, a New York-based clothier, dismissed its auditor, Big Four firm Ernst & Young, and named Mahoney Cohen & Co. as its new independent accountant.
July 8 -
This column is approximately the 250th that has appeared under the title of "The Spirit of Accounting." Paul Miller has been around for all of them, and Paul Bahnson for the latest 150. As we were looking ahead to what to write about next, we looked back to the first few columns we published to see whether their messages might still be relevant for today.It turns out that they were, and we thought it would be insightful to reprint this one that first appeared in September 2000. One of the issues being debated at that time was the question of whether non-audit fees could compromise auditor independence. In those days, Enron was considered to be an amazing company, instead of the economic disaster that we now know was going to happen in 2001.
July 8 -
Donor-advised funds have captured headlines since the millennium changed, often for their meteoric rise in popularity. There was an estimated $5.5 billion in donor-advised funds nationwide in 1995, while the current estimate is nearly $20 billion.These giving vehicles have existed for more than 70 years. Despite their longevity and impressive growth, numerous misperceptions about donor-advised funds persist. These common "myths" underplay the real value that a DAF can have in helping you meet your clients' philanthropic needs.
July 8 -
SEC WON'T APPEAL COURT DECISIONThe Securities and Exchange Commission said that it would ask a court to allow four months for investors and their brokers to respond in light of a court decision affecting an estimated 1 million fee-based brokerage accounts.
July 8 -
A new nationwide research study on family businesses commissioned by Seattle-based Laird Norton Co., a diversified financial concern, shows that overwhelming optimism of the owners of family businesses about their future might prove to be premature because of a lack of strategic vision, succession planning and governance policies.The survey showed that nearly 60 percent of majority shareowners in family businesses are 55 or older, while 30 percent are 65 or older. However, less than 30 percent of those respondents even have succession plans in place, and fewer than 40 percent have a successor lined up.
July 8 -
Big Four firm PricewaterhouseCoopers agreed to pay $225 million to settle a securities and accounting fraud class-action lawsuit brought by Tyco shareholders. The accounting giant's payment, combined with Tyco's share, will bring the total amount of the settlement to $3.2 billion including interest, according to the three law firms representing the plaintiffs: Grant & Eisenhofer, Schiffrin Barroway Topaz & Kessler, and Milberg Weiss.
July 8 -
Little Rock, Ark. - Arkansas accounting giant Moore Stephens Frost has acquired a North Carolina firm, Lynch and Howard.
July 8 -
A bill before the Connecticut State Senate would give its state comptroller the legal authority to establish generally accepted accounting principles for the state's financials, thereby sidestepping the Governmental Accounting Standards Board - the standard-setter for governments and municipalities.Proponents said that GASB's accounting rules make it hard to achieve a balanced budget, which Connecticut requires.
July 8 -
Pension fund disclosures will soon look more like those of other post-employment benefits under a new statement issued by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board.Statement 50, Pension Disclosures, amends Statement 25, on reporting on defined-benefit pension plans, and Statement 27, on accounting for pensions by governmental employers. The amendments make disclosures under those two statements consistent with the requirements of Statements 43, on reporting OPEB, and 45, on reporting on OPEB by governmental employers.
July 8 -
Think you've come up with a perfect tax strategy for your high-end clients? Before you go ahead with it, you might want to check if it's been patented. You're liable to be sued for patent infringement if someone else thought of it first.It all started in 1998, when a federal appeals court ruled that business methods could be patented. Since then, more than 60 tax-strategy patents have been granted, and 86 more are pending. And the first infringement suit has been filed over the SOGRAT patent.
July 8