Audit & Accounting

  • Financial services educator The American College is accepting nominations for induction into its newly created Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame is designed to recognize graduates of the college's designation or degree programs who have made extraordinary contributions in time, effort and energy to this institution of higher learning.To qualify for induction into The American College Hall of Fame, individuals must have graduated from at least one of the college's designation or degree programs. In addition, they must be long-term volunteers of the college and active participants in its community and learning environment.

    October 9
  • Houses and offices under water. Looting in the streets. Factories on fire. What's an accountant to do?According to the Financial Accounting Standards Board's Emerging Issues Task Force, treat the situation as ordinary.

    October 9
  • The Streamlined Sales Tax Project, in labor since 2000, officially gave birth on Oct. 1, 2005, when the threshold of 10 states representing at least 20 percent of the population was crossed."There are now 13 full-member states and five more associate states," said SSTP co-chair Scott Peterson, of the South Dakota Department of Revenue and Regulations. The associate-member states are those that have passed the requisite implementing legislation, but where the legislation had not yet gone into effect by October 1.

    October 9
  • Following the inevitable rounds of infighting, European Union countries are taking the final steps to enact legislation to bring their auditing standards into line with best international practices as set out by the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board.At press time, the European Parliament was expected to rubber-stamp an upgraded version of the EU's Eighth Directive on statutory auditing, which got through the committee stage in September. The agreed-upon package will be published before the end of the year, leading on to official enactment by the EU national governments.

    October 9
  • Repealing the federal estate tax could end up choking off billions of dollars in contributions to charities whose resources have been stretched thin by the Hurricane Katrina relief effort, a top tax policy researcher warned Congress.Testifying on behalf of the Brookings Institution's Tax Policy Center, economist William Gale cited a variety of studies suggesting that "estate tax repeal would reduce charitable bequests by between 22 and 37 percent" - a drop that would drain between $3.6 billion and $6 billion each year from the nation's charities.

    October 9
  • Calling the proposal for a "return-free" filing system "flawed" and "dangerous to taxpayers," 14 groups have written the President's Advisory Panel on Tax Reform to urge that it be taken off the table in any final report.While the timetable for a final report has been delayed by Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, with the final two scheduled meetings postponed, the return-free concept is one of the proposals under consideration by the panel.

    October 9
  • New guidance from Securities and Exchange Commission regulators sets limits on ways to determine the cost of stock options, though the new SEC chairman said that the report was "tentative."Chief accountant Donald Nicolaisen, who will leave the SEC in October, wrote in a statement that he had doubts as to whether the creation of a financial instrument to mimic employee stock options would be an accurate tool. And chief economist Chester Spatt wrote in a memo from the SEC's Office of Economic Analysis that such an instrument would face the inherent difficulty of reconciling market price with the fair value of stock options.

    October 9
  • Environmentalism has arrived, and it's here to stay. And apparently the time to account for it has also come. The question is how.Many corporations have seen real, market-driven reasons to report on their environmental impact and sustainability. Consumers are paying attention. Investors are worried about what they're investing in and how environmental liabilities could impact their investments. In many countries, environmental regulation agencies are requiring some degree of reporting.

    October 9
  • BearingPoint Inc., a spinoff of Big Four firm KPMG's former consulting business, said that the Securities and Exchange Commission has launched a formal investigation of the company.Along with providing an update to the progress of the company's plans to release its 2004 financial statements, BearingPoint said that the SEC has issued a formal order of investigation into the company. In a statement, BearingPoint said that it believes the matters involved are the same as the informal investigation that it announced in March.

    October 9
  • Two state pension funds and other large investors have sued Delphi Corp. and its auditor, Deloitte & Touche, saying that the auto parts supplier made deals with third-party vendors to hide the company's financial problems.

    October 6