Audit & Accounting

  • While Big Four firm KPMG was busy writing a check for $456 million as a settlement with federal regulators for its part in pushing fraudulent tax shelters, the remaining three global audit firms were either breathing a sigh of relief or wondering if they'll soon receive a request for a chat with prosecutors.Because KPMG avoided a criminal indictment like the one that ultimately proved fatal to now-defunct Big Five firm Arthur Andersen, my guess is you won't see a lemming-like exodus of audit clients like that at Andersen circa 2002.

    September 25
  • ZONES INC. DISMISSES PWC: Zones Inc., an Auburn, Wash.-based reseller of information technology products, dismissed Big Four firm PricewaterhouseCoopers as its independent accountant and hired Grant Thornton as its successor.In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Zones said that it had no accounting disagreements with its former auditor over the last two fiscal years.

    September 25
  • Audit committees have never felt so stressed and stretched. Everybody, from stock exchanges to boards of directors to investors, expects more from them, and the penalties for failure have never been more serious.As a result, audit committees are meeting more often, setting more serious agendas tilted more toward inquiry, demanding more of internal auditors, and calling for committee members with better qualifications.

    September 25
  • In our preceding five columns, we have expressed our concerns to our good friends at the Financial Accounting Standards Board about their May 2005 exposure draft on the hierarchy of accounting principles.We confess that we yawned when we first saw this document superficially. However, a closer, more careful look made us sit upright and kick into gear. We don't think they meant anything sinister, but we found great hubris in their words.

    September 25
  • EARNINGS FOR FINANCIAL PLANNERS RISE IN 2005: Earnings for financial planners have risen 27 percent from their 2004 levels, according to a survey conducted by the College for Financial Planning in conjunction with the Financial Planning Association. Its 2005 Survey of Trends in the Financial Planning Industry showed that the median gross amount of planner earnings climbed to $277,800 in 2005.The majority of CFP professionals surveyed (56 percent) also reported that their income is the result of a combination of fees for service and commissions, while only 34 percent reported that their income is the result of fee-only services. When asked about clients' net worth, planners reported the continuation of a trend from previous years, with a 33 percent increase - to $1 million - over last year's reported amount of $750,000. In other findings regarding the financial planning market, 67.3 percent of planners participating in the survey prepared between one and 19 single-focus plans, while 62.7 percent prepared up to 19 comprehensive plans.

    September 25
  • Investment advisors write books for many reasons.Some have practice management techniques that they feel could help others. Some have a particular planning or investment expertise. Others just want to see their name on the dust jacket. Check your cost benefit analysis calculators before starting, say veteran scribes: The task is a monumental one, and the benefits often come quite indirectly.

    September 25
  • The recently enacted Energy Tax Incentives Act of 2005 includes new and substantial tax incentives for individuals to make energy-saving (and some energy-creating) improvements to their homes.The incentives come in the form of tax credits, which reduce federal tax bills on a dollar-for-dollar basis. Unlike many other tax credits contained in the Internal Revenue Code, these energy tax credits are not phased out for higher-income individuals. These credits are available for certain energy-saving home improvements made in 2006 and 2007.

    September 25
  • For the fourth consecutive year, Plante Moran Financial Advisors placed among the top 10 largest independent financial advisory firms in the nation based on total assets under management, according to Bloomberg Wealth Manager's fifth annual rankings.With more than $3.9 billion in total assets under management, PMFA ranked seventh in terms of overall assets; the firm also is 45th based on average client relationship size. Bloomberg Wealth Manager's annual financial advisor ranking includes 500 firms from across the United States.

    September 25
  • To aid the convergence of International Public Sector Accounting Standards with International Financial Reporting Standards, the International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board has issued a new exposure draft, "Improvements to International Public Sector Accounting Standards."

    September 25
  • A new set of proposed regulations from the Internal Revenue Service aims to change the way companies use accounting methods to switch profits from countries with high corporate tax to countries where corporate taxes are low.The regs - all 85 pages of them - create an ambitious regime with a number of nebulous new concepts, including an "investor model," to insure that businesses value intangibles, such as marketing, research and development, and patents, in a way that will maximize exposure to U.S. tax.

    September 25