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No matter what else may happen in 2005, the markets for personal financial planning are set to explode. It's not just the Bush administration's announced plans to overhaul both Social Security and the income tax systems. Nor is it just that an economic upswing and low interest rates are pushing the stock markets back up to pre-2000 levels.There are certain fundamental changes taking place in the software industry, and in the markets for financial planning software in particular. Three trends are notable at the beginning of this year: * The software is going online. In addition to traditional application software provider eMoneyAdvisor, MoneyTree and EISI have both moved strongly into Web-based services. Other software vendors must carefully weave between the obvious advantages of an online service and the wishes of subscribers, who may not want to move so quickly onto the Internet. But the trend has an air of inevitability about it.
March 14 -
Just weeks after a report by New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi charged three former officials of the Roslyn N.Y. School District with plundering more than $11 million over an eight-year period, a new investigation is examining the district budget, as well as the former supervisor for construction and repair projects. The probe by prosecutors for Nassau County, as well as Hevesi's office, centers on Thomas Galinski, who resigned last year after questions arose surrounding trips to Las Vegas and Atlantic City that were billed to the district. At issue is a $23.9 million bond issue approved five years ago to expand the district's middle school. However, district residents have labeled the work substandard, as evidenced by such things as leaking roofs. The former superintendent, Frank A. Tassone, assistant superintendent Pamela Gluckin and clerk Debra Rigano, who were alleged to have siphoned the money from district coffers, are currently awaiting indictment by the Nassau County Grand Jury. In addition, the state probe has implicated an additional 26 people involved in the audit scam. Meanwhile, the accounting firm that audited the district, Miller Lily & Pearce, which audited over 50 additional school districts and whose affiliate sold financial software to some 250 districts across New York state, recently shut its doors.
March 14 -
Washington - Regulators at the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board are wrestling with proposals to abandon the current "pass/fail" auditor reporting model for informing investors of the accuracy of corporate financial statements - a move that could require independent accountants to provide considerably more information about the veracity of their clients' financial reports.Whether the additional work and information will translate into more useful data for investors was a matter of considerable debate during the latest meeting of the PCAOB's Standing Advisory Group.
March 14 -
Accounting for social policy obligations has long confounded the preparers and users of governmental financial reports.The controversy currently surrounding the gargantuan obligations of the Social Security Administration is an example of the difficulties of dealing with long-term, big-number obligations of vaguely defined liability.
March 14 -
Brussels - Following the start of 2005, when the EU's International Financial Reporting Standards ventured out of port, so to speak, users might have hoped that only the odd technical hitch or two remained to be solved, and that the arrival of IFRS accountancy standardization to the economic zone's 7,000 listed companies would be smooth sailing.Subsequently, European investors, who previously faced a tangle of variegated regulations - which led to confusion over how companies were performing - would then be able to balance performance with performance.
March 14 -
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board has released its new five-year strategic plan, an effort that kicks off with a series of sweeping surveys of the board's standing with its constituency, as well as a barometer of its progress.
March 14 -
The constant headlines of regulators' actions against broker/dealers recall the image of falling dominoes.
March 14 -
Despite the Securities and Exchange Commission giving the okay for companies to voluntarily file reports using XBRL, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. being poised to require quarterly call reports in the tagged data format, the United States still lags behind Europe, Asia and Australia in the adoption and implementation of the Extensible Business Reporting Language.Now more than five years old, XBRL is the financial reporting derivation of Extensible Mark-up Language, or XML - a framework that establishes individual "tags" for elements in structured documents, allowing specific elements to be immediately accessed and aggregated.
March 14 -
The President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform will hold its fourth meeting on Wednesday, March 16, at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business Gleacher Center. Witnesses will provide perspectives on the impact of the tax laws on important taxpayer decisions and how the tax system treats investment alternatives. Panel I, on taxes and individual decisions, will hear testimony from James J. Heckman, a Nobel Laureate in Economics and professor of economics at the University of Chicago. Panel II will examine taxes and investment alternatives. Its witnesses include Brian Wesbury, chief investment strategist at Claymore Securities Inc.; Kathleen Kennedy, an associate professor of law and director of the Center for Tax Law and Employee Benefits at John Marshall Law School; Dr. Susan Dynarski, assistant professor of public policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University; and Armond Dinverno, principal and co-president of Balasa Dinverno & Foltz LLC. Panel III, on taxation of financial instruments, will hear David Weisbach, a professor of law at the University of Chicago; and Robert McDonald, a professor of finance at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.
March 14 -
Auditor General David M. Walker said that, while Social Security is staring at a long-term financing problem, the 70-year-old program does not face an "immediate crisis." In testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee, Walker told lawmakers that it would be "prudent" to address the Social Security problem "sooner rather than later." Walker also took President George W. Bush to task for his aggressive selling of his privatization plan, where younger workers would be able to divert a portion of their payroll taxes into private investment accounts. Walker testified that private accounts by themselves would "exacerbate the solvency problem" that Social Security faces, and suggested that Congress first focus on improving the program's financing. The private accounts plan faces stiff opposition from Democrats and even some Republicans. Rep. Charles B. Rangel, D-N.Y., ranking Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, was quoted as telling Walker that, "Private accounts will not be on the table if you are looking for bipartisanship.''
March 11