-
In a move triggered by lawmaker's concerns over the marketing of abusive tax shelters by some accounting firms, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board has proposed new rules restricting the ability of accountants to provide tax services to their audit clients.
January 10 -
What four words cause public accountants to cringe more than, "Where were the auditors?"
January 10 -
-
Brussels - Europe is bracing for two major accounting reforms in the insurance industry, but most fear that the schedules could extend to at least 2007 and possibly to 2010.One of the reforms currently in the pipeline will consist of IFRS4 Phase II, or "Insurance Phase II." This will eventually replace the Phase I version - a measure currently in place that has not radically shaken up traditional regulations.
January 10 -
With the tax law becoming increasingly complex, it is no surprise that there often can be several well-intentioned interpretations of a particular provision. Also no surprise is the expectation of many clients that a fee for planning advice should almost always result in an exponential decrease in overall tax liability.
January 10 -
Members of the accounting profession are rallying to aid victims of the tsunami that devastated South Asia.
January 7 -
While 2004 brought convictions in such high-profile cases as Adelphia, Dynergy and others, with implementation of Sarbanes-Oxley requirements well underway and new federal sentencing guidelines in place, expect to see more corporate scandals unearthed in 2005, according to FirstGlobal Investigations.
January 7 -
Two weeks after ousting former auditor KPMG LLP, beleaguered mortgage giant Fannie Mae has hired Deloitte & Touche LLP to perform its 2004 audit and to re-audit prior period financial statements that it will restate.
January 6 -
The head of Big Four accounting firm Deloitte defended his firm's work and reportedly suggested that Grant Thornton's former Italian affiliate may have withheld information during audit work on Parmalat, the Italian dairy giant that imploded amid allegations of widespread accounting fraud.
January 5 -
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board is falling behind in its plan to recruit a small army of veteran auditors for the coming year -- a development that led it to trim its budget for the year and that could lead to frustrating delays in the Sarbanes-Oxley-mandated inspections of the more than 1,400 public accounting firms that have registered to audit the financial statements of publicly traded U.S. corporations.
January 4