Audit & Accounting

  • The Government Accountability Office has released a report on the possibility of using accrual budgeting instead of cash budgeting to bring more attention to the nation's long-term fiscal challenges.

    December 27
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission introduced an online tool that allows investors to compare executive pay at 500 of the largest American companies.

    December 26
  • ATM and voting machine maker Diebold said that the Justice Department, in addition to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Office of the Chief Accountant, has been investigating its accounting practices.

    December 26
  • Sunrise Senior Living fired three top executives after the company completed its accounting investigation.

    December 24
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission's Office of the Chief Accountant and Division of Corporation Finance have released a staff accounting bulletin intended to help public companies value stock option grants to employees on their income statements.

    December 24
  • Hey, all you single, married, and divorced women out there. Guess who the model investor is? Nope. Guess again! It’s not any of you. Can you believe that widows make model investors? How’s that again? Well, based upon a recent national survey from OppenheimerFunds, it was found that widowed women had more confidence when it came to managing their money with some 65 percent of the respondents giving themselves a rating of 8 or better on a scale of 100 when asked how good of a job they were doing. You can compare this number with 40 percent of married and co-habitants, and 52 percent of divorced respondents. Lauren Coulston, Assistant Vice President, Advocacy and Training Manager at OppenheimerFunds, says “It makes sense that women who are responsible for their own finances through a major life event such as widowhood or divorce have more confidence in their money management skills.” She notes that one possible reason for this confidence is that more widows work with financial advisors. In other words, widowed women are often forced to deal with their own finances. Seems to make a lot of sense in that widowed women appear to do more financial planning and on a more methodical basis. Incidentally, according to the survey, widowed respondents were also more likely to list retirement as their primary investment goal followed by divorced, married/co-habitants, and single women. Moreover, they are least likely to cite a lack of money as the reason they are not participating in a retirement savings vehicle or plan. I was especially interested in who widows relied on for investing advice. You got it! The financial advisor. “The fact is, eighty to ninety percent of women will be solely responsible for managing their own finances at some point of their life due to longer life expectancies and higher divorce rates,” adds Coulston. “Regardless of marital status, financial advisors should bring women into financial conversations as early as possible.” I couldn’t agree more. By the way, consider too the fact that more than 60 percent of the women surveyed here had over $5,000 in household debt and more than 30 percent maintained over $20,000 of debt. Number one source of debt? The credit card, of course. And to put a topper on all this, consider this salient fact. Widowed respondents were the least likely to carry any debt. Bottom line? You don’t have to be in a widowed state to work with a financial advisor. All marital demographics could benefit. And the earlier you get started, obviously, the better off you will be.

    December 21
  • The Center for Audit Quality has advice for smaller public companies that will soon have to implement Section 404(a) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

    December 21
  • The Internal Revenue Service has issued an updated version of Form 990, which charities are required to file annually to retain their tax-exempt status, and is giving small tax-exempt organizations time to adjust.

    December 21
  • Financial Executives International, a 15,000-member trade group headquartered here, has compiled what it considers to be the top financial challenges for 2008.

    December 21
  • The American Institute of CPAs received 24 marketing awards, mostly for its "Feed the Pig" campaign aimed at encouraging Americans to prepare better for long-term financial security.

    December 20