Audit

  • Two New York firms are combining forces, with Tarrytown-based Platt, Barth, Elson & Steinman P.C. merging with New York City-based Marks Paneth & Shron LLP.

    August 5
  • When the Institute of Internal Auditors reached out to the world in an effort to understand the nature of internal auditing, it hoped to get comments from 20 countries.It heard from 91.

    August 5
  • CVB ENGAGES KPMGCVB Financial Corp., an Ontario, Calif.-based holding concern for Citizens Business Bank, has hired Big Four firm KPMG as its independent accountant, replacing McGladrey & Pullen.

    August 5
  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board said it is looking for suggestions on whether it should pursue a project on accounting for insurance contracts, and whether it should team up with the International Accounting Standards Board, which has been working on a similar project.

    August 5
  • The more we consider what the Financial Accounting Standards Board accomplished with SFAS 159, the more we're warming up to the sea change it represents. This standard, titled "The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities," permits without requiring managers to account for financial assets and liabilities using their fair values, with unrealized gains and losses flowing through the income statement. Some have disparaged SFAS 159 for not mandating full fair-value reporting, while others have criticized its "optionality."We see it quite differently. For years we have endorsed the Quality Financial Reporting paradigm that calls managers to step out on their own and try to meet the needs of the capital markets for useful information. In effect, SFAS 159 provides a nudge in this direction by allowing, even encouraging, innovative managers to jump into QFR by applying fair value without waiting for everyone else to get into the pool. We've often said that the biggest rewards will go to those who start providing better financial statements, so we're gratified that FASB seems to have seen it our way.

    August 5
  • The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards has now bolstered its ethical standards for financial planners who can use its CFP certification designation. The intent is to get the American consumer to the point of trusting that their financial planners who have this particular mark will be placing the clients’ interests well ahead of their own. According to Karen Schaeffer, who chairs the CFP’s Board of Directors, the demand for financial planning is high and growing. “Each day millions of Americans must make important financial decisions, from Baby Boomers on the verge of retirement to the younger generations looking for ways to build their nest eggs.” She adds, “As company-sponsored pensions are being replaced by self-administered 401(k)s and IRAs, and as more responsibility for medical coverage shifts to individuals, Americans today are often required to make a broader range of fiduciary decisions than the decisions their parents made, and more people are finding professional financial planning assistance a necessity.” Interestingly-enough, in a recent survey commissioned by the CFP Board, 97 percent of the more than 1,100 participants identified trustworthiness a the most important factor they considered when looking for a professional financial advisor. That’s pretty much where that code of ethics and practice standards come in, and it also helps to explain the CFP Board’s dedication (and rightly so) in making ethical financial planning available to the public. By the way, some recent updates to these ethical standards, which take effect in July of next year, significantly strengthens the ethical requirements for the more than 55,000 CFP professionals. The CFP people even help the consumer by listing a series of questions that a consumer might want to consider when retaining a financial planner, such as: What experience do you have? What services do you offer? What is your approach to financial planning? Will you be the only person working with me? How will I pay for your services? How much do you typically charge? Could someone besides me benefit from your recommendations? Have you ever been publicly disciplined for any unlawful or unethical actions? Can I have it in writing? I love that last one! According to Schaeffer, “Integrity, competence, and the desire to create trusting relationships with consumers are the cornerstones of CPR certification.” The CFP people deserve a big ovation. They certainly are following through on that.

    August 2
  • Scandal-tainted Japanese accounting firm Misuzu Audit, formerly known as ChuoAoyama PricewaterhouseCoopers, has disbanded after 39 years, according to Kyodo News.

    August 2
  • Ray Schmidt, chief information officer of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, is stepping down after five years to take a job in the private sector.

    August 2
  • A Securities and Exchange Commission advisory committee began meeting to consider ways to make financial reporting more understandable and relevant to investors.

    August 2
  • Two CPA firms on California's central coast have announced a merger: Bianchi, Lorincz, Huey, Hudson & Co. and Kasavan & Pope.

    August 1
  • General Electric vice president and comptroller Phillip Ameen has joined the advisory board of BNA Tax and Accounting's Accounting Policy & Practice Series.

    August 1
  • Grant Thornton CEO Edward E. Nusbaum has worked with the firm for 28 years, but since he took over the helm, the Chicago-based firm has more than doubled its revenue in the last four years, reaching $940 million in 2006.

    August 1
  • This week marks the five-year anniversary of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The legislation has proven to be a boon to many accountants and auditing firms, but a bane to many public companies.

    July 31
  • Motive has dropped Ernst & Young as its independent auditing firm after its audit committee conducted an investigation into its own past accounting practices, helped by a law firm that hired PricewaterhouseCoopers.

    July 31
  • SEC Chairman Christopher Cox says small public companies should start getting ready to comply with the stricter auditing rules of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, but left open the possibility of another deferral of the requirement.

    July 31
  • Huron Consulting Group has acquired Callaway Partners for $60 million in cash to add Callaway's finance and accounting project management expertise to Huron's financial and consulting services.

    July 31
  • You might be surprised what qualifies as an unforeseen circumstance for the partial exclusion of gain on the sale of a personal residence. Under this special rule, taxpayers are allowed to exclude gain up to a reduced maximum exclusion amount under Section 121(c) if the sale is due to a change in place of employment, health, or unforeseen circumstances even though it was used for less than two of the five preceding years as the personal residence.

    July 30
  • Two-thirds of investors would be concerned about any easing of Sarbanes-Oxley rules, according to a national survey by the Center for Audit Quality, released in conjunction with the five-year anniversary of the legislation.

    July 30
  • Three academics from the U.K. who have written a book about auditing, and a Virginia professor who has developed a taxation education curriculum, will receive awards from Deloitte & Touche’s not-for-profit Deloitte Foundation.

    July 30
  • Cougar Mountain Software released Version 12 of its CMS Professional Accounting, Fund and Point of Sale products.

    July 29