Audit

  • Recently, I was asked by my town officials to become a member of the fire sprinkler inspection team, whose purpose as explained to me, is to ensure that all emergency sprinkler systems within our area’s municipal buildings are up to code and functional.

    December 4
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board approved a $136.4 million budget for the 2007 calendar year, an increase of 4.2 percent over last year.Under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which created the accounting regulator, the board’s budget, less registration fees collected from accounting firms throughout 2006, form the basis for assessment of accounting support fees in 2007. The board will agreed to tap into an excess of its working capital reserve fund to reduce the overall accounting support fee by $10 million next year.

    December 4
  • Hitachi America Ltd. XBRL Business Unit announced the launch of its Xinba 2.0 Reader and Analyzer, a desktop-based Microsoft Excel add-in that gives users the capability to import, open and manipulate Extensible Business Reporting Language directly in the program.XBRL is a technology that tags financial information through disparate applications and carries it through the business reporting chain. Software that can actually manipulate the data into usable form is only just beginning to be introduced on a broad base.

    December 4
  • This column has to do with life expectancy. If you would rather not know when you are departing this world, then perhaps you don’t want to read any further. But if you are curious enough to know what your longevity might be and how this is critical for retirement planning, read on.I asked one calculator which said I would leave this earth in 12 years, 306, days, 3 hours, 38 minutes, and 24 seconds, as of the time I got this down on paper. Another calculator estimated that I would last until I was 90.21 while a third one had me pegged taking off at age 89.

    December 1
  • KPMG International reported that member firms posted combined revenues of $16.9 billion for the 2006 fiscal year, a 7.6 percent gain in U.S. dollars over the prior year.

    December 1
  • The BDO International network announced its global revenues for the fiscal year ending September 2006 increased to $3.9 billion in U.S. dollars, an increase of 17 percent from last year.

    December 1
  • The Committee on Capital Markets Regulation, which has the support of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, released a report urging legislators to consider overhauling the country’s enforcement policies and litigation system.

    December 1
  • A report released by Huron Consulting Group found that the number of accountants on audit committees has doubled over the last four years. In its research, however, the group found six out of 10 companies did not have at least one accountant on its audit committee in 2005.

    November 29
  • With the close of 2006 approaching, we asked industry leaders to share their ideas of what the accounting profession will look like in five years: What will be its major concerns? Challenges? Hot new service areas? What will shape will the firm landscape have taken?In the final part of the series, among others, managing director of research for research firm Glass Lewis & Co. Lynn Turner, Information Technology Group Inc. principal David Cieslak and Internal Federation of Accountants chief executive Ian Ball take a stab at forecasting what the future holds for the profession. The managing partner of Beckstead and Watts, Brad Beckstead, the firm involved in the legal challenge over the constitutionality of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, wraps things up.

    November 29
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board will meet Thursday, Nov. 30, to consider adoption of its budget for the 2007 fiscal year.As outlined under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the board -- which sets its fiscal year according to the calendar -- must set a budget for the upcoming year no later than one month before the end of the current fiscal year. Once approved by the board, the budget will be submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission for approval.

    November 28
  • SENIOR CAPITAL DISMISSES KPMG: Senior Capital Living Corp., a Dallas-based operator of senior residential communities, jettisoned its auditor, Big Four firm KPMG, and named Ernst & Young as its new independent accountant.KPMG's audit report for the year ended Dec. 31, 2005, noted ineffective internal controls over financial reporting. The auditor stated that SCLC's policies and procedures, and allocation of resources, did not provide for an effective review of the company's accounting for income taxes, which was prepared by tax consultants and third-party advisors.

    November 27
  • High-profile corporate scandals in recent years have seriously eroded public confidence in published financial results.Reliance on the accuracy of financial statements is essential if investors are to own equity or debt instruments of corporations. With the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002 leading the way, the governance role and function of boards of directors are evolving and expanding for public and private companies, as well as nonprofit organizations.

    November 27
  • The controversy over options backdating just won't go away, and with good reason.According to the latest count, more than 120 companies are under investigation for doing it. In September, the heretofore-worshipped Steve Jobs was in the news with an apology for past backdating misdeeds at Apple. Even though he denied receiving any backdated options, he apparently approved some, but claims he was unaware of any accounting impropriety.

    November 27
  • Federal prosecutors will not challenge a judge’s ruling that vacates the conviction of Enron founder Ken Lay, who died in July after being found guilty for his role in the massive corporate accounting scandal.

    November 27
  • Speaking to a group of financial executives, a Securities and Exchange Commission accountant said research from his office has revealed that most restatements are due to basic accounting mistakes.Speaking at the annual conference of Financial Executives International, SEC deputy chief accountants Scott Taub said that about 55 percent of recent company restatements were due to the misapplication of basic accounting rules or to problems with the actual data used in the original calculation.

    November 22
  • While he didn't call for any new regulations, or outright suggest the overturning of any existing rules, in a speech this week Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson urged federal regulators to take a more hands-off approach when it comes to dealing with the markets.Speaking on the competitiveness of the capital markets at the Economic Club of New York, Paulson told the audience that U.S. accounting and securities regulators should consider adopting flexible accounting rules that outline principles, but don’t set strict rules.

    November 21
  • Former Enron chief executive Jeffrey Skilling will head to a low-security federal prison in Waseca, Minn., on Dec. 12 to begin serving a prison term of 24 years and four months for his conviction on fraud and conspiracy charges.

    November 20
  • McGladrey & Pullen LLP announced that it has acquired Chicago-based CPA firm Altschuler, Melvoin and Glasser LLP.AM&G previously had an alternative practice structure with American Express Tax and Business Services, which was acquired by RSM McGladrey in October 2005.

    November 20
  • I got hooked onto Lee Eisenberg’s new book, “The Number” (Simon & Schuster, 2006), via Elaine Morgillo, a certified financial planner and president of New England-based Morgillo Financial Management.

    November 17
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission announced that 1st Global Capital Corp., a Dallas-based broker-dealer, will pay a $100,000 penalty and consent to findings that it made unsuitable recommendations and sales of Section 529 College Savings Plans.According to the order, between 2001 and 2004 1st Global recommended and sold investments in 529 plan units without understanding and evaluating the comparative costs for its customers.

    November 17