Audit

  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board will continue its forums on auditing in the small business environment throughout 2006.

    January 18
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission voted unanimously to propose a number of changes to the disclosure rules for executive pay packages.

    January 18
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has launched a formal investigation into an accounting change made by IBM in 2005.

    January 18
  • Many of the 19 former tax professionals facing trial over the sale of KPMG tax shelters, whose legality has been questioned by the federal government, have asked for the dismissal of the charges in a variety of joint motions.

    January 17
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has opened an informal inquiry into how Home Depot Inc. records the credits it receives from vendors for defective merchandise.

    January 13
  • Alan L. Beller, director of the Division of Corporation Finance at the Securities and Exchange Commission, will return to the private sector next month.

    January 12
  • BANK OF SOUTH CAROLINA JETTISONS KPMG: The Bank of South Carolina has dismissed its auditor - Big Four firm KPMG - and hired Elliot Davis as its new independent accountant.In a federal filing, the company said that it made the decision to change auditors because it felt that it could get the same services at a lower fee structure from another audit firm.

    January 9
  • More times than we can count, we have written that the preferable resolution of most financial accounting issues involves reporting values of assets and liabilities on the balance sheet and changes in those values on the income statement when they happen, not before and certainly not after.We have written about this point in the context of specific items, such as investments, receivables, inventories, tangible and intangible assets, payables, stock options, other derivatives, and pension assets and liabilities. We have also advocated this change on a theoretical level, especially as we reviewed the Financial Accounting Standards Board's new Conceptual Framework project.

    January 9
  • Nearly half of all business organizations worldwide have been victims of fraud in the past two years, according to the 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers' Global Economic Crime Survey released in late November.The survey found that the number of companies reporting fraud increased from 37 percent to 45 percent since 2003, a 22 percent increase. The cost to companies was an average of $1.7 million in losses from "tangible frauds," those resulting in immediate and direct financial loss, like asset misappropriation, false pretences or counterfeiting.

    January 9
  • If you've had problems applying Auditing Standard No. 2, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board says you're not alone.The board has known of widespread difficulties applying the new standard, "An Audit of Internal Control over Financial Reporting Performed in Conjunction with an Audit of Financial Statements," since audit firms first began grappling with its complex and often undefined demands.

    January 9
  • Edward Knauf didn't take long to get to work after rising to the chairmanship of the American Institute of CPAs' Technical Issues Committee. Within a month of his appointment, he met with the three organizations of most concern to the small and midsized accounting firms that comprise the TIC's constituents.All three - the Financial Accounting Standards Board, the Auditing Standards Board, and the AICPA's Professional Ethics Executive Committee - are, in the diligent pursuit of their respective missions, putting increased pressure on auditors, who are already stretched in one direction by the demands put upon them and in another by the scarcity of human resources available to satisfy those demands.

    January 9
  • Commerce Bancorp Inc., parent to some 375 Commerce Bank branches in the New York, Philadelphia and Southeast Florida markets, has acquired online wealth manager eMoney Advisor for $32 million.

    January 6
  • New York-based public relations firm Burson-Marsteller released its 2005 reputation survey of, and found Bill Gates, Microsoft's chairman and chief software architect, to be the world's most admired business leader.

    January 4
  • On the heels of the $11.2 million audit scandal at the Roslyn, N.Y., school district that resulted in the convictions of the superintendent and several associates, New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi has singled out a number of school districts in Westchester and Rockland Counties for audits.

    January 4
  • The Governmental Accounting Standard Board has published a Guide to Implementation of GASB Statement 44 on the Statistical Section.

    January 4
  • Larry E. Bergmann, senior associate director in the Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Market Regulation, will retire from the regulator in January to join the law firm of Willkie Farr & Gallagher.

    January 4
  • In a report, Australia's auditor-general has criticized poor accounting methods in the country's Defense Department for making it impossible to vouch for more than $4 billion in financial statements.

    January 3
  • Boom may be too strong an adjective, if only because the continuing good fortune for the Big Four has been so steady in recent year-end results.

    December 28
  • Timothy P. Flynn, chairman and chief executive of Big Four firm KPMG, has been appointed to the board of the Financial Accounting Foundation.

    December 27
  • Lawrence A. West, associate director of the Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Enforcement, will depart the regulator to become a partner at the Washington office of Latham & Watkins.

    December 27