Audit

  • Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. asked the Securities and Exchange Commission for an extra five days to file its 10-Q quarterly report, to give it time to complete an analysis of accounting related to "certain franchise matters."

    December 15
  • The number of public companies that disclosed material weaknesses or significant deficiencies in internal controls during the month of November soared to 119, nearly double the 63 reported in October, according to a report by corporate governance and compliance newsletter Compliance Week.

    December 14
  • The Governmental Accounting Standards Board has published an exposure draft that establishes guidance for termination benefits to state and local government employers.

    December 14
  • The Institute of Management Accountants has named Severin Wilson to lead its international endeavors in the newly created post of assistant vice president of international development.

    December 9
  • As the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America and the College Retirement Equities Fund deals with the backlash over the conflict of interest that led to the resignation of two of its trustees, the controversy could cost Big Four firm Ernst & Young its gig as TIAA-CREF's auditor.

    December 9
  • Compliance and accountability software provider Paisley Consulting, has sealed a deal with The Alliance for SOX 404 Compliance to provide SOX solutions to its member accounting firms.

    December 9
  • A District Court Judge here has reportedly barred telecommunications giant MCI, formerly known as WorldCom, from making further payments to the accounting, law and consulting firms steering it through bankruptcy that haven't already been approved through the budgeting system set up by the court.

    December 8
  • Ernst & Young has reportedly confirmed that the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating the firm over its role in designing and auditing financing vehicles allegedly used by PNC Financial Services Group to inflate profits.

    December 8
  • To help fund President Bush's reform plan to add personal retirement accounts to the Social Security program, the White House admitted that it would probably use government borrowing to cover the oft-debated "transition financing" phase of a new program.

    December 7
  • A mid-level House aide reportedly said that he was the one who added the controversial provision in last month's spending bill that would have given staffers on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees access to Americans' tax returns.

    December 6
  • Ernst & Young has shed its investment banking arm by selling the practice to the consulting firm run by former New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani.

    December 3
  • Fewer than one-third of audit committees implement a majority of practices that lead to higher ratings of the financial audit process, according to a report by J.D. Power and Associates.

    December 3
  • Filomeno & Company PC, an eight-partner CPA firm based here, has expanded its financial planning practice with the merger of fee-only planning firm Thibodeau Financial Advisors LLC into its fold.

    December 2
  • Laura L. Cox, a high-level aide to Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman William Donaldson, is departing the regulator to join Big Four firm PricewaterhouseCoopers as partner-in-charge of professional and governmental activities.

    December 2
  • A recent report identified two trends among companies that report material weaknesses -- skyrocketing audit fees and disappearing chief financial officers.

    December 1
  • Marking its 11th consecutive year of aggregate revenue growth, Big Four firm Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu reported global revenue of $16.4 billion, up 8.6 percent over last year.

    December 1
  • Thanks to some fast footwork by regulators at the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, accounting firms and many of their smaller audit clients gained an additional 45 days of breathing room to comply with complex new Sarbanes-Oxley Act internal control reporting rules.

    December 1
  • Audit, tax and professional services provider Jefferson Wells, headquartered here, said that it has opened its initial office in Boston, bringing its total number of units to 37. The concern said that David Welch has been named managing partner of the Boston location. Welch's resume includes stints with Spencer Brook Partners and Big Four firm PricewaterhouseCoopers. Welch said that the newest branch would fuel the company's "significant expansion of our East Coast client base." In addition to Boston, Jefferson Wells' 2004 openings include London, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Portland, Ore., Grand Rapid, Mich., and San Francisco.

    November 30
  • The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board is poised to vote Tuesday Nov. 30 on implementing Auditing Standard No. 2 and the required audits of internal control over financial reporting. In March, the oversight body adopted AS No. 2, which is titled "An Audit of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting Performed in Conjunction with an Audit of Financial Statements." The standard addresses both the work that is required to audit internal control over financial reporting and the relationship of that audit to the audit of the financial statements. The requirement pertains to companies with more than $75 million in market capitalization. It is in effect for fiscal years ending on or after Nov. 15, 2004.

    November 30
  • Despite Internal Revenue Service assertions that it had halted the decline in the government's efforts to police corporate tax non-compliance, the pace of corporate audits is running well below the record-low levels registered in 2003, according to an analysis of IRS data.

    November 29