Regulation and compliance

Regulation

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  • The American Institute of CPAs presented awards to 10 budding CPAs who achieved the highest cumulative scores last year on the four sections of the Uniform CPA Examination.

    August 20
  • If forensic accounting is sexy, litigation support is hot - and CPAs who offer these specialty services are finding their firms' business boiling over into new areas.Being retained by legal counsel to give an expert opinion is at the core of litigation support, a subset of forensic accounting. The two fast-growing niches are very much related, but experts say that forensic accounting is more of an umbrella term that encompasses litigation support.

    August 19
  • According to those more experienced in such matters, I'm told the proper gift for a fifth anniversary is wood. To mark my five years of wedded bliss, I asked for a new wood driver. My wife, astutely predicting that such a gift would provide an entrée to spending weekends on the golf course in lieu of sharing domestic duties, instead bought me a hand-carved in/out box.The financial community recently marked a five-year anniversary, although not everyone was rushing out to locate the gift register. It's been five years since the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was signed into law, and exactly what type of wood gift one would purchase to celebrate that milestone depends largely, I would assume, on the giver.

    August 19
  • NEOPHARM RETAINS BDO SEIDMANPharmaceutical concern NeoPharm Inc., a marketer of cancer treatment drugs, has engaged BDO Seidman as its new independent accountant, succeeding Big Four firm KPMG.

    August 19
  • Two years ago, we criticized the Financial Accounting Standards Board for publishing an exposure draft that proposed doing away with the Rule 203 exceptions that permit, and even encourage, departures from generally accepted accounting principles when compliance would produce misleading financial statements. Underlying this proposed action was a presumption that compliance with published GAAP always leads to relevant and reliable information. Back then we prepared a series of columns describing the intolerable flaws in this premise.The first two focused on how essential it is to allow Rule 203 exceptions to foster innovations when the old ways can no longer be considered adequate.

    August 19
  • The government is frustrated over seniors' difficulties with the expanded Medicare menu. Evidently, having so many choices has led to confusion, rather than informed decisions.Maybe they should seek advice from corporate executives, who face a similar dilemma deciphering their compensation alternatives. While highly paid employees may appear to suffer from nothing worse than an abundance of riches, many are wasting money through inaction or ill-advised choices. The effects of these decisions on their retirement plans can be significant. It's an opportunity for wealth advisors to serve a unique market niche.

    August 19
  • SEC ADOPTS FRAUD MEASUREThe Securities and Exchange Commission voted to adopt a sweeping anti-fraud rule that targets money managers who deliberately mislead investors.

    August 19
  • Computer maker Dell said its audit committee has finished its investigation into the company's accounting and financial reporting issues and has identified significant errors and irregularities.

    August 19
  • On a muggy July day five years ago, President George W. Bush put his pen to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, an expansive piece of corporate reform legislation designed to help restore investor confidence in a nation scarred by an apparently unending series of accounting scandals.The 11-section measure, which essentially changed the way public companies do business, ushered in a cascade of new reforms, service prohibitions and standards for public issuers, their boards and the CPA firms that audit them. It was the most deliberately invasive regulatory reform passed since the Roosevelt administration, touching nearly every aspect of the financial reporting process.

    August 19
  • Is the Governmental Accounting Standards Board in trouble? "Trouble" may be too strong a word, but it's been a bumpy couple of months for the state and local government standard-setter.In December, the Government Financial Officers Association voted to "re-assess GASB's role as the authoritative accounting standard-setting body for state and local governments."

    August 19
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission approved the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's new internal control auditing standard by a 5-0 vote in late July.Registered audit firms are now required to use the new standard for all audits of internal controls no later than for fiscal years ending on or after Nov. 15, 2007. Auditing Standard No. 5 replaces the older AS2.

    August 19
  • This coming January officially marks the three-year countdown before the axe falls on the lower individual capital gains rates now in place.Since May 6, 2003, thanks to the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, gain from the sale of most long-term capital assets is subject to a maximum tax rate of 15 percent (5 percent for individuals in the 10 percent or 15 percent tax bracket). Starting in 2011, however, these rates are scheduled to revert to their former pre-May 6, 2003, levels of 20 percent and 10 percent, respectively. Nevertheless, before the party ends, a 0 percent rate will replace the 5 percent rate for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2007.

    August 19
  • The Governmental Accounting Standards Board has unveiled a new standard on accounting and reporting for intangible assets, clearing up a requirement of Statement 34 that had caused widespread uncertainty in the preparation and comparison of governmental financial reports.GASB Statement 51, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Intangible Assets, adopts a clear and simple description of intangibles as assets that have no physical substance, are non-financial in nature, and have a useful life extending beyond a single reporting period. Such assets would include easements, internally generated and third-party computer software, water and timber rights, patents, and trademarks.

    August 19
  • On the heels of a conviction against former Brocade Communications CEO Gregory Reyes, the Securities and Exchange Commission has filed fraud charges against Michael Byrd, the company's former CFO and COO.

    August 19
  • Thomson Tax & Accounting's Practitioners Publishing Co. unit has beefed up its audit guidance line with two products aimed at auditing construction contractors and financial institutions.

    August 16
  • Microsoft has launched Microsoft Money Plus, an update to its personal financial software targeted at consumers, entrepreneurs and small businesses.

    August 16
  • The future of the accounting profession will be largely determined by its response to escalating talent shortages and other challenges of the post-regulatory-reform era, says a distinguished group of leaders in this field. The Robert Half International Financial Leadership Council recently met and recommended a number of strategies for addressing these issues. It’s all set forth in a new report, Charting the Future of Accounting, Finance and Audit Professions. The Council, which represents a diverse range of leaders from the corporate world, public accounting firms, industry associations, and top accounting universities in the U.S. and Canada, discussed the impact of changing workforce demographics on today’s accounting landscape and the recruitment and retention challenges associated with these shifts. Some of the key findings and recommended solutions are:

    August 16
  • Albridge Solutions has added mutual fund and exchange-traded fund research to its Albridge Wealth Reporting software.

    August 15
  • BDO Seidman was ordered to pay $170 million in compensation and $350 million in punitive damages by a Florida jury that blamed the accounting firm for negligence in failing to uncover fraud in its audits of a financial services company.

    August 14
  • At least 61 percent of sole proprietor companies are underreporting their net business income, but a small proportion of them account for the bulk of understated taxes, according to a report by the Government Accountability Office.

    August 14