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Wolters Kluwer Corporate & Financial Services will provide the Internal Revenue Service with online access to capital gain and loss information on publicly traded securities.
September 27 -
Without the release of all pertinent documents by San Diego's pension board, attorney's office and firefighters union , auditor KPMG says that its review of the city's 2003 year could drag on even longer.
September 27 -
The Norwegian branch of KPMG International will pay $53.6 million to eight banks in order to settle damages over one of the country's worst bankruptcies.
September 26 -
Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox will recuse himself to avoid any appearance of impropriety in the agency's investigation of Cox's former congressional colleague, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist.
September 26 -
The board of trustees of the Financial Accounting Foundation appointed telecomm executive Robert J. DeSantis as president and chief operating officer.
September 26 -
ZONES INC. DISMISSES PWC: Zones Inc., an Auburn, Wash.-based reseller of information technology products, dismissed Big Four firm PricewaterhouseCoopers as its independent accountant and hired Grant Thornton as its successor.In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Zones said that it had no accounting disagreements with its former auditor over the last two fiscal years.
September 25 -
Audit committees have never felt so stressed and stretched. Everybody, from stock exchanges to boards of directors to investors, expects more from them, and the penalties for failure have never been more serious.As a result, audit committees are meeting more often, setting more serious agendas tilted more toward inquiry, demanding more of internal auditors, and calling for committee members with better qualifications.
September 25 -
In our preceding five columns, we have expressed our concerns to our good friends at the Financial Accounting Standards Board about their May 2005 exposure draft on the hierarchy of accounting principles.We confess that we yawned when we first saw this document superficially. However, a closer, more careful look made us sit upright and kick into gear. We don't think they meant anything sinister, but we found great hubris in their words.
September 25 -
To aid the convergence of International Public Sector Accounting Standards with International Financial Reporting Standards, the International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board has issued a new exposure draft, "Improvements to International Public Sector Accounting Standards."
September 25 -
A new set of proposed regulations from the Internal Revenue Service aims to change the way companies use accounting methods to switch profits from countries with high corporate tax to countries where corporate taxes are low.The regs - all 85 pages of them - create an ambitious regime with a number of nebulous new concepts, including an "investor model," to insure that businesses value intangibles, such as marketing, research and development, and patents, in a way that will maximize exposure to U.S. tax.
September 25 -
The chief accountant of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Donald T. Nicolaisen, will leave the commission in October to return to the private sector.Nicolaisen, 61, joined the SEC under former Chairman William Donaldson in September 2003 and led numerous initiatives to improve financial disclosure, strengthen the audit process and rebuild investor confidence.
September 25 -
In a continuing struggle to keep up with the increasing complexity of financial assets and special purpose entities, the Financial Accounting Standards Board has issued three proposals to amend existing statements that have, in just a few years, become - to some extent - obsolete.The proposals are a response to constituents in various sectors who requested clarifications and simplifications of the technically complex Statement 140, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets, which was seen as becoming harder to interpret and implement as new kinds of financial assets come into existence, especially in the areas of securitizations and special purpose entities.
September 25 -
Both the Government Accountability Office and the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration have some advice for the Internal Revenue Service.On the heels of an IRS decision to focus on S corporations in order to zero in on the compliance problems of small businesses, the TIGTA issued a report calling on the IRS to improve its efforts against employment tax noncompliance. The GAO also weighed in in the same week with its report, "Tax Compliance: Better Compliance Data and Long-term Goals Would Support a More Strategic IRS Approach to Reducing the Tax Gap."
September 25 -
William J. McDonough, chairman of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, announced that he will resign on Nov. 30 or when his successor is put in place, whichever occurs sooner.
September 22 -
It was a smooth first meeting for Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox, with the panel voting unanimously to extend the deadline for when small companies will have to have their internal controls documented under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley law.
September 22 -
The former chairman of Gemstar-TV Guide International Inc. will plead guilty to obstructing a Securities and Exchange Commision investigation into accounting irregularities at the company.
September 21 -
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board will host a forum in Boston to bring information to the small business community.
September 21 -
Three months after restating its 2004 earnings, stun gun manufacturer Taser International Inc. said it had fired its accounting firm.
September 19 -
Interpublic Group of Companies Inc., which includes several of the world's largest advertising agencies, said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it will correct four years of earnings spanning 2000 to 2004.
September 18 -
PricewaterhouseCoopers, Britain's biggest audit firm, will face formal complaints from the country's Accountancy Investigation & Discipline Board in connection with the failure of bus manufacturer TransBus.
September 15