Accounting standards

  • Standard & Poor's plans to host a forum on the merits of fair value accounting later this month.

    May 8
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged semiconductor maker Marvell Technology Group and its co-founder with backdating employee stock option grants.

    May 8
  • The Treasury Department's Advisory Committee on the Auditing Profession has released a draft report outlining recommendations for improving the profession.

    May 7
  • Securities and Exchange Commissioner Paul Atkins said he plans to leave the SEC at the end of his term, the latest in a string of departures for the commission.

    May 6
  • The American Institute of CPAs has begun publicizing the revised set of peer review standards it quietly issued earlier this year.

    May 4
  • XBRL US, the nonprofit group working to develop the Extensible Business Reporting Language in the U.S., said it has finished codifying collections of financial and business terms for U.S. generally accepted accounting principles in XBRL format, along with an accompanying preparers guide.

    May 4
  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board may change some accounting rules to make it more difficult for banks to get subprime loans off their books.

    May 4
  • 2008 was to be the year that companies and their tax advisors worked to get their nonqualified deferred-compensation plans in order to comply with the new requirements under Code Section 409A and the regulations thereunder. Recent positions from the Internal Revenue Service are, however, expanding the focus of compensation concerns for 2008 beyond deferred compensation to include deductions for current performance-based compensation.BACKGROUND

    May 4
  • Just because the idea of violating a patented tax strategy sounds ridiculous on its face doesn’t mean you won’t get sued for using it.Currently, some 65 tax patents have been issued, and 109 more are pending, according to Eileen Sherr, technical manager at the American Institute of CPAs’ Tax Division. “Many of these are common twists on everyday transactions,” observed Sherr, who attended a recent Internal Revenue Service hearing on the issue.

    May 4
  • The Treasury Department has released a blueprint for overhauling the regulation of financial markets to forestall future crises in the mortgage and credit markets.Under the blueprint, there would be a “conduct of business regulator” to monitor the business conduct of financial firms. The agency would assume many of the roles of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and insurance and banking regulators. The blueprint also envisions a “corporate finance regulator” that would encompass the SEC’s oversight of accounting regs.

    May 4
  • Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson is putting new pressure on lawmakers to establish nationwide standards that would weed out bad-apple tax practitioners and serve to protect the more than 60 percent of taxpayers who rely on paid tax preparers.In bluntly worded testimony suggesting that she is losing patience with both Congress and her own agency, Olson called on the House Ways and Means Committee to move forward on proposals to rein in rogue tax preparers and protect American taxpayers from other forms of abuse.

    May 4
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed enforcement actions against global advertising network McCann-Erickson Worldwide, its parent company Interpublic Group of Companies, and two of its former executives, charging them with accounting fraud.

    May 1
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has agreed to bar a former Arthur Andersen audit partner from appearing or practicing before the commission for at least five years.

    April 29
  • While U.S. and international accounting standards seem set on an inevitable convergence path, some are worried that the U.S. approach may end up becoming a bad influence on International Financial Reporting Standards.

    April 29
  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board and the China Accounting Standards Committee have signed a memorandum of understanding agreeing to strengthen communication and cooperation between the U.S. and Chinese standards setters.

    April 28
  • Broadcom agreed to pay $12 million to settle charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission over the chip maker's stock-option backdating that led to a restatement of more than $2 billion.

    April 23
  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board and the International Accounting Standards Board agreed on a set of proposals to accelerate the 2006 memorandum of understanding on convergence between International Financial Reporting Standards and U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

    April 23
  • An Ohio jury ruled that Fifth Third Bancorp is not entitled to a $5.6 million tax refund for its 1997 tax year after the bank sought to take tax deductions related to complex leasing transactions involving passenger rail cars.

    April 23
  • The European Commission said it would propose a law allowing U.S. and Japanese companies with listings on European exchanges to file financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles without first reconciling them with International Financial Reporting Standards.

    April 23
  • The Internal Revenue Service has withdrawn proposed regulations that would have treated mortgage loans as capital assets and restricted the deductibility of mortgage defaults.

    April 23