Accounting standards

  • The President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform will hold its fourth meeting on Wednesday, March 16, at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business Gleacher Center. Witnesses will provide perspectives on the impact of the tax laws on important taxpayer decisions and how the tax system treats investment alternatives. Panel I, on taxes and individual decisions, will hear testimony from James J. Heckman, a Nobel Laureate in Economics and professor of economics at the University of Chicago. Panel II will examine taxes and investment alternatives. Its witnesses include Brian Wesbury, chief investment strategist at Claymore Securities Inc.; Kathleen Kennedy, an associate professor of law and director of the Center for Tax Law and Employee Benefits at John Marshall Law School; Dr. Susan Dynarski, assistant professor of public policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University; and Armond Dinverno, principal and co-president of Balasa Dinverno & Foltz LLC. Panel III, on taxation of financial instruments, will hear David Weisbach, a professor of law at the University of Chicago; and Robert McDonald, a professor of finance at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

    March 14
  • Adecco, the world's largest staffing firm, announced Tuesday that the Securities and Exchange Commission had closed its investigation into the Swiss company's accounting, with no recommendation for enforcement action. The probe was initiated after Adecco's uncovering of accounting irregularities at its North American unit early in 2004 caused it to delay financial reports. Swiss authorities launched a similar investigation. The firm's own independent examination found no fraud, but did report minor accounting control weaknesses at Adecco Staffing North America. Uncertainty about the company's financials cost its investors billions of dollars in market value, and led to the resignation of the chairman, finance chief and head of its North American operations. In June 2004, a new board of directors and new co-chairmen were appointed to try and restore confidence in the firm. Adecco's stock rose on news of the end of the SEC's probe, though it was still almost 20 percent below where it stood before the discovery of the accounting problems.

    March 10
  • As part of a deal reached Monday with its regulator, mortgage giant Fannie Mae agreed to a number of corporate governance and management changes. The new practices, which supplement an earlier agreement meant to satisfy the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight regarding Fannie Mae's governance, include: * Separating the duties of the chairman and the chief executive officer; * Establishing a compliance and ethics office that can communicate directly with OFHEO; * Strengthening accounting rules; and, * Implementing policies to prevent the falsifying of signatures. Last year, OFHEO discovered significant problems with the mortgage giant's practices, including juggling the books to meet targets that triggered executive bonuses. The revelations led to the resignation of chairman and CEO Franklin Raines and chief financial officer Timothy Howard in December. The Securities and Exchange Commission said that from 2001 to mid-2004, Fannie Mae's accounting practices didn't comply with the requirements related to accounting for deferred purchase price adjustments and for derivatives and hedging activities, and advised the company that it should, among other things, restate its financial statements to eliminate the use of hedge accounting. In February, SEC chief accountant Donald Nicolaisen announced that the commission would conduct a thorough, top-down examination of the mortgage financing concern.

    March 9
  • Accounting irregularities have brought a flurry of troubles down on Delphi Corp., the world's largest maker of auto parts, leading to the need for a $200-plus million restatement and a host of corporate changes, including the departure of its chief financial officer. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company, based here, said that it had overstated its cash flow for 2000 by about $200 million due to improper accounting for prior transactions involving the receipt of rebates, credits and lump-sum payments, as well as certain off-balance sheet transactions. It also said that improper accounting regarding rebate transactions lead to a $61 million overstatement of income in 2001. The company discovered the irregularities in an ongoing investigation that was prompted by an SEC inquiry last July. Following the filing, Delphi's board expressed a lack of confidence in vice chairman and chief financial officer Alan Dawes; he resigned last Friday. Chief accountant and controller Paul Free also resigned, and John Blahnik, vice president of treasury, mergers and acquisitions, and new markets, was re-assigned to a lesser position. Chief accounting officer and controller John D. Sheehan is acting as CFO for now, reporting to chairman and chief executive J.T. Battenberg, who will retire later this year. The company's stock suffered this week as a result of the news, and on Tuesday Moody's cut Delphi's debt rating to junk. Also on Tuesday, the company announced that it would cut health benefits for retirees by dropping coverage once they are eligible for Medicare, starting in 2007. The cuts could save the company half a billion dollars over time.

    March 9
  • Fast-food titan McDonald's Corp. said that it would pare down its equity-based compensation, such as stock options, and replace it in some cases with cash-based incentives, The Wall Street Journal reported. In its annual report, the global burger chain said that its decision stemmed in part from the options expensing rule adopted by the Financial Accounting Standards Board in December. McDonald's said that it will start complying with the options-expensing mandate during the current first quarter, and added that it would have to restate its financial results from some prior periods to reflect the previously unrecognized compensation expense.

    March 8
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission unanimously approved the 2005 budget for the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, which requested $137 million for the body charged with policing the accounting profession. Initially, the board submitted a 2005 budget request of $152.5 million, a dramatic increase from the $103 million it had been allocated in 2004. However, when its hiring goals for 2004 fell short, it slashed that request by roughly 15 percent. The SEC approval, however, did not come without controversy, as two commissioners -- Paul Atkins and Cynthia Glassman -- reportedly ignored the objections of their boss, SEC Chairman William Donaldson, and extended an invitation to PCAOB Chairman William McDonough to attend the budget meeting. An invitation was also extended to Robert Herz, chairman of the Financial Accounting Standards Board. Neither attended the meeting. Last year's approval of the PCAOB budget had been done behind closed doors.

    March 4
  • Federal penalties for taxpayers accused of tax evasion, failure to file a return, or making false statements to the Internal Revenue Service could increase dramatically later this year if Congress approves legislation being pushed by Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., to sweeten tax deductions for charitable volunteers. Under the bill, the current $100,000 fine for attempting to "evade or defeat tax" liabilities would jump to $250,000, penalties for more serious violations would double to $1 million per offense, and the maximum of prison terms facing taxpayers would rise from five years to 10 years. At the same time, taxpayers charged with "willful failure to file returns, supply information or pay tax" would face felony rather than misdemeanor charges, with maximum penalties climbing to 10 years, up from 12 months currently. Feingold's bill would also double the federal penalties for making false statements to IRS to as much as $1 million and/or five years in prison. These sharply increased penalties are buried in the fine print of a bill that Feingold said is needed to provide equitable tax treatment for volunteers who use their cars for charitable activities. Under current law, these volunteers may be reimbursed up to 14 cents per mile for their donated services without triggering a tax consequence for either the organization or the volunteers. If the charitable organization reimburses any more than that, they are required to file an information return indicating the amount, and the volunteers must include the amount over 14 cents per mile in their taxable income. According to Feingold, this is inequitable because the mileage reimbursement level currently permitted for businesses is a more liberal 40.5 cents per mile. In proposing legislation to eliminate this "disparity," Feingold told the Senate that his new bill "today is identical to a measure I introduced in the 107th Congress and the 108th Congress in nearly every respect." Significantly, however, neither of those earlier Senate bills, nor separate legislation introduced in the House earlier this year by Rep. Todd Platts, R-Pa., to increase charitable mileage deductions, contain the tax penalty increases included in Feingold's current measure. In explaining the new bill's tax sanction provisions, the Wisconsin Democrat said that the sharply increased monetary penalties for taxpayers would offset the cost of raising the mileage deduction for charitable volunteers. That represents a tax break that the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation has estimated would result in a net federal revenue loss of no more than $1 million over five years. "Though the revenue loss is small," Feingold explained, "it is vital that we do everything we can to move toward a balanced budget, and to that end I have included a provision to fully offset the cost of the measure and make it deficit-neutral."

    March 3
  • As expected, the Securities and Exchange Commission granted a one-year extension on Sarbanes-Oxley 404 compliance for small companies and foreign issuers that trade in the U.S. Under the SEC's revised guidelines, those firms that fall under those categories -- U.S, firms with a market cap of less than $75 million -- would have to be in 404 compliance for their first fiscal year ending on or after July 15, 2006. Section 404 of SOX requires that a company certify their internal controls and have an attestation to that effect from their outside auditor. Larger U.S. companies are required to be in 404 compliance for the first fiscal year ending on or after Nov. 15, 2004. In April, the SEC has scheduled a public roundtable to discuss concerns about SOX 404 and its time and cost impact on smaller companies.

    March 3
  • The Big GAAP vs. Little GAAP debate rages on. An American Institute of CPAs' task force charged with examining private company financial reporting standards wants to begin a process to implement changes in generally accepted accounting principles for private issuer companies. "Fundamental changes should be made in the current GAAP standards-setting process to ensure that the financial reporting needs of private company constituents are met," read the report issued by the institute's task force. The task force, established last year and headed by former AICPA chairman James Castellano, made its determinations based on the input of some 3,700 business owners, public practitioners, financial managers, lenders, investors and sureties. The research was conducted by Omaha, Neb.-based MSR Group, an independent market research firm. "This group did not approach its research with a preconceived notion that issues or problems with GAAP financial reporting for private companies existed," Castellano said. "We wanted to understand if what many of us had been hearing was simply the opinion of a vocal minority or the true expression of concerns by stakeholders of private company financial reporting." Public issuers are required to prepare financials in accordance with GAAP, and privately held companies -- which comprise an overwhelming majority of the roughly 5 million companies in the U.S. -- have traditionally used GAAP as well, thus fueling the protracted public-versus-private-standards debate. The AICPA board -- subject to input from Council -- along with accounting standard-setter the Financial Accounting Standards Board and its overseer, the Financial Accounting Foundation, have agreed to collaborate on possible courses of action. However, FASB and the FAF neither endorsed nor rejected the task force's conclusions. The AICPA, the FAF and FASB agreed that any proposal would need to be fully exposed for public comment and debate. A complete copy of the task force report can be found at: http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/acctstd/pvtco_fincl_reprt/index.htm.

    March 2
  • The European Union has reiterated its call for more "home-grown" representation in drafting international accounting standards. The E.U. has demanded more that the current five seats it has on the International Accounting Standards Board, claiming that as of Jan. 1, it was the first to use the international accounting rules ahead of the U.S. At the start of the new year, all publicly traded companies within the 25-nation E.U. were require to use international rules. Last week, former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, who serves as chair of the IASB overseer committee, said that Europe was "sufficiently represented on the board," and instead of boosting European representation, more consideration should be given to countries such as India, China and Japan. Both the U.S. and the E.U. have five seats on the IASB. In a speech before a gathering of accounting professionals, Volcker said that representation on the IASB shouldn't be based on "national, political or sectoral interests."

    March 1
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission will convene March 3 to consider approval of the 2005 budget for the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. The oversight body has proposed a 2005 budget of $137.1 million, a figure roughly 10 percent below its initial 2005 request of $152.5 million. The regulator trimmed its initial budget request after it fell behind on its anticipated hiring volume for the coming year. The board said that the $15 million reduction reflected the subsequent reductions in salary, benefits and payroll tax expenses. In addition to okaying the accounting oversight board's 2005 budget, the commission is also expected to discuss issues related to mutual fund redemption fees and credit rating agencies.

    February 28
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has named Joseph A. Hall to the post of managing executive for policy and Martha B. Peterson as counselor to commission chair William Donaldson. Hall will assist Donaldson with enforcement policies, as well as procedures governing both the markets and SEC issuers. He also will serve as Donaldson's main liaison to other SEC commissioners and departments. Hall succeeds Patrick Von Bargen, who recently announced that he would be leaving the regulator for a post in the private sector. Hall joined the SEC in 2003 as senior policy fellow in the Office of the General Counsel, and later served as counsel to Donaldson. Prior to coming aboard at the commission, he was a partner with the firm of Davis Polk & Wardwell in New York. In her new post as Donaldson's counsel, Peterson will advise him on rulemaking and other initiatives. She originally joined the commission in 1987, serving in the Office of the General Counsel and later as counsel to then-chair David Ruder. In a statement, Donaldson said, "Joe and Martha each bring a wealth of experience and knowledge to their positions. I look forward to continuing to work with them to further the best interests of America's investors."

    February 25
  • Embattled brand Krispy Kreme, which is currently the subject of a formal probe by the Securities and Exchange Commission, said that it would cooperate with prosecutors who want to interview former executives of the doughnut and coffee retailer, based here. In published reports, the chain said that the executive inquiry, which is being conducted by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, is related to the ongoing SEC probe and vowed to cooperate with investigators. The names of the executives to be questioned were not identified. Krispy Kreme, which went public roughly five years ago, has been under investigation for its franchisee buyback procedures, as well as its earnings forecasts. It also faces a number of class-action lawsuits by shareholders. The company's stock, which once closed in on the $50 level, now trades at just over $5. Last month the chain ousted chief executive Scott Livengood and handed the reins over to Stephen F. Cooper, a turnaround specialist, who promptly announced a 25 percent reduction in the number of corporate employees.

    February 25
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission said that it would hold its previously announced roundtable on the internal controls requirements of Sarbanes-Oxley on April 13 -- affording both companies and auditors the opportunities to air their grievances on the difficulties and costs of the federal mandate. Since the 2002 passage of the sweeping corporate reform act --Section 404 of which requires a company's executives to attest to the adequacy of its internal controls -- the guidelines have been the subject of frequent complaints from firms and auditors citing the prohibitive costs in both money and time. The SEC is currently mulling a delay for internal controls compliance for both smaller and foreign-based companies, both of whom are required to be in compliance by July 15. After receiving a delay last year, larger companies -- those with a market cap of $700 million and higher -- began complying with the internal controls requirements in November.

    February 24
  • Spurred by a recent clarification from the Securities and Exchange Commission, retailers Gymboree Corp. and Kohl's announced separately on Tuesday that they would restate their financial results. Citing the Feb. 7 letter on lease accounting from the SEC's Office of the Chief Accountant, Gymboree announced that it would change the way it accounted for rent holidays, landlord allowances and incentives under operating leases, which, it said in a statement, "is not consistent with the views expressed" in the SEC's interpretation. The San Francisco-based clothing company, which operates over 600 stores, said that it will restate its quarterly financials for 2004, and possibly for earlier periods. Gymboree expected to record an additional non-cash charge for fiscal 2004 of between six and seven cents a share, and that the restatements would reduce 2004 income by as much as 2 cents a quarter. Menomonee Falls, Wis.-based department store operator Kohl's, meanwhile, announced that it would restate financials going back to 1998 in response to the Feb. 7 clarification. The company, which operates over 600 stores, said that the changes would not affect future or historical cash flows, but that it would recognize higher rent expenses over the period covered by the restatements. It said that the higher rent would reduce earnings by 1 cent per share in 1999, 2 cents per share in 2000, 2001 and 2002; and 3 cents per share in 1998, 2003 and 2004. The company is still working with external auditor Ernst & Young on the restatements.

    February 23
  • A report by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration absolves the procedures used by the Internal Revenue Service's Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division for reviewing political activities by exempt organizations. While many charities speak out on public issues, the code prohibits Section 501(c)(3) organizations from specific types of political activities. In response to media reports of allegations that the TE/GE Division was examining these types of activities just prior to the 2004 presidential election for politically motivated reasons, the IRS asked the TIGTA to investigate. "This report confirms what we've said all along," said IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson. "Political considerations played absolutely no part in the inquiries we launched last summer." Everson said that recommendations in the report would be addressed by the IRS and would be in place for future election cycles.

    February 22
  • Paul F. Roye, director of the Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Investment Management -- the division that polices the mutual fund industry -- is leaving to pursue a job in the private sector. Roye, who has served as the unit's director since 1998 and steered it through the explosive market-timing scandals affecting a number of large fund families, had been instrumental in orchestrating a number of initiatives at the regulator, including: o Strengthening the corporate governance regime for mutual funds; o Enhancing ethical standards for funds and investment advisers; and, o Requiring that funds and advisors adopt comprehensive compliance policies and procedures, and designate a chief compliance officer."It has been an honor and a privilege to serve America's investors as the director of the Division of Investment Management," Roye said in a statement. "I will miss my talented and dedicated colleagues in the division who, particularly during the challenges of recent months, have given their all to serve and protect America's investors." A successor has not been named.

    February 22
  • In just under two years at the helm of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, Chairman William McDonough has gone from being a respected figure in banking to being the most influential - and often feared - figure in accounting.

    February 21
  • The American Institute of CPAs' Auditing Standards Board is poised to issue an exposure draft of five proposed statements and amendments to statements relating to auditors' risk assessment.

    February 21
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is looking at an early March timetable in which to offer companies guidance on stock option expensing. According to The Wall Street Journal, SEC chief accountant Don Nicolaisen said that the regulator is close to making a decision on how much leeway to grant companies in applying the options-expensing standards. "But in early March, we'd like to be in a position to at least express key views on what our thinking is," Nicolaisen said. The protracted battle to expense options has come under intense lobbying pressure from pro-options groups, the high-tech sector and lawmakers with large constituencies affected by the options rule issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board. Last year, the House, led by Rep. Richard Baker, R-La., overwhelmingly passed its own version of options expensing that requires that options be expensed only for a company's top five executives. Last fall, some 50 senators requested that the SEC delay implementing the rule until the regulator could provide valuation guidance.

    February 17