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Leaders of six business associations have written a joint letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission complaining that recent guidance about the use of judgment in fair value accounting "has the potential to cloud transparency."
October 26 -
A certain advisor had a 35-year relationship with his client/friend. He helped him with businesses, financial plans, estate plans, and the like. When the client died, and then subsequently his wife, the family advisor was called to the home by the daughter to discuss the next steps regarding the estate. He asked the daughter what she wanted to do with the vast collection of art and antiques. The daughter, who had just lost both parents and was herself in the middle of a divorce, said she trusted the advisor and ended with “Can you handle this?” The advisor called a local auction house and was pleased to see the auction results yielded more than $500,000, with one piece of furniture in particular selling for $68,000. When he reported this to the daughter, she said, “That was Mom’s favorite piece.” Well, eight months later the daughter’s aunt called the advisor to say that the piece of furniture that sold for $68,000 was subsequently sold in a New York auction for $725,000. Does the advisor see a lawyer calling him? This story is related by Michael Mendelsohn who a few months ago launched The Briddge Group to meet the growing demand for art succession planning advocates. He created it in partnership with some of the nation’s foremost art, legal, and financial experts. Mendelsohn says that “Collectors and their advisors need an advocate who knows how to lift art and collectibles out of the estate planning process and treat them with the special handling every collection deserves.” He also listed the top 10 art succession planning mistakes made by financial and legal advisors: 1. Failure to understand the effect a large art inheritance will have on your clients’ children and future generations. 2. Assuming that if a piece is “undeclared” and passed quietly to an heir (the empty hook approach), it can avoid taxation—that approach can actually cause serious tax problems. 3. Failure to understand the difference between clients who accumulate common objects and clients who are collectors. 4. Neglecting to collect proper documentation, including cost basis, proper title, provenance, and current opinion of valuation for each piece in a collection. 5. Failure to take advantage of current tax laws which allow a collector to reduce current income tax, eliminate capital gains, and estate taxation on art assets. 6. Failure to leverage/arbitrage your clients’ art holdings for the benefit of their favorite charities. 7. Failure to develop a plan to protect art assets from creditors’ claims. 8. Failure to understand the art headlines in the press—those big auctions often mean panic selling, a huge reduction in value, and/or a lost legacy. 9. Confusing estate planning with art succession planning. There are different rules and different opportunities for art assets. 10. Failure to use a team approach when planning for their clients’ art assets—collectors and their advisors need specialized advocates. For more information, contact Annette@briddgegroup.com
October 23 -
Bank of America's audit committee has hired PricewaterhouseCoopers to replace KPMG as the auditor for its recently acquired Countrywide Financial unit.
October 23 -
The confidence of accounting and finance workers has plunged to a new low, according to a new survey.
October 22 -
Two-thirds of certified financial planners have seen an increase in potential clients as economic turbulence has increased in the past several weeks, according to a new survey.
October 22 -
The dispute between the American Bankers Association and the Financial Accounting Standards Board heated up as ABA president Edward Yingling called for a new accounting oversight board that would hold sway over FASB.
October 22 -
Proxy research and advisory concern Glass Lewis & Co. said it would expand its partnership with IW Financial, a provider of environmental, social, and governance research, to include a broader range of research offerings, including global security risk/terrorism and custom research.
October 21 -
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has given new life to calls for an economic stimulus package, but exactly what it will be is anybody's guess.
October 21 -
Barry Melancon, president and chief executive of the American Institute of CPAs, opened his annual remarks regarding the state of the profession at the Fall Meeting of Council and Members by addressing the current economic crisis and the controversy around fair value accounting.
October 21 -
If there were any doubt about Americans' urgent need for basic financial enlightenment, the economic meltdown that has been taking its heavy toll on Wall Street and Main Street of late should lay it to rest.But today's rocky environment was probably far from the imagination of the legions of CPAs who responded to the American Institute of CPAs' call in 2003, asking if they'd be willing to participate in a sweeping effort to raise Americans' financial literacy quotient.
October 19 -
The Census Bureau estimates that there are nearly 78 million Baby Boomers, many of whom are facing retirement in the next few years with little or no savings.These 40-, 50- and even 60-year-old late-starters have been too busy educating children, caring for parents and making ends meet to properly save for their own retirement. By taking the time to understand their personal needs and goals, and staying on top of changes in relevant plans and laws, advisors can give clients one more reason to rely on them and their financial guidance.
October 19 -
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“Every day, we receive phone calls or e-mails that begin, ‘I just inherited (or acquired) a coin collection. What do I do?’ Unfortunately, all of us in the rare coin business have heard horror stories over the years about widows who sold their late husband’s collections at a fraction of the true value because they didn't have enough information. We've set up this new service so heirs can quickly get accurate information and find reputable dealers,” says Ron Guth, President of Professional Coin Grading Service (PCGS), one of the world’s largest, third-party rare coin authentication companies.
October 16 -
The Internal Revenue Service announced cost-of-living adjustments on the dollar limitations for pension plans and other items in tax year 2009, even as Social Security benefits are expected to rise next year.
October 16 -
The Financial Accounting Standards Board is considering delaying implementation of its controversial standard on accounting for uncertainty in income taxes for private entitiies.
October 16 -
The International Accounting Standards Board and its U.S. counterpart, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, plan to create a global advisory group to review financial reporting issues related to the credit crisis.
October 16 -
The Center for Audit Quality, the CFA Institute, the Council of Institutional Investors and the Consumer Federation of America have written to the Securities and Exchange Commission opposing demands for the SEC to override the Financial Accounting Standards Board's rules on fair value accounting.
October 15 -
The federal government plans to spend $250 billion to buy equity stakes in troubled banks to help them weather the credit crisis.
October 14 -
Presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and his rival Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., have proposed differing tax and retirement plan measures to deal with the economic downturn.
October 14 -
As more clients are confronted with shrinking retirement portfolios, layoffs and hardship getting bank loans for their business and personal needs, accountants are being asked for advice on how to survive through lean times.
October 14