Financial reporting

  • Accounting firm Weaver and Tidwell has introduced a financial services niche practice aimed at investment companies, including hedge funds and private equity firms.

    July 6
  • Financial guarantee insurance companies stand behind trillions of dollars in financial obligations — including many of the mortgages that have recently fallen into default.So the Securities and Exchange Commission had good reason to call for new disclosures and clarifications of existing accounting and financial reporting standards.

    July 6
  • Never before has the issue of executive compensation garnered as much of the public’s interest as it has in recent years, due in large part to several highly publicized corporate scandals.The backlash from incidents involving top executives at global organizations, and recent changes in Securities and Exchange Commission proxy and accounting rules, have prompted interesting new trends related to how executives and board members within large public companies are being compensated and to what degree.

    July 6
  • The Governmental Accounting Standards Board has issued a new standard aimed at improving how state and local governments report information about derivative instruments in their financial statements.

    July 6
  • One of legendary basketball coach John Wooden’s basic tenets of success was an axiom he quoted almost daily to his players, or for that matter, anyone who wanted to listen and learn.

    June 29
  • I just returned from a three-day trip to my undergraduate university and my 50th reunion. Yes, you read that right. Fifty years. Okay, so I started college at 10. About 400 showed up for this clambake and the most startling thing of all is that I recognized nobody and they probably felt the same about me. To the credit of the planning committee, the name badges draped around our necks not only had our names, including any nicknames known in school at that time in 1954, but also our graduation picture. That made it much easier to recognize people. I would simply go up to some unknown face, look at the picture on the name tag, and say “Hey, Bill, I know you.” And then lift my eyes to his face and say, “But you I don’t know.” What a wakeup call. Interestingly enough, if I talked to 10 people, only one—one mind you—was still working. The other nine had all “retired.” I put quotes around the word “retired” because retirement is not in my lexicon. I believe in changing lifestyles but sitting home, watching Oprah, and eating bon bons is not my ideal life. I would have to keep the brain going and the muscles in the body stimulated. Now, of those 10 people, the one who is still working is not doing it by choice. He is working because he “has to,” meaning he doesn’t have the funds to “pack it in”…another phrase commonly used at this reunion. The other nine? Catch this. None of them went to a financial planner. They used their accountants to determine what the income flow was (Social Security, pensions, securities, savings, et al) against what the expenses would be. This is a complete turnabout with what is going on today where Baby Boomers are flooding to financial planners and the financial planning niche is the fastest growing one in the industry. Why is that? One thing to keep in mind. At the time my colleagues decided to put a brake to the 9-5 grind, the economy was in good shape, stocks were up, there was pretty solid economic growth. This was all pre-9/11 and pre-Iraq, because the majority of my colleagues stopped full-time work by the time they turned 60, some 12 years ago. Today, the economy is panting, stocks are taking a beating, cost of living is sky-high, and everyone is running scared. A different world from one decade to another. What I found also fascinating is that my classmates were not living like Donald Trump. They were comfortable with enough money for their basic needs and at least one vacation (not more than $5,000) a year. Many had moved to other parts of the country to keep costs down. They were extracting only about five percent from any pension plans; in effect, living off the interest rather than the principal. And oddly enough (and maybe it’s the generation), nobody was scrimping and saving to leave a big fortune to kids and grandkids. “Shrouds have no pockets,” said one classmate. “You can’t take anything with you. I’m spending every last cent.” Another chimed in with “Hey, my kids make more than I did.” But, these weren’t cries of bitterness. They were statements of fact. I think the most telling aspect of this reunion and the one that woke us all up was a particular dinner where the university president offered a slide show in which he talked about our class and what we had and didn’t have when we came to school as freshmen in 1954. Up there on the screen the only electronic equipment we saw was the record player spinning 78s and 45s, and the old Underwood manual typewriter with those red/black spools that had to be changed quite frequently. And then he showed us what the kids of today have: computers, desktop and wireless, Blackberries, Blueberries, iPods, DVDs…it went on and on and on…and we all groaned. “Yeah, look at what we had and now look at what these kids have.” Everybody griping until the president ended with these words: “And you people should have no regrets, for after all, you invented all of this.” End of story. See you in another 50? Sure. Take two and hit to right.

    June 26
  • Securities and Exchange Commission chief accountant Conrad Hewitt said SEC staff members planned to propose a date for mandating the use of International Financial Reporting Standards by public companies, but the date would not be confirmed for two years, giving accountants some extra leeway.

    June 26
  • Accounting firm RSM McGladrey is donating $10,000 to the American Red Cross to help with Midwest flood relief, while setting up a relief fund for its own employees.

    June 25
  • Internet evangelist Bill Keller is challenging an Internal Revenue Service probe of his organization’s tax-exempt status.

    June 25
  • The House Ways and Means Select Revenue Measures Subcommittee held hearings on bills that would encourage employers to automatically enroll their employees in individual retirement account plans.

    June 25
  • Olympic gold medalist Wendy Lansbach Boglioli gave a thought-provoking talk last week at the New York State Society of CPAs’ Personal Financial Planning and Eldercare Conference about the importance of long-term care insurance.

    June 24
  • We all want to do more productive, efficient work.

    June 24
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission plans to launch an ambitious project to re-examine how companies and other entities should make financial disclosures to take advantage of the latest technologies.

    June 24
  • We all want to do more productive, efficient work.

    June 23
  • CCH has enhanced the Audit Public Library in its Accounting Research Manager database with a set of questions and answers about Financial Accounting Standard 157 for fair value measurements.

    June 23
  • We all want to do more productive, efficient work.

    June 22
  • M&A

    FiveStar3 has acquired the Alliance of Professional Associations, a national association management company for accounting firms.

    June 19
  • Try this on for size. A new study shows that of some one million 401(k) portfolios, some 69 percent of participants have portfolios with inappropriate risk or diversification, 36 percent hold high concentrations of company stock, and 33 percent fail to contribute enough to receive the full company match. While groups of participants are taking full advantage of their 401(k) plans, participants with lower salaries, lower plan balances, and those closer to retirement tend to make the most costly mistakes.

    June 19
  • Cohen & Co. has acquired Mercurio & Bridgford, expanding the Ohio-based firm's presence in Florida.

    June 18
  • Financial regulators from around the world are setting up a monitoring group that will work with international accounting standards-setters.

    June 18