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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Top audit firms push to use their own judgment

Auditors and corporate finance departments must be able to use professional judgment without being second-guessed if countries continue to adopt principle-based accounting standards, the chief executives of the top six global accounting networks argued in a white paper on Tuesday.

The paper, presented at a Global Public Policy Symposium in New York, urged regulators and other stakeholders to create a system where reasonable auditor judgments are accepted.

"Investors are best served when financial reports are clear and easy to understand and use," the CEOs of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu [DLTE.UL], Ernst & Young [ERNY.UL], PricewaterhouseCoopers [PWC.UL], KPMG [KPMG.UL], Grant Thornton, and BDO Seidman wrote.

"In order to deliver on that goal, preparers and auditors must be given the space to exercise professional judgment and to feel confident that their judgment, so long as it is fundamentally sound and documented, will not be subject to second-guessing."

More than 100 countries are currently using, or plan to use International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which are seen as a more principle-based accounting system. In recent months many have called for the United States to set a national plan to move to IFRS from U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, which are often viewed as more rule-based.

Top audit firms push to use their own judgment

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Monday, October 22, 2007

PCAOB Told to Plan for Global Standards

Members of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's advisory group are split on the question of how hard it would be for the auditing profession to adapt to International Financial Reporting Standards.

In light of a recent Securities and Exchange Commission proposal that U.S. companies should be given the choice between IFRS and U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, some PCAOB advisers worried that such a choice would overly burden accounting professors who are already strapped for resources. They also questioned whether the International Accounting Standards Board's version of IFRS is of high enough quality to meet U.S. regulators' and investors' expectations. The IASB expressed similar worries on Thursday.

The larger accounting firms, however, assured the advisory group that they have been training their staffs on using IFRS. Perhaps surprisingly, a member of the Financial Accounting Standards Board spoke in favor of a move to international standards.

PCAOB Told to Plan for Global Standards


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Sunday, April 29, 2007

SEC's Cox sees common accounting standards by 2009

Cox was appearing on a panel at the German Marshall Fund Brussels Forum. In other comments, he said the SEC was proving able to modify the U.S.'s Sarbanes-Oxley legislation to meet European concerns and that he expected the accounting progress to become a key part of a new transatlantic partnership on eliminating regulatory divergences.
U.S. President George W. Bush and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are due to sign a new regulatory partnership Monday in Washington. The deal will create a transatlantic council to set priorities.
Accounting standards are a "wonderful example," a "tangible result" of what the new accord can achieve, Cox said. Progress towards common accounting standards is "going swimmingly," he added. Specifically, he said the SEC was already willing to allow foreign issuers of securities to report results either in the IFRS international standards or the U.S. GAAP standards. It soon will consider whether allowing U.S. issuers to have a similar choice, he added.

SEC's Cox sees common accounting standards by 2009

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Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Speech By SEC Commissioner Roel C. Campos: Remarks Before The IOSCO Annual Conference

Good morning. At the outset, I'd like to thank M. Damodaran for being such an excellent host to this conference. In addition, it's definitely a pleasure to be part of such a distinguished panel, and I appreciate all of the work that Arthur Doctors van Leeuwen has done in organizing the topics for it. In any event, before I begin, I must remind you that the comments I make today are my own and do not reflect the opinions of the staff or the other Commissioners of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Let me start by noting that in the nearly five years in which I've worked with IOSCO, I've never seen more interest with respect to the growing globalization of the securities markets and international securities regulation than in the last few months. Perhaps this is just an American perspective and that we're just late to the party, but I do sense that we may be approaching critical mass on some of these issues.

Of course, much of what I'm referring to does not directly involve audit or accounting standards, but rather concerns the fact that there has been increasing globalization of the securities markets. Most notable is the recent NYSE-Euronext merger, which I think will add significant pressures to the desire for seamless global securities trading and will likely bring requests from the combined entity to allow the sale of listed European securities in the U.S., and vice versa.

Speech By SEC Commissioner Roel C. Campos: Remarks Before The IOSCO Annual Conference

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Monday, April 16, 2007

Gulf between US and international accounting standards remains

Companies from overseas that are listed in the US are still facing considerable differences between international and US accounting standards, Ernst & Young has stated.

The accounts of 130 foreign private issuers filed with SEC had more than 200 differences between the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and the US Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), Accountancy Magazine reports.

Areas with the most substantial differences were pensions, business contributions and financial instruments.

Gulf between US and international accounting standards remains

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