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| Title & Description | Date | Type of Article | |||||
| 1. |
What Companies Should Know About XBRL Tagging
The digital revolution in financial reporting is underway! Oh, um—you haven’t noticed yet?By Colleen Cunningham |
02/23/10 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 2. |
Conflict Exists Over How to Calculate Cash Flow
Every year I attend Financial Executives International’s annual Current Financial Reporting conference. The 2009 conference, held in November, was its usual excellent event, addressing everything from new accounting rules for mergers to new guidance on fair value to the future of financial statement presentation.By Colleen Cunningham |
12/22/09 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 3. |
FASB, IASB Plod Toward Convergence on Revenue
For an economy that isn’t seeing enough revenue these days, the United States certainly does have a lot of ways companies can try to recognize it.By Colleen Cunningham |
10/27/09 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 4. |
The Upside to IFRS for Small, Medium Entities
The International Accounting Standards Board finally issued its long-awaited, International Financial Reporting Standard for small and medium-sized entities (SMEs) in July. This is more important than you think.By Colleen Cunningham |
08/25/09 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 5. |
Regulators Need to Get Moving on IFRS
Despite an apparent drop in momentum recently, the United States and the world are on a clear path to move to one set of global accounting standards. In fact, the only common theme we’ve seen in comments about the Securities and Exchange Commission’s plan to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards is that everyone believes we should have one standard.By Colleen Cunningham |
06/30/09 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 6. |
Doing the Right Thing, Even When It’s Costly
As everyone reading these words knows, Congress enacted the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002 to improve transparency and accountability in business processes and financial reporting. The intent was to increase confidence in public markets. Section 404 of SOX outlined the requirements for senior management at publicly traded companies to assess the effectiveness of internal controls, and for an attestation by their external auditors on that assessment.By Colleen Cunningham |
04/28/09 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 7. |
Will Revamped Financial Statement Benefit Valuation?
The International Accounting Standards Board and the U.S. Financial Accounting Standards Board recently published a discussion paper for public comment on financial statement presentation. The paper presents the boards’ initial thinking on a possible future format.By Colleen Cunningham |
02/24/09 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 8. |
How to Handle FASB’s Unfair Value Standard
I had planned to write a completely different column for this month—but, much like the Treasury Department, was inspired by recent events regarding the credit crisis to change course.By Colleen Cunningham |
11/04/08 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 9. |
Convergence Coming, but at What Pace?
In case you haven’t heard, International Financial Reporting Standards are coming to the United States—so it’s not IFRS, it’s WHENRS!By Colleen Cunningham |
07/29/08 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 10. |
How Fair Value Works When Liquidity Dries Up
My name is Colleen Cunningham, and I weigh 7 pounds, 2 ounces—at least, I do if you go by historical cost accounting.By Colleen Cunningham |
05/28/08 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 11. |
Preparing Yourself for the XBRL Wave
Once upon a time, I was a young auditor dutifully carrying around my audit bag filled with hand-written green ledger sheets (written with my Pentel, of course). I got on planes to Washington, D.C., to deliver filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission on their due date and walked across New York City to give a client some much-needed document.By Colleen Cunningham |
02/26/08 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 12. |
What Comes Next for Merger Accounting
Any time now, we are expecting both the Financial Accounting Standards Board and its global counterpart, the International Accounting Standards Board, to issue final standards on accounting for business combinations and non-controlling interests. These standards are the culmination of a joint project between FASB and the IASB, and staffs of both boards have participated on the project team since it was added to their agendas in 2002. In fact, the business combinations project was part of the now-famous Memorandum of Understanding that outlined the “Roadmap of Convergence” between International Financial Reporting Standards and U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles to occur by 2009.By Colleen Cunningham |
11/27/07 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 13. |
Mark to Market, or to Myth? FAS 157 Worries
The Bear Stearns hedge fund meltdown put “fair value” on the front pages. Now, Financial Accounting Standard No. 157 is going to put it on your books, and soon.By Colleen Cunningham |
09/25/07 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 14. |
Bear Stearns, Enron, And Warnings On Fair Value
As has been widely reported in the business media, New York-based Bear Stearns recently announced a $3.2 billion bail out of two of its hedge funds, due to investments in subprime mortgage loans (basically, home loans to borrowers with bad credit). Although the funds had been using fair value accounting to calculate the assets’ worth, the collapse caught many by surprise—largely because it is extremely difficult to value assets that do not have a ready liquid market. The funds ran into trouble when a downturn in parts of the housing market negatively impacted the funds’ investments in complex securities backed by subprime mortgages; since the securities are not frequently traded, the “fair value” is difficult to determine. Borrowed money was used in an attempt to save the funds.By Colleen Cunningham |
07/10/07 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 15. |
An Overzealous Definition Of Materiality?
Few concepts involving the preparation of financial statements in conformity with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles are as difficult to address as “materiality.” This is an issue that has been covered by Compliance Week extensively over the last few months; in May, the publication was the first to break the story that the SEC was indeed considering an update to its views on materiality, and former SEC deputy chief accountant and Compliance Week columnist Scott Taub recently penned a column on materiality as it pertains to restatements.By Colleen Cunningham |
05/30/07 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 16. |
Addressing Financial Reporting Complexity
Compliance Week is pleased to introduce Colleen Cunningham as its newest columnist. A former chief accountant of AT&T and former CFO of global advertising giant Havas, Cunningham was most recently CEO of Financial Executives International. Her column will appear in Compliance Week every other montBy Colleen Cunningham |
03/27/07 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 17. |
Getting Control Over Internal Control Rules
The March 16 deadline for public companies to complete an audit of their internal controls over financial reporting under the requirements of Sarbanes-Oxley Section 404 has come and gone. Now that we have gone through the first run of this mammoth compliance effort, it’s time to review what we have learned and identify ways to improve the annual certification process going forward.By Frank H. Brod and Colleen Cunningham |
05/17/05 | Columns & Editorials | ||||
| 18. |
Top 10 Financial Reporting Challenges For 2005
Last week, the CEO of Financial Executives International, Colleen Cunningham (formerly Sayther), crafted for members a list of the "top 10 financial reporting challenges for 2005." Though there aren't many surprises in the list, it is a nice compilation of the key issues that should be on companies' radar screens during the new year. We're reprinting the list, below, with permission from FEI, along with links to related rules, coverage, or guidance for each topic.By Colleen Cunningham |
01/11/05 | Compliance Week Coverage | ||||
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