All Compliance Week articles in Web Issue – Page 563
-
Blog
Michael Lewis’ ‘The Undoing Project’ and compliance
The Man From FCPA Tom Fox offers his take on the most recent Michael Lewis book, “The Undoing Project, A Friendship That Changed Our Minds,” which—Fox says—“should be studied by every compliance professional for its insights into how the human mind works.”
-
Blog
PCAOB’s reorganized auditing standards rule book takes effect
Now that the calendar has turned to 2017, auditors will be following a new nomenclature with respect to citing auditing standards after a reorganization of the rules has taken effect. Tammy Whitehouse reports.
-
Article
Ireland appeals EC Apple tax ruling
Nothing but trouble ensues when Apple fights a multibillion-dollar fine that Ireland doesn’t really want to enforce. Neil Hodge looks at Apple’s epic taxation struggle.
-
Article
Ethics lessons from the Flint water crisis
Flint’s lead-poisoned water is more than just a technical failure, writes Jaclyn Jaeger. It’s a systemic governmental failure with leadership as toxic as Flint’s water itself.
-
Article
Agenda 2017: revenue recognition, meet internal controls
In 2017, monumental accounting change in the form of revenue recognition will crash head on with continued intensity around internal controls. Tammy Whitehouse reports.
-
Blog
President-elect Trump picks his SEC chairman
President-elect Donald Trump has announced the nomination of Jay Clayton to replace current Chairman Mary Jo White at the conclusion of her term. Clayton is currently a partner with Sullivan & Cromwell. Joe Mont has more.
-
Article
Debate over SEC’s in-house courts could go to the Supreme Court
The SEC has fought off challenges to its in-house judges before, but new complaints that the Commission’s proceedings are unconstitutional might just stick. Joe Mont reports.
-
Article
New York delays and dials back cyber-security rules
New York’s tough new cyber-security rules for financial institutions were supposed to start on January 1. Instead, a toned-down version is in the works. Joe Mont has more.
-
Article
A country-by-country assessment of bribery risk
The 2016 TRACE Matrix is out, but is its data on international bribery hotspots better than Transparency International’s data? Jaclyn Jaeger explores.
-
Article
‘Name and shame’ campaigns may be a direct hit on the bottom line
A troubling sign of things to come: U.S. cities are finding a way to leverage SEC rules to boost tax rates. Joe Mont reports.
-
Resource
The ABC's of GRC
The value of mature GRC capabilities can be summed up through another acronym—ABC: Aware, Bespoke, and Confident.
-
Blog
CFPB highlights debt collection complaint statistics
With a slate of rules targeting the industry in the pipeline, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has released a tally of consumer complaints related to debt collection. More from Joe Mont.
-
Blog
Banks reach final resolutions under Swiss Bank Program
The Department of Justice last week announced that it has reached final resolutions with banks that have met the requirements of the Swiss Bank Program, which provided a path for Swiss banks to resolve potential criminal liabilities in the United States, and to cooperate in ongoing investigations of the use ...
-
Blog
PCAOB publishes views on conflict with China rules
To address how U.S. audit rules intersect with those in China, the PCAOB has published a four-page Q&A to explain its views on why firms subject to its rules should observe them. Tammy Whitehouse reports.
-
Blog
Another Infosys chief compliance officer abruptly departs
Infosys Limited announced that David Kennedy, general counsel and chief compliance officer, and the company have mutually agreed that Kennedy’s employment with the India-based software giant will cease on Dec. 31, 2016.
-
Blog
CW to publish late this week
Compliance Week will publish one day late this week on Wednesday, Jan. 4, due to the New Year’s holiday.
-
Blog
General Cable to pay $76M in FCPA case
General Cable today agreed to pay a combined $76 million to resolve parallel investigations with the SEC and Department of Justice related to violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The company agreed to pay an additional $6.5 million penalty to the SEC to settle separate accounting-related violations. Jaclyn Jaeger ...
-
Blog
SEC and DOJ allege insider trading related to hacked law firms
Yesterday, the SEC and the DOJ separately announced significant cases against three Chinese traders who made nearly millions in illegal profits by hacking into the computer networks of two "prominent New York-based law firms."
-
Blog
SEC: hackers hit law firms, traded on nonpublic information
In a first-of-its-kind case, the SEC has charged a trio of Chinese hackers with stealing and trading on nonpublic, market-moving data from law firms.