SEC’s Cox sees common accounting standards by 2009
0 Comments Published by claudia April 30th, 2007 in News, SEC, SOX, Europe, North America, Accounting rules, Sarbox Tags: accounting standard, accounting standards, euronext, european concerns, gaap, german chancellor angela merkel, german marshall fund, new york stock exchange, regulatory, sarbanes oxley act, sarbanes oxley act of 2002, transatlantic partnership.The U.S. and Europe should be able to achieve a single accounting standard by 2009, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Committee, Christopher Cox, said Sunday.
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.
European and U.S. regulators are working together well, Cox continued. He noted how they had managed to avoid a “calamity” when the New York Stock Exchange took over Euronext. He also noted how the SEC had managed to be “attentive to European concerns” about Section 404 of the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, which required strict internal audits of corporate accounts.
MarketWatch: SEC’s Cox sees common accounting standards by 2009
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Apple’s 802.11n accounting conundrum
0 Comments Published by claudia January 27th, 2007 in Uncategorized, News, North America, Company News, Accounting rules Tags: apple, gaap, generally accepted accounting principles, lynn turner, macs, wireless technology.Experts and officials are questioning Apple’s stated reasons behind its proposed $1.99 fee to enable faster wireless technology in some already shipped Macs. The company on Thursday confirmed that it will charge users a small fee to enable the new, faster 802.11n wireless technology in its previously shipped Core 2 Duo-based Macs, saying that the charges were required to stay in compliance with generally accepted accounting principles (a.k.a, GAAP).
“GAAP doesn’t require you to charge squat,” says Lynn Turner, managing director of research at Glass Lewis & Co. and a former chief accountant of the Securities and Exchange Commission told The Wall Street Journal. “You charge whatever you want. GAAP doesn’t even remotely address whether or not you charge for a significant functionality change. GAAP establishes what the proper accounting is, based on what you did or didn’t charge for it.”
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