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Archive for December, 2006

PCAOB - Updates on SOX Auditing

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

Board Proposes Revised Auditing Standard on Internal Control over Financial Reporting:

News Release - http://www.pcaobus.org/News_and_Events/News/2006/12-19.aspx
                       
Rule and Related Documentation - http://www.pcaobus.org/Rules/Docket_021/index.aspx

Amendments to Board Rules Relating to Inspections - http://www.pcaobus.org/Rules/Docket_022/index.aspx
 

The Office of Internal Oversight and Performance Assurance (IOPA) has issued new review summaries regarding PCAOB information technology activities:

IOPA Page -  http://www.pcaobus.org/About_the_PCAOB/Internal_Oversight/index.aspx
 

Are the SEC’s Sarbox Changes Enough?

Thursday, December 14th, 2006
 
The Securities and Exchange Commission’s proposed changes to Sarbanes-Oxley 404 were due to be released Dec. 13, but before that, scholars from the American Enterprise Institute predicted the changes wouldn’t be the right kind. Instead of offering more guidance, one said, the SEC should start again, perhaps by making small business participation voluntary and requiring fewer audits after the first year of compliance. The Committee on Capital Markets Regulation has similar ideas, as its first report revealed. The committee suggested fewer internal controls, less frequent audits and a clearer definition of “materiality” to start. Whether the regulators can make the changes or Congress has to come in with new legislation, if they’re the right changes, the U.S. can regain its status as economically competitive.

MORE SEC HEADLINES

SEC proposes easing of audit rules - By unanimous vote, commissioners voted to seek comment about making Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act more “risk-based,” thereby allowing executives to focus their energies on identifying the biggest potential risks to their corporations’ books.

Proposed SEC controls guidance targets risks - The SEC voted 5-0 at a meeting to propose letting companies take a narrower view on evaluating design and operation of internal controls, or how they keep their books in order.

Auditing change could ease burden on small firms - The proposal, which wouldn’t be adopted until early next year, means that small and midsize companies wouldn’t necessarily have to spend millions to overhaul their internal control systems to comply with Section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley.

Feds Give AICPA a Peek at SOX Plans - Top officials from the SEC and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board gave the accounting profession an advance peek at its plans during a meeting with American Institute of CPA members in the nation’s capital.

Jeffrey Skilling enters prison in Minn. - Former Enron chief executive Jeffrey Skilling entered prison quietly on Wednesday, the final step in the fall of a man who once presided over one of Wall Street’s biggest success stories.

Former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling’s New Prison Home Includes Roommates, Fish Sandwiches and Bunk Beds - Disgraced former Enron chief Jeffrey Skilling will still make money while serving his more than 24-year sentence for fraud and other crimes in a low-level federal prison in Minnesota. But at 12-cents an hour, it’s a far cry from the reported $40 million he once raked in as top dog of America’s energy industry.

Small companies see surge in restatements - The report, from proxy advisory and financial research firm Glass Lewis & Co., comes as financial regulators are expected to ease rules that take effect in 2008 on internal controls for smaller companies, which govern how they keep their ledgers in order.

Firms still struggling with compliance regulations - Compliance management is still largely a manual process which forces many IT organisations to devote “major staff resources” to reporting, new research has revealed.

Congress and tech: Little to show

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

Grading the tech legislative process
Very few technology-related bills have made it through the legislative process in the past 12 years of Republican rule of the U.S. House of Representatives. John Palafoutas, senior vice president and chief lobbyist for the American Electronics Association, claims, “If they [the 109th Congress] were going to get a grade, it would be an ‘I’ for failure to complete all assignments.” What grade would you give the U.S. Congress?

Top News

US issues privacy guidelines for use in the War on Terror

Concerns linger over secret airline passenger risk profiles

Dangerous IT security myths abound in the financial sector

Believing in harder passwords just makes things easier for hackers

PCAOB vows to reconsider SOX auditing standard

December 19 public meeting to unveil AS 2 reconstruction

New e-discovery rules boosts IT information-retrieval business

Big changes for storage, search, and sanitation of data

Wall Street bank lawsuit fails to win class action status

Ruling of IPO manipulation from dotcom boom saves banks billions of dollars in payout

  

December 2006
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Upcoming Events

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Just as with the Y2K crisis of seven years ago, IT workers are being called upon to don superhero suits and save the enterprise from impending technology trouble. But this time, IT will be sifting through the complexities of the federal Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Public Companies over 75 million already need to comply by 12/15/2007...

Will your SMB be Ready?


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