¶ … New PCAOB
Reporting Requirements
A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE NEW PCAOB REPORTING
A Practical Guide to the New PCAOB Reporting Requirements
PCAOB is a Public Company Accounting Oversight Board established by Sarbanes-Oxley Act to oversee the auditing procedures of public companies in order to protect the interest of investors and enhance public confidence towards preparation of accurate audit information. The PCAOB attempts to protect the interests of investors as well as enhancing fair and accurate audit reporting.
The objective of this study is to justify whether the reporting requirements of the PCAOB reduce the chance of financial fraud.
Justification how the reporting requirements of the PCAOB reduce the chance of financial fraud
Fundamental objective leading to the enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Act of 2002 was in response of corporate financial scandals that rocked business circle in the late 1990s and early 2000s in the United States. To restore investors' confidence and improve overall financial reporting, SOX Act mandates public traded company to display their financial data publicly through annual report. Under Section 404 of SOX Act, public company should implement internal control to enhance financial accounting transparency. Equally important, the section 409 of SOX Act mandates publicly traded company to seek for the service of an external auditor to audit the company annual financial statement.
To comply with the SOX Act, PCAOB was established to oversee the auditing procedures implemented by the public traded companies. To ensure that companies comply with PCAOB laid down requirements, PCAOB promulgated new rules where an accounting a firm charged to audit a company financial data is to file current and annual return with PCAOB to implement the requirement of SOX Section 102(d).There is an also disclosure requirement where the audit firm is required to provide information about its performing audit, and report annual information about the firms and the overall audit practice.
To comply with the reporting requirements of the PCAOB, publicly traded company should restructure the Board of Directors...
Despite the shortcomings identified in the PCAOB reporting requirements, the system has been able to reduce fraud practice within the publicly traded company. Typically, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Chief Financial Officer (CFO) know that they are likely to go to jail in case of financial scandal, thus these two officers are implementing tight financial scrutiny to enhance financial transparency within the company. (Coates, 2007).
Typically, the financial reporting requirements of PCAOB have been able to reduce the chance of financial fraud because apart from the internal control system that a firm needs to implement, an external auditor should also attest to the financial transparency of the firm. Thus, all the steps taken by firms to enhance financial transparency should be filed with PCAOB with Form and Form 3.
Overall objectives for making public traded companies to implement PCAOB requirements are to enhance financial transparency of the company financial data. To comply with the PCAOB reporting requirements, firms need also set aside large amount of money to enhance compliance.
Despite the effectiveness of PCAOB to address financial fraud, there is still issue such as Ponzi scheme which seems to be a new fraudulent practice in the United States. Recently, chairman of NASDAQ has involved in a financial scandal worth $50 billions. Jonas (2007) points out that with PCAOB reporting requirement, many firms are still heading to the reporting risks. Data collected revealed that 74 companies were not able to implement effective internal control thereby leading to the ineffective internal reporting.
Illustration of Responsibilities of an auditing firm to detect fraud during the audit process
"An audit is the process of accumulating and evaluating evidence by a competent independent person about the specific economic entity for the purpose of determining and reporting upon the degree of correspondence between the quantifiable information and established criteria. The financial statement audit applies this concept to the financial statements prepared by the…
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 in reducing fraudulent financial reporting Introduction to Fraudulent Financial Reporting Available research on financial statement fraud relies mostly on anecdotal evidence (for example, Wells, 2001, 2002, 2004a, and 2004b; Rezaee, 2003). This evidence offers advice on how mechanisms related to the fraud triangle can be curtailed. It leads to theoretical sense to reduce factors which lead to more instances of fraud. However, deterrence and established deterrence methods
In the company it has ushered in a better accounting and the management with upgrades in technology and competence, there will be a requirement for training and upgrading managers and staff to meet the contingencies of the proposed systems and controls. The Sarbanes-Oxley section will help the companies on the other hand gain a lot of investment and support from the investors by providing a quality and timely information,
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It should not be treated as a separate exercise undertaken to meet regulatory requirements." (ICA, 29) Here is expressed a philosophical impetus that drives the focus of this research, that such compliance which will generally concern matters such as corporate accounting, the practice of internal oversight and the practice of financial transaction must be considered inextricable from other aspects of practical, procedural and legal operation in terms of its