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New crypto reporting regs will generate information deluge

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Crypto reporting enters a new phase on Jan. 1, 2025, the effective date for the new 1099-DA and finalized reporting regs. Brokers, traders, banks, wallet hubs, and taxpayers are still trying to digest the regulations and decide what is necessary to comply.

“I think it’s flown under the radar for a lot of people,” said James Creech, a director in the tax advocacy and controversy practice of Top 10 Firm Baker Tilly. “But the fact that the IRS is now going to get information about the transactions, and how inaccurate the information will be, is really underappreciated at this point. There will be a lot of people who will realize, too late, that this has taken effect.”

And there is very little time to become familiar with the rules, which go from nothing, or ad hoc reporting, through to a 1099 type B statement. 

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An attendee wears a shirt with cryptocurrency logos during the CoinDesk 2022 Consensus Festival.

Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg

“It’s going to be a rough transition period, beginning on Jan. 1, 2025,” Creech said. “For example, if hypothetically a bunch of people buy Bitcoin at 100,000 and it crashes down to 50,000 and they sell out at a loss, they’re going to be very confused if they just get a 1099 that has the proceeds on it. It would look like they have a $50,000 gain versus a $50,000 loss.”

“The concern was that there is not really much of any kind of standardized reporting,” he continued. “For example, if I were to buy $1,000,000 of crypto or sell $1,000,000 of crypto, there’s no guarantee that the information on the sales will make it to the IRS. So Congress  imposed two code sections, 6045 and 6050, that created these reporting requirements which were a little sparse. They had some definitions that were a little vague, or that shouldn’t have been there at all. One senator held up the process and kept the definition vague, while the majority wanted to narrow it to be more precise. Overall, considering they were handed a really complex bundle of regulations to implement, they did a good job to come up with reasonable definitions.”

Creech said that he believes everyone expects the Form  1099-DA to result in  “scattershot, unhelpful reporting” for the first few years. “No one really knows what to expect. To really be effective there needs to be a continuity of ownership within exchanges, so you can track both what the basis is and what the proceeds are. The first few years we might get half the report. The basis is going to be an issue — we’re likely to get inaccurate basis but accurate gross proceeds on these forms.”

Over time, the Treasury plans to expand these regulations and provide more clarity to some of the other people who are covered by Section 6045 and 6050 regulations. 

“And the reporting will be expanded to things such as peer-to-peer exchanges or other kinds of marketplaces, since the definition tends to be, ‘Can you set prices or set fees for exchanging crypto?’ It’s pretty broad and it’s going to cover people who may not have the ability to comply, he said. “But that’s not so much of a January 1st issue.”

There have been estimates of up to 6 billion 1099-DAs to be filed with the IRS a year, according to Creech: “And if they’re all inaccurate, what is the IRS going to be able to do with them? Every transaction will generate a 1099-DA. If I’m trading crypto and make 1,000 trades, I could be getting 1,000 1099-DAs. It will all have to go into a digital shoe box.”

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Accounting

IAASB tweaks standards on working with outside experts

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The International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board is proposing to tailor some of its standards to align with recent additions to the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants’ International Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants when it comes to using the work of an external expert.

The proposed narrow-scope amendments involve minor changes to several IAASB standards:

  • ISA 620, Using the Work of an Auditor’s Expert;
  • ISRE 2400 (Revised), Engagements to Review Historical Financial Statements;
  • ISAE 3000 (Revised), Assurance Engagements Other than Audits or Reviews of Historical Financial Information;
  • ISRS 4400 (Revised), Agreed-upon Procedures Engagements.

The IAASB is asking for comments via a digital response template that can be found on the IAASB website by July 24, 2025.

In December 2023, the IESBA approved an exposure draft for proposed revisions to the IESBA’s Code of Ethics related to using the work of an external expert. The proposals included three new sections to the Code of Ethics, including provisions for professional accountants in public practice; professional accountants in business and sustainability assurance practitioners. The IESBA approved the provisions on using the work of an external expert at its December 2024 meeting, establishing an ethical framework to guide accountants and sustainability assurance practitioners in evaluating whether an external expert has the necessary competence, capabilities and objectivity to use their work, as well as provisions on applying the Ethics Code’s conceptual framework when using the work of an outside expert.  

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Tariffs will hit low-income Americans harder than richest, report says

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President Donald Trump’s tariffs would effectively cause a tax increase for low-income families that is more than three times higher than what wealthier Americans would pay, according to an analysis from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.

The report from the progressive think tank outlined the outcomes for Americans of all backgrounds if the tariffs currently in effect remain in place next year. Those making $28,600 or less would have to spend 6.2% more of their income due to higher prices, while the richest Americans with income of at least $914,900 are expected to spend 1.7% more. Middle-income families making between $55,100 and $94,100 would pay 5% more of their earnings. 

Trump has imposed the steepest U.S. duties in more than a century, including a 145% tariff on many products from China, a 25% rate on most imports from Canada and Mexico, duties on some sectors such as steel and aluminum and a baseline 10% tariff on the rest of the country’s trading partners. He suspended higher, customized tariffs on most countries for 90 days.

Economists have warned that costs from tariff increases would ultimately be passed on to U.S. consumers. And while prices will rise for everyone, lower-income families are expected to lose a larger portion of their budgets because they tend to spend more of their earnings on goods, including food and other necessities, compared to wealthier individuals.

Food prices could rise by 2.6% in the short run due to tariffs, according to an estimate from the Yale Budget Lab. Among all goods impacted, consumers are expected to face the steepest price hikes for clothing at 64%, the report showed. 

The Yale Budget Lab projected that the tariffs would result in a loss of $4,700 a year on average for American households.

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Accounting

At Schellman, AI reshapes a firm’s staffing needs

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Artificial intelligence is just getting started in the accounting world, but it is already helping firms like technology specialist Schellman do more things with fewer people, allowing the firm to scale back hiring and reduce headcount in certain areas through natural attrition. 

Schellman CEO Avani Desai said there have definitely been some shifts in headcount at the Top 100 Firm, though she stressed it was nothing dramatic, as it mostly reflects natural attrition combined with being more selective with hiring. She said the firm has already made an internal decision to not reduce headcount in force, as that just indicates they didn’t hire properly the first time. 

“It hasn’t been about reducing roles but evolving how we do work, so there wasn’t one specific date where we ‘started’ the reduction. It’s been more case by case. We’ve held back on refilling certain roles when we saw opportunities to streamline, especially with the use of new technologies like AI,” she said. 

One area where the firm has found such opportunities has been in the testing of certain cybersecurity controls, particularly within the SOC framework. The firm examined all the controls it tests on the service side and asked which ones require human judgment or deep expertise. The answer was a lot of them. But for the ones that don’t, AI algorithms have been able to significantly lighten the load. 

“[If] we don’t refill a role, it’s because the need actually has changed, or the process has improved so significantly [that] the workload is lighter or shared across the smarter system. So that’s what’s happening,” said Desai. 

Outside of client services like SOC control testing and reporting, the firm has found efficiencies in administrative functions as well as certain internal operational processes. On the latter point, Desai noted that Schellman’s engineers, including the chief information officer, have been using AI to help develop code, which means they’re not relying as much on outside expertise on the internal service delivery side of things. There are still people in the development process, but their roles are changing: They’re writing less code, and doing more reviewing of code before it gets pushed into production, saving time and creating efficiencies. 

“The best way for me to say this is, to us, this has been intentional. We paused hiring in a few areas where we saw overlaps, where technology was really working,” said Desai.

However, even in an age awash with AI, Schellman acknowledges there are certain jobs that need a human, at least for now. For example, the firm does assessments for the FedRAMP program, which is needed for cloud service providers to contract with certain government agencies. These assessments, even in the most stable of times, can be long and complex engagements, to say nothing of the less predictable nature of the current government. As such, it does not make as much sense to reduce human staff in this area. 

“The way it is right now for us to do FedRAMP engagements, it’s a very manual process. There’s a lot of back and forth between us and a third party, the government, and we don’t see a lot of overall application or technology help… We’re in the federal space and you can imagine, [with] what’s going on right now, there’s a big changing market condition for clients and their pricing pressure,” said Desai. 

As Schellman reduces staff levels in some places, it is increasing them in others. Desai said the firm is actively hiring in certain areas. In particular, it’s adding staff in technical cybersecurity (e.g., penetration testers), the aforementioned FedRAMP engagements, AI assessment (in line with recently becoming an ISO 42001 certification body) and in some client-facing roles like marketing and sales. 

“So, to me, this isn’t about doing more with less … It’s about doing more of the right things with the right people,” said Desai. 

While these moves have resulted in savings, she said that was never really the point, so whatever the firm has saved from staffing efficiencies it has reinvested in its tech stack to build its service line further. When asked for an example, she said the firm would like to focus more on penetration testing by building a SaaS tool for it. While Schellman has a proof of concept developed, she noted it would take a lot of money and time to deploy a full solution — both of which the firm now has more of because of its efficiency moves. 

“What is the ‘why’ behind these decisions? The ‘why’ for us isn’t what I think you traditionally see, which is ‘We need to get profitability high. We need to have less people do more things.’ That’s not what it is like,” said Desai. “I want to be able to focus on quality. And the only way I think I can focus on quality is if my people are not focusing on things that don’t matter … I feel like I’m in a much better place because the smart people that I’ve hired are working on the riskiest and most complicated things.”

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