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Is private equity bringing accounting down or lifting it up?

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A recent article about private equity in the medical field raises important questions about the evolving landscape of the accounting industry, particularly concerning consolidation and private equity. 

While the questions about maintaining quality and client focus should be asked, the article paints an oversimplified picture of the challenges driving this shift and misses important nuances and context vital to the conversation. 

As someone who grew up in my family’s boutique accounting firm and has seen firsthand the value these local firms provide to clients and communities, I think it’s important to talk through these questions with facts, data and a true pulse on the industry, as opposed to fear or nebulous concerns that may not align with reality. 

The accounting industry has been struggling

The accounting industry has faced a confluence of pressures that have necessitated change for a long time:

  • Talent shortage: A significant decline in accounting graduates and increased competition for talent from other sectors are creating an acute shortage of qualified professionals. This shortage strains capacity and impacts service delivery, especially for smaller firms, who don’t have dedicated recruiting resources or processes to source, keep and develop talent. 
  • Leadership development: Similar to the talent shortage, and in part because of it, most non-national firms are limited in their ability to provide management development training. Firms’ capacity has been redlining for more than a decade, resulting in limited capital resources and time dedicated to developing the next generation of leaders, which has had significant implications that we see playing out today. 
  • Technological disruption: The rapid advancement of technology, including AI, automation and data analytics, requires substantial investment. Many firms, especially smaller ones, lack the time, expertise and resources to implement these technologies effectively, hindering their ability to compete and provide modern services.
  • Increasing complexity: The regulatory environment and the complexity of business operations are constantly increasing. Clients demand a wider range of specialized, collaborative services, which smaller firms often struggle to provide.
  • Succession planning: Many accounting firms are facing a wave of partner retirements, with insufficient plans in place to ensure a smooth transition of leadership and client relationships. This threatens the continuity of many small firms. 

How consolidation helps address these issues

Consolidation, when done with intentionality and expertise, offers a powerful mechanism to address these critical challenges:

  • Talent shortage: Larger, consolidated entities can offer more competitive compensation and benefits packages, enhanced and expanded career development opportunities, flexibility, access to offshore talent, and modern work environments with enormous opportunities for growth and networking. They can also offer much more robust recruiting functions. 
  • Leadership development: Consolidators can put in the significant upfront time and lend expertise supporting firms organizing in a way that diffuses information, rewards and relationships more broadly than the traditional pyramid-shaped partner model, with more systematization. When executed well, consolidation not only provides the next generation of leaders more opportunity, but also the firm itself with shared best practices, stronger insights and data analytics, and centralized operations support. Additionally, consolidation means bringing together experts from other industries that can bring innovation, operational expertise and management strength that support and enhance firm models and provide a “platform” on which the next generation of leadership can stand.
  • Technological disruption: Consolidated firms have greater financial resources to invest in and implement advanced technologies. This investment enables them to automate routine tasks, improve efficiency, enhance data analytics capabilities and give them valuable time back to focus on clients. They also have dedicated integration and change management professionals to push new adoption forward without being overly disruptive or “breaking things:  
  • Comprehensive service portfolio: Consolidation allows for the creation of specialized teams and service lines, enabling firms to offer a broader range of expertise that can deepen the client relationship by better serving the increasingly complex needs of clients. Collaboration across services improves efficiency and makes for a better work product for clients. 
  • Succession planning: With fewer junior people eager to run firms, many partners don’t have a great exit strategy. Consolidators can offer them a strong deal and succession plan that allows them to have a capstone experience to their storied career and phase out as needed, while helping create continuity and stability for their employees and clients for the long term. 

But not all consolidation is created equal

I want to be clear: Consolidation can lead to lessened quality or client care, and it’s a valid concern. The first thing to note is that private equity is not a ubiquitous term. There are many forms of private capital in the market, and behind that capital are varying philosophies on how to build a good business. If consolidators or private equity come into a category like accounting focused solely on maximizing short-term profits to support the quick “flip” to the next buyer, or don’t understand the intricacies and value these firms bring, everyone loses. But the resources and collaboration that come with joining a larger group can have enormous benefits for everyone.

We don’t think we need to “fix” boutique accounting, but it does need to evolve in the face of the aforementioned challenges. We also believe we need to support the evolution in a way that preserves what has made it special. 

Here’s what matters when it comes to consolidating accounting firms:

  • Long-term vision: The focus should be on building a platform that supports the growth, connection and development of accounting professionals while delivering exceptional client service. That means investing for the long haul, prioritizing sustainable growth, data-driven processes and operations, and collecting data to help firms operate more efficiently and effectively. 
  • Investing in technology: We have spent a decade getting to a fully vetted, bespoke technology stack that we have seen improve efficiency, enhance service delivery and free up our professionals to focus on higher-value client interactions, and positions us to continually implement new and adaptive tools. 
  • Preserving culture: We understand the importance of preserving the unique culture and client relationships of our firms. Part of what makes boutique accounting great is the read they have on their local communities, and the relationships they’ve established over decades of service. This is in our DNA, and we believe we are here to support these unique cultures and preserve them even as partners transition and the next generation takes the reins. 
  • Focus on quality: We believe that by providing firms with the resources and support they need, they can focus on what they do best: serving their clients. For example, prior to joining a group, local firms don’t have the resources for internal quality control teams, risk committees, training and development programming, incident response teams and the list goes on. 

A new model can mean accounting clients are better taken care of than ever

Consolidation, when done right and with clients and people at the forefront, is not about sacrificing quality for profit. It’s about creating economies of scale, expanding service offerings, providing growth opportunities and ensuring business continuity. 

The accounting industry is at a critical juncture. Private equity is now a mainstay, and we can either vilify it and consolidation, or we can, with intentionality and a discerning eye, embrace a new model that has the potential to address the challenges we face and position us for future success.

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Accounting

AICPA wants Congress to change tax bill

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The American Institute of CPAs is asking leaders of the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee to make changes in the wide-ranging tax and spending legislation that was passed in the House last week and is now in the Senate, especially provisions that have a significant impact on accounting firms and tax professionals.

In a letter Thursday, the AICPA outlined its concerns about changes in the deductibility of state and local taxes pass-through entities such as accounting and law firms that fit the definition of “specified service trades or businesses.” The AICPA urged CPAs to contact lawmakers ahead of passage of the bill in the House and spoke out earlier about concerns to changes to the deductibility of state and local taxes for pass-through entities. 

“While we support portions of the legislation, we do have significant concerns regarding several provisions in the bill, including one which threatens to severely limit the deductibility of state and local tax (SALT) by certain businesses,” wrote AICPA Tax Executive Committee chair Cheri Freeh in the letter. “This outcome is contrary to the intentions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is to strengthen small businesses and enhance small business relief.”

The AICPA urged lawmakers to retain entity-level deductibility of state and local taxes for all pass-through entities, strike the contingency fee provision, allow excess business loss carryforwards to offset business and nonbusiness income, and retain the deductibility of state and local taxes for all pass-through entities.

The proposal goes beyond accounting firms. According to the IRS, “an SSTB is a trade or business involving the performance of services in the fields of health, law, accounting, actuarial science, performing arts, consulting, athletics, financial services, investing and investment management, trading or dealing in certain assets, or any trade or business where the principal asset is the reputation or skill of one or more of its employees or owners.”

The AICPA argued that SSTBs would be unfairly economically disadvantaged simply by existing as a certain type of business and the parity gap among SSTBs and non-SSTBs and C corporations would widen.

Under current tax law (and before the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017), it noted, C corporations could deduct SALT in determining their federal taxable income. Prior to the TCJA, owners of PTEs (and sole proprietorships that itemized deductions) were also allowed to deduct SALT on income earned by the PTE (or sole proprietorship). 

“However, the TCJA placed a limitation on the individual SALT deduction,” Freeh wrote. “In response, 36 states (of the 41 that have a state income tax) enacted or proposed various approaches to mitigate the individual SALT limitation by shifting the SALT liability on PTE income from the owner to the PTE. This approach restored parity among businesses and was approved by the IRS through Notice 2020-75, by allowing PTEs to deduct PTE taxes paid to domestic jurisdictions in computing the entity’s federal non-separately stated income or loss. Under this approved approach, the PTE tax does not count against partners’/owners’ individual federal SALT deduction limit. Rather, the PTE pays the SALT, and the partners/owners fully deduct the amount of their distributive share of the state taxes paid by the PTE for federal income tax purposes.”

The AICPA pointed out that C corporations enjoy a number of advantages, including an unlimited SALT deduction, a 21% corporate tax rate, a lower tax rate on dividends for owners, and the ability for owners to defer income. 

“However, many SSTBs are restricted from organizing as a C corporation, leaving them with no option to escape the harsh results of the SSTB distinction and limiting their SALT deduction,” said the letter. “In addition, non-SSTBs are entitled to an unfettered qualified business income (QBI) deduction under Internal Revenue Code section 199A, while SSTBs are subject to harsh limitations on their ability to claim a QBI deduction.”

The AICPA also believes the bill would add significant complexity and uncertainty for all pass-through entities, which would be required to perform complex calculations and analysis to determine if they are eligible for any SALT deduction. “To determine eligibility for state and local income taxes, non-SSTBs would need to perform a gross receipts calculation,” said the letter. “To determine eligibility for all other state and local taxes, pass-through entities would need to determine eligibility under the substitute payments provision (another complex set of calculations). Our laws should not discourage the formation of critical service-based businesses and, therefore, disincentivize professionals from entering such trades and businesses. Therefore, we urge Congress to allow all business entities, including SSTBs, to deduct state and local taxes paid or accrued in carrying on a trade or business.”

Tax professionals have been hearing about the problem from the Institute’s outreach campaign. 

“The AICPA was making some noise about that provision and encouraging some grassroots lobbying in the industry around that provision, given its impact on accounting firms,” said Jess LeDonne, director of tax technical at the Bonadio Group. “It did survive on the House side. It is still in there, specifically meaning the nonqualifying businesses, including SSTBs. I will wait and see if some of those efforts from industry leaders in the AICPA maybe move the needle on the Senate side.”

Contingency fees

The AICPA also objects to another provision in the bill involving contingency fees affecting the tax profession. It would allow contingency fee arrangements for all tax preparation activities, including those involving the submission of an original tax return. 

“The preparation of an original return on a contingent fee basis could be an incentive to prepare questionable returns, which would result in an open invitation to unscrupulous tax preparers to engage in fraudulent preparation activities that takes advantage of both the U.S. tax system and taxpayers,” said the AICPA. “Unknowing taxpayers would ultimately bear the cost of these fee arrangements, since they will have remitted the fee to the preparer, long before an assessment is made upon the examination of the return.”

The AICPA pointed out that contingent fee arrangements were associated with many of the abuses in the Employee Retention Credit program, in both original and amended return filings.

“Allowing contingent fee arrangements to be used in the preparation of the annual original income tax returns is an open invitation to abuse the tax system and leaves the IRS unable to sufficiently address this problem,” said the letter. “Congress should strike the contingent fee provision from the tax bill. If Congress wants to include the provision on contingency fees, we recommend that Congress provide that where contingent fees are permitted for amended returns and claims for refund, a paid return preparer is required to disclose that the return or claim is prepared under a contingent fee agreement. Disclosure of a contingent fee arrangement deters potential abuse, helps ensure the integrity of the tax preparation process, and ensures compliance with regulatory and ethical standards.”

Business loss carryforwards

The AICPA also called for allowing excess business loss carryforwards to offset business and nonbusiness income. It noted that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act amends Section 461(l)(2) of the Tax Code to provide that any excess business loss carries over as an excess business loss, rather than a net operating loss. 

“This amendment would effectively provide for a permanent disallowance of any business losses unless or until the taxpayer has other business income,” said letter. “For example, a taxpayer that sells a business and recognizes a large ordinary loss in that year would be limited in each carryover year indefinitely, during which time the taxpayer is unlikely to have any additional business income. The bill should be amended to remove this provision and to retain the treatment of excess business loss carryforwards under current law, which is that the excess business loss carries over as a net operating loss (at which point it is no longer subject to section 461(l) in the carryforward year).

AICPA supports provisions

The AICPA added that it supported a number of provisions in the bill, despite those concerns. The provisions it supports and has advocated for in the past include 

• Allow Section 529 plan funds to be used for post-secondary credential expenses;
• Provide tax relief for individuals and businesses affected by natural disasters, albeit not
permanent;
• Make permanent the QBI deduction, increase the QBI deduction percentage, and expand the QBI deduction limit phase-in range;
• Create new Section 174A for expensing of domestic research and experimental expenditures and suspend required capitalization of such expenditures;
• Retain the current increased individual Alternative Minimum Tax exemption amounts;
• Preserve the cash method of accounting for tax purposes;
• Increase the Form 1099-K reporting threshold for third-party payment platforms;
• Make permanent the paid family leave tax credit;
• Make permanent extensions of international tax rates for foreign-derived intangible income, base erosion and anti-abuse tax, and global intangible low-taxed income;
• Exclude from GILTI certain income derived from services performed in the Virgin
Islands;
• Provide greater certainty and clarity via permanent tax provisions, rather than sunset
tax provisions.

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Accounting

On the move: HHM promotes former intern to partner

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KPMG anoints next management committee; Ryan forms Tariff Task Force; and more news from across the profession.

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Accounting

Mid-year moves: Why placed-in-service dates matter more than ever for cost segregation planning

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In the world of depreciation planning, one small timing detail continues to fly under the radar — and it’s costing taxpayers serious money.

Most people fixate on what a property costs or how much they can write off. But the placed-in-service date — when the IRS considers a property ready and available for use — plays a crucial role in determining bonus depreciation eligibility for cost segregation studies.

And as bonus depreciation continues to phase out (or possibly bounce back), that timing has never been more important.

Why placed-in-service timing gets overlooked

The IRS defines “placed in service” as the moment a property is ready and available for its intended use.

For rentals, that means:

  • It’s available for move-in, and,
  • It’s listed or actively being shown.

But in practice, this definition gets misapplied. Some real estate owners assume the closing date is enough. Others delay listing the property until after the new year, missing key depreciation opportunities.

And that gap between intent and readiness? That’s where deductions quietly slip away.

Bonus depreciation: The clock is ticking

Under current law, bonus depreciation is tapering fast:

  • 2024: 60%
  • 2025: 40%
  • 2026: 20%
  • 2027: 0%

The difference between a property placed in service on December 31 versus January 2 can translate into tens of thousands in immediate deductions.

And just to make things more interesting — on May 9, the House Ways and Means Committee released a draft bill that would reinstate 100% bonus depreciation retroactive to Jan. 20, 2025. (The bill was passed last week by the House as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill and is now with the Senate.)

The result? Accountants now have to think in two timelines:

  • What the current rules say;
  • What Congress might say a few months from now.

It’s a tricky season to navigate — but also one where proactive advice carries real weight.

Typical scenarios where timing matters

Placed-in-service missteps don’t always show up on a tax return — but they quietly erode what could’ve been better results. Some common examples:

  • End-of-year closings where the property isn’t listed or rent-ready until January.
  • Short-term rentals delayed by renovation punch lists or permitting hang-ups.
  • Commercial buildings waiting on tenant improvements before becoming operational.

Each of these cases may involve a difference of just a few days — but that’s enough to miss a year’s bonus depreciation percentage.

Planning moves for the second half of the year

As Q3 and Q4 approach, here are a few moves worth making:

  • Confirm the service-readiness timeline with clients acquiring property in the second half of the year.
  • Educate on what “in service” really means — closing isn’t enough.
  • Create a checklist for documentation: utilities on, photos of rent-ready condition, listings or lease activity.
  • Track bonus depreciation eligibility relative to current and potential legislative shifts.

For properties acquired late in the year, encourage clients to fast-track final steps. The tax impact of being placed in service by December 31 versus January 2 is larger than most realize.

If the window closes, there’s still value

Even if a property misses bonus depreciation, cost segregation still creates long-term savings — especially for high-income earners.

Partial-year depreciation still applies, and in some cases, Form 3115 can allow for catch-up depreciation in future years. The strategy may shift, but the opportunity doesn’t disappear.

Placed-in-service dates don’t usually show up on investor spreadsheets. But they’re one of the most controllable levers in maximizing tax savings. For CPAs and advisors, helping clients navigate that timing correctly can deliver outsized results.

Because at the end of the day, smart tax planning isn’t just about what you buy — it’s about when you put it to work.

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