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How should tax leaders prepare for a Pandora’s Box of transparency in 2026?

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Next year is shaping up to be something of a pivotal year for global accounting and tax leaders. A trio of regulatory developments — including IFRS 18, mandatory e-invoicing and the OECD’s Pillar 2 global minimum tax — will open the lid on a potential Pandora’s Box of far-reaching and irreversible tax transparency. This will be the year when compliance becomes continuous, reporting moves to real-time, and governance evolves to handle unprecedented transparency.

Real-time data flows will replace static reporting, internal inconsistencies will be exposed to external scrutiny, and finance functions will need to move from a deliberative compliance stance to real-time data stewardship. How can tax leaders prepare to “open the lid” sufficiently to deliver the right levels of transparency and accountability, without unleashing a world of unmanaged data flows and compliance risk?

When the lid lifts: a turning point for tax

In Greek mythology, Pandora was given a sealed box by the gods and told never to open it. However, driven by curiosity, she lifted the lid and released chaos into the world. Disease, pain and hardship escaped, leaving just one thing behind: hope. The trio of major accounting and tax reforms coming next year are intended to deliver insight and accountability, but also carry the risk of disorder for those who are unprepared. The analogy is more than symbolic: 2026 reforms will expose gaps long hidden within local systems and manual processes.

For many global companies, accounting and tax data have long been compartmentalized, tracked in legacy systems, governed by local teams and reviewed retrospectively. This model is no longer sustainable.

From 2026 onward, IFRS 18 will introduce a restructured income statement format, while mandatory e-invoicing and e-reporting regimes will push tax data into real-time transmission. At the same time, the OECD’s Pillar 2 global minimum tax rules will begin to take effect and require multinationals to calculate and disclose effective tax rates by jurisdiction.

These reforms will have a big impact on how global companies present their financial performance, manage their taxes and assess risk across their organizations. Once the flow of data to the outside world begins, it will be hard to stop.

IFRS 18: what’s inside the box for finance?

As with Pandora’s curiosity, IFRS 18 invites every company to open up its financial statements to deeper, wider scrutiny. Effective for periods beginning Jan. 1, 2027 — with early adoption allowed — IFRS 18 replaces IAS 1 and introduces mandatory performance categories, including operating, investing and financing, as well as enhanced note disclosure. It also requires companies to define and disclose their own management-defined performance measures, which need to be reconciled and explained in detail.

This new structure is designed to bring greater comparability to income statements, but may also reveal discrepancies in how companies currently report internally. In many cases, it may be that the performance metrics used for board reporting, investor presentations or executive compensation do not align with the new IFRS categories.

To prepare, finance leaders should assess the impact of IFRS 18 as early as possible. Charts of accounts will likely need to be updated, and group reporting templates and consolidation systems will likely need to be revised. Management-defined performance measures will require governance, testing and alignment with existing KPIs. For tax leaders, these changes matter because IFRS 18 categories influence tax-sensitive adjustments and must align with Pillar 2 data models and local digital-reporting structures.

Pillar 2: the global minimum tax

The Pillar 2 rules, part of the OECD’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting framework, take operational effect in 2026. These rules impose a 15% minimum effective tax rate on public or private multinational enterprises with consolidated annual revenues of €750 million or more (the same threshold as Country-by-Country Reporting).

To comply, groups must calculate their ETR in every jurisdiction where they operate. If the local rate falls below 15%, a “top-up tax” must be paid, often via an EU holding company under the Income Inclusion Rule.

The first Pillar 2 filings are due in 2026 and will demand unprecedented data quality and system integration. Tax functions will need to gather and reconcile data at a level of granularity that few systems currently support. Treasury teams will need to model the cash flow impact of these new liabilities. At the same time, finance functions will need to present a consistent narrative; one that links financial results under IFRS 18 with tax disclosures under Pillar 2.

Even companies headquartered in the USA — where domestic adoption of Pillar 2 remains uncertain — will be affected, as their overseas subsidiaries will face local compliance and top-up tax obligations.

E-invoicing and e-reporting: the data escapes

By 2026, more than 80 jurisdictions will require some form of real-time e-invoicing or e-reporting. For example, countries such as Brazil, France, Mexico and Poland are adopting Real-Time Clearance, where every invoice must be validated through government platforms before being shared with customers or booked for payment and becoming legally effective. Under digital reporting mandates such as SAF-T, SPED, MTD and SII, tax administrations now receive ledgers and transactional data directly.

These models transform tax compliance from a retrospective process into a real-time obligation. An American manufacturer operating in Poland, for example, must issue B2B invoices via the government’s KSeF platform in a precise XML format. If validation fails, the invoice is legally invalid, which can delay payment, block VAT refunds and even disrupt supply chains.

Once such digital reporting begins, every transaction leaves a trace. Transparency, like Pandora’s gift, can illuminate — or overwhelm — depending on readiness.

To keep pace, companies will need to localize their finance systems to meet national schema requirements, enable direct API integration with tax platforms, and automate reconciliations across tax, statutory and management reports. Real-time compliance is not just an IT challenge — it requires cross-functional coordination, robust data governance, and rapid incident response.

Forecasting the aftermath: a new tax cash flow discipline

Once the tax accounting box has been opened up, what escapes cannot be put back in. Every transaction is visible to tax authorities in real time, and timing becomes critical. Withholding tax obligations, VAT refunds and top-up taxes will affect liquidity in more immediate and measurable ways. Tax timing becomes a treasury-critical variable, not just a compliance consideration.

This means CFOs need to build tax-related cash flow models that integrate with treasury planning. These models should forecast the timing of indirect tax flows, quantify the effects of minimum tax adjustments and align with functional currency exposures. Stress testing should become standard — modeling scenarios such as delayed VAT refunds, API outages or jurisdictional disputes.

The changes also mean rethinking governance. According to TMF Group’s latest Global Business Complexity Index, accounting and tax compliance remain among the top three global challenges. Companies need to build governance structures that channel complexity into foresight.

This will demand things like global dashboards for tax visibility, defined roles for local data owners, and joint steering committees that bring together tax, finance and IT. Technology must underpin the response, but culture, coordination and foresight will determine success.

Five actions for 2026 readiness

To prepare for the 2026 transparency revolution, tax leaders should focus on five practical priorities.

1. Impact assessment: First, they should conduct a thorough impact assessment of IFRS 18. This includes reviewing how the new presentation categories will reshape financial disclosures, updating charts of accounts to reflect these categories, and testing proposed MPMs to ensure they align with internal performance metrics and incentive structures.

2. Global compliance framework: Second, they should establish a global compliance framework for e-invoicing and e-reporting. This involves mapping jurisdictional mandates, cataloging schema requirements, and selecting the right technology to automate invoice clearance and data transmission. Companies should assign local data owners to be responsible for submission accuracy and timeliness.

3. Tax-integrated cash flow forecasting: Third, they should integrate tax forecasting into broader cashflow planning. This means building models that forecast VAT refund timing, withholding tax outflows and top-up tax liabilities under Pillar 2, and aligning them with treasury’s currency and liquidity forecasts.

4. Finance system localization: Fourth, they should localize and integrate systems across jurisdictions. Finance systems must be configured to support IFRS 18 and digital reporting mandates. Where possible, API links should be built to avoid manual uploads and reduce the risk of human error. Automated reconciliations should bridge statutory, tax and management accounts.

5. Dual-lens governance and controls: Finally, they should strengthen governance with a dual-lens model. Companies should adopt separate calendars for group and statutory reporting, define clear data ownership and validation protocols, and establish a cross-functional compliance group to manage change. Teams across functions should be trained on both IFRS 18 and local digital-reporting requirements.

For today’s tax leaders, embracing transparency and compliance will improve data quality, strengthen controls and bring greater clarity to performance narratives. What transpires in 2026 will challenge every finance function — but if handled early and carefully, it could also become a catalyst for strategic advantage.

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FASB plans changes in crypto accounting

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The Financial Accounting Standards Board met this week to discuss its projects on accounting for transfers of cryptocurrency assets and enhancing the disclosures around certain digital assets, such as stablecoins.

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During Wednesday’s meeting, FASB’s board made certain tentative decisions, according to a summary posted to FASB’s website. FASB began deliberating the Accounting for transfers of crypto assets project and decided to expand the scope of its guidance in  Subtopic 350-60, Intangibles—Goodwill and Other—Crypto Assets, to address crypto assets that provide the holder with a right to receive another crypto asset. FASB decided to clarify the existing disclosure guidance by providing an example of a tabular disclosure illustrating that wrapped tokens, if they’re significant, would be disclosed separately from other significant crypto asset holdings.

At a future meeting, the board plans to consider clarifying the derecognition guidance for crypto transfer arrangements to assess whether the control of a crypto asset has been transferred.

FASB also began deliberations on the Cash equivalents—disclosure enhancement and classification of certain digital assets project and made a number of decisions.

The board decided to provide illustrative examples in Topic 230, Statement of Cash Flows, to clarify whether certain digital assets such as stablecoins can meet the definition of cash equivalents. It also decided to include the following concepts in the illustrative examples:

  1. Interpretive explanations that link to the current cash equivalents definition;
  2. The amount and composition of reserve assets; and,
  3. The nature of qualifying on-demand, contractual cash redemption rights directly with the issuer.

FASB plans to clarify that an entity should consider compliance with relevant laws and regulations when it’s creating a policy concerning which assets that satisfy the Master Glossary definition of the term “cash equivalents will be treated as cash equivalents.

“I agree with the staff suggestion to look at examples,” said FASB vice chair Hillary Salo. “From my perspective, I think that is going to help level the playing field. People have been making reasonable judgments. I agree with that. And I think that this is really going to help show those goalposts or guardrails of what types of stablecoins would be in the scope of cash equivalents, and which ones would not be in the scope of cash equivalents. I certainly appreciate that approach, and I think it has the least potential impact of unintended consequences, because I do agree with my fellow board members that we shouldn’t be changing the definition of cash equivalents, and it’s a high bar to get into the cash equivalent definition.”

“I’m definitely supportive of not changing the definition of cash equivalents,” said FASB chair Richard Jones. “I believe that’s settled GAAP in a way, and we’re not really seeing a call to change it for broader issues. I am supportive of the example-based approach. The challenge with examples, though, is everybody’s going to want their exact pattern, but that’s not what we’re doing.”

The examples will explain the rationale for how digital assets such as stablecoins do or do not qualify as cash equivalents and give a roadmap for other types of digital assets with varying fact patterns to be able to apply.

“We really don’t want to be as a board facing a situation where something was a cash equivalent and then no longer is at a later date,” said Jones. “That’s not good for anyone, so keeping it as a high bar with certain rigid criteria, I think, is fine.”

Stablecoins are supposed to be pegged to fiat currencies such as U.S. dollars and thus provide more stability to investors. “In my view, while a stablecoin may meet the accounting definition established for cash equivalents, not every one of those stablecoins in the cash equivalent classification represents the same level of risk,” said FASB member Joyce Joseph.

She noted that the capital markets recognize the distinctions and have established a Stablecoin Stability Assessment Framework to evaluate a stablecoin’s ability to maintain its peg to a fiat currency. Such assessments look at the legal and regulatory framework associated with the stablecoin, and provide investors with information that could enable them to do forward-looking assessments about the stability of the stablecoin.

“However, for an investor to consider and utilize such information for a company analysis the financial statement disclosures would need to include information about the stablecoin itself,” Joseph added. “In outreach, the staff learned that investors supported classifying certain stablecoins as cash equivalents when transparent information is available about the entities at which the reserve assets are held. Therefore, in my view, taking all of this into consideration a relevant and informative company disclosure would include providing investors with the name of the stablecoin and the amount of the stablecoin that is classified as a cash equivalent, so investors can independently assess the liquidity risks more meaningfully and more comprehensively by utilizing broader information that is available in the capital markets and its emerging information.”

Such information could include the issuer, reserves, governance and management, she noted, so investors would get a more holistic look at the risks that holding the stablecoin would entail for a given company.

The board decided to require all entities to disclose the significant classes and related amounts of cash equivalents on an annual basis for each period that a statement of financial position is presented.

Entities should apply the amendments related to the classification of certain digital assets as cash equivalents on a modified prospective basis as of the beginning of the annual reporting period in the year of adoption.

FASB decided that entities should apply the amendments related to the disclosure of the significant classes and amounts of cash equivalents on a prospective basis as of the date of the most recent statement of financial position presented in the period of adoption.

The board will allow early adoption in both interim and annual reporting periods in which financial statements have not been issued or made available for issuance.

FASB also decided to permit entities to adopt the amendments to be illustrated in the examples related to the classification of certain digital assets as cash equivalents without the need to perform a preferability assessment as described in Topic 250, Accounting Changes and Error Corrections.

The board directed the staff to draft a proposed accounting standards update to be voted on by written ballot. The proposed update will have a 90-day comment period.

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Lawmakers propose tax and IRS bills as filing season ends

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Senators introduced several pieces of tax-related legislation this week, including measures aimed at improving customer service at the Internal Revenue Service, cracking down on tax evasion and curbing the carried interest tax break, in addition to efforts in the House to repeal the Corporate Transparency Act.

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Senators Bill Cassidy, R-Louisiana, and Mark Warner, D-Virginia, teamed up on introducing a bipartisan bill, the Improving IRS Customer Service Act, which would expand information on refunds available to taxpayers online and help taxpayers with payment plans if they need it.

The bill would establish a dashboard to inform taxpayers of backlogs and wait times; expand electronic access to information and refunds; expand callback technology and online accounts; and inform individuals facing economic hardship about collection alternatives.

“Taxpayers deserve a simple, stress-free experience when dealing with the IRS,” Cassidy said in a statement Wednesday. “This bill makes the process quicker and easier for taxpayers to get the information they need.”

He also mentioned the bill during a Senate Finance Committee hearing about tax season when questioning IRS CEO Frank Bisignano. During the hearing, Cassidy secured a commitment from Bisignano that the IRS would work with Congress to implement these reforms if the legislation were signed into law.

“I’m happy to meet with the team … and do all I can to make it as good as you want it to be,” said Bisignano.

“My bill would equip the IRS with the legislative mandate to create an online dashboard so that taxpayers can monitor average call wait time and budget time accordingly,” said Cassidy. He noted that the bill would allow a callback for taxpayers that might need to wait longer than five minutes to speak to a representative, and establish a program to identify and support taxpayers struggling to make ends meet by providing information about alternative payment methods, such as installments, partial payments and offers in compromise. 

“I know people are kind of desperate and don’t know where to turn for cash, so I think this could really ease anxiety,” he added. “This legislation is bipartisan and is likely to pass this Congress.”

Cassidy and Warner introduced the Improving IRS Customer Service Act in 2024. Last year, Warner wrote to National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins at the IRS regarding the underperforming Taxpayer Advocate Service office in Richmond, Virginia, and advocated against any harmful personnel decisions that would negatively impact taxpayers.

“Taxpayers shouldn’t have to jump through hoops to get basic answers from the IRS — and in the last year, those challenges have only gotten worse,” Warner said in a statement. “I am glad to reintroduce this bipartisan legislation on Tax Day to ease some of this frustration by increasing clear communication and making IRS resources more readily available.”

Stop CHEATERS Act

Also on Tax Day, a group of Senate Democrats and an independent who usually caucuses with Democrats teamed up to introduce the Stop Corporations and High Earners from Avoiding Taxes and Enforce the Rules Strictly (Stop CHEATERS) Act.

Senate Finance Committee ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, joined with Senators Angus King, I-Maine, Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, Tim Kaine, D-Virginia, and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-Rhode Island. The bill would provide additional funding for the IRS to strengthen and expand tax collection services and systems and crack down on tax cheating by the wealthy.

“Wealthy tax cheats and scofflaw corporations are stealing billions and billions from the American people by refusing to pay what they legally owe, and far too many of them are getting a free pass because Republicans gutted the enforcement capacity of the IRS,” Wyden said in a statement. “A rich tax cheat who shelters mountains of cash among a web of shell companies and passthroughs is likelier to be struck by lightning than face an IRS audit, and Republicans want to keep it that way. This bill is about making sure the IRS has the resources it needs to go after wealthy tax cheats while improving customer service for the vast majority of American taxpayers who follow the law every year.”

Earlier this week. Wyden also introduced two other pieces of legislation aimed at cracking down on the use of grantor retained annuity trusts and private placement life insurance contracts to avoid or minimize taxes.

The Stop CHEATERS Act would provide the IRS with additional funding for tax enforcement focused upon high-income tax evasion, technology operations support, systems modernization, and taxpayer services like free tax-payer assistance.

“As Congress seeks ways to fund much-needed policy priorities and address our growing national debt, there is one common sense solution that should have unanimous bipartisan support: let’s enforce the tax laws already on the books,” said King in a statement. “Our legislation will make sure the IRS has the resources it needs to confront the gap between taxes owed and taxes paid – while ensuring that our tax enforcement professionals are focused on the high-income earners who account for the most tax evasion. This is a serious problem with an easy solution; let’s pass this legislation and make sure every American pays what they owe in taxes.”

Carried interest

Wyden, King and Whitehouse also teamed up on another bill Thursday to close the carried interest tax break for hedge fund managers that Democrats as well as President Trump have pledged for years to curtail. The tax break mainly benefits hedge fund managers, private equity firm partners and venture capitalists, who have lobbied heavily to defeat attempts to end the lucrative tax break. The tax break was scaled back somewhat under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.

Carried interest is a form of compensation received by a fund manager in exchange for investment management services, according to a summary of the bill. A carried interest entitles a fund manager to future profits of a partnership, also known as a “profits interest.” Under current law, a fund manager is generally not taxed when a profits interest is issued and only pays tax when income is realized by the partnership, often in connection with  the sale of an investment that happens years down the road. Not only does this allow a fund manager to defer paying tax, but the eventual income from the partnership almost always takes the form of capital gain income, taxed at a preferential rate of 23.8% compared to the top rate of 40.8% for wage-like income.  

Under the bill, the Ending the Carried Interest Loophole Act, fund managers would be required to recognize deemed compensation income each year and to pay annual tax on that amount, preventing them from deferring payment of taxes on wage-like income. A fund manager’s compensation income would be taxed similar to wages on an employee’s W-2, subject to ordinary income rates and self-employment taxes.   

“Our tax code is rigged to favor ultra-wealthy investors who know how to game the system to dodge paying a fair share, and there is no better example of how it works in practice than the carried interest loophole,” Wyden said in a statement. “For several decades now we’ve had a tax system that rewards the accumulation of wealth by the rich while punishing middle-class wage earners, and the effect of that system has been the strangulation of prosperity and opportunity for everybody but the ultra-wealthy. There are a lot of problems to fix to restore fairness and common sense to our tax code, and closing the carried interest loophole is a great place to start.”

Repealing Corporate Transparency Act

The House Financial Services Committee is also planning to markup a bill next Tuesday that would fully repeal the Corporate Transparency Act, which has already been significantly scaled back under the Trump administration to only require beneficial ownership information reporting by foreign companies to FinCEN, the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. 

If enacted, the repeal would eliminate beneficial ownership reporting requirements, removing a transparency measure designed to help law enforcement and national security officials identify who is behind U.S. companies. 

“This repeal would turn the United States back into one of the easiest places in the world to set up anonymous shell companies, something Congress worked for years to fix,” said Erica Hanichak, deputy director of the FACT Coalition, in a statement. “These entities are routinely used to facilitate corruption, financial crime, and abuse. Rolling back the CTA doesn’t just weaken transparency, it signals to bad actors around the world that the U.S. is once again open for illicit business.”

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IRS struggles against nonfilers with large foreign bank accounts

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The Internal Revenue Service rarely penalizes taxpayers who have high balances in foreign bank accounts and fail to file the proper forms, according to a new report.

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The report, released Tuesday by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, examined Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, also known as FATCA, which was included as part of a 2010 law in an effort to tax income held by U.S. citizens in foreign bank accounts by requiring financial institutions abroad to share information with the tax authorities. 

Taxpayers with specified foreign financial assets that meet a certain dollar threshold are also required to report the information to the IRS by filing Form 8938. Failure to file the form can result in penalties of up to $60,000. However, TIGTA’s previous reports have demonstrated that the IRS rarely enforces these penalties. 

The IRS created an Offshore Private Banking Campaign initiative to address tax noncompliance related to taxpayers’ failure to file Form 8938 and information reporting associated with offshore banking accounts, but it’s had limited success.

Even though the initiative identified hundreds of individual taxpayers with significant foreign bank account deposits who failed to file Forms 8938, the campaign only resulted in relatively few taxpayer examinations and a small number of nonfiling penalties. The campaign identified 405 taxpayers with significant foreign account balances who appeared to be noncompliant with their FATCA reporting requirements.

The IRS used two ways to address the 405 noncompliant taxpayers: referral for examinations and the issuance of letters to them.

  • 164 taxpayers (who had an average unreported foreign account balance of $1.3 billion) were referred for possible examination, but only 12 of the 164 were examined, with five having $39.7 million in additional tax and $80,000 in penalties assessed.
  • 241 noncompliant taxpayers (who had an average unreported account balance of $377 million) received a combination of 225 educational letters (requiring no response from the taxpayers) and 16 soft letters (requiring taxpayers to respond). None of the 241 taxpayers were assessed the initial $10,000 FATCA nonfiling penalty.

“While taxpayers can hold offshore banking accounts for a number of legitimate reasons, some taxpayers have also used them to hide income and evade taxes,” said the report. 

Significant assets and income are factors considered by the IRS when assessing whether taxpayers intentionally evaded their tax responsibilities, the report noted. Given the large size of the average unreported foreign account balances, these taxpayers probably have higher levels of sophistication and an awareness of their obligation to comply with the law. 

TIGTA believes the IRS needs to establish specific performance measures to determine the effectiveness of the FATCA program. “If the IRS does not plan to enforce the FATCA provisions even where obvious noncompliance is identified, it should at least quantify the enforcement impact of its efforts,” said the report. “This will ensure that IRS decision makers have the information they need to determine if the FATCA program is worth the investment and improves taxpayer compliance. 

TIGTA made three recommendations in the report, including revising Campaign 896 processes to include assessing FATCA failure to file penalties; assessing the viability of using Form 1099 data to identify Form 8938 nonfilers; and implementing additional performance measures to give decision makers comprehensive information about the effectiveness of the FATCA program. The IRS disagreed with two of TIGTA’s recommendations and partially agreed with the remaining recommendation. IRS officials didn’t agree to assess penalties in Campaign 896 or with implementing performance measures to assess the effectiveness of the FATCA program. 

“From our perspective, TIGTA’s conclusions regarding IRS Campaign 896 are based, in part, on a misguided premise and overgeneralizations, including the treatment of ‘potential noncompliance’ as tantamount to ‘egregious noncompliance’ that warrants a monetary penalty without contemplating the variety of justifications that may exempt a taxpayer from having to file Form 8938,” wrote Mabeline Baldwin, acting commissioner of the IRS’s Large Business and International Division, in response to the report. 

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