Connect with us

Accounting

CLA adds Axiom CPAs | Accounting Today

Published

on

CliftonLarsonAllen said Axiom Certified Public Accountants & Business Advisors, based in Albuquerque, New Mexico, joined CLA, effective Aug. 1.

The acquisition will help CLA serve its clients in New Mexico and the southwest U.S.

Four partners and 16 team members joined CLA as of Aug. 1. CLA has nearly 9,000 professionals.

Financial terms were not disclosed. CLA ranked No. 8 on Accounting Today‘s 2024 list of the Top 100 Firms, with $2 billion in annual revenue. 

Axiom was founded in 2012 and offers clients tax, assurance and general accounting services along with specialty tax credit and incentive services, plus state and local tax consulting. 

cla-nyc-office.jpg
CLA’s New York office

Gus Wiltse

“The team at Axiom is another great addition to our CLA family,” said CLA chief geographic officer Scott Engelbrecht in a statement. “CLA continues to be an attractive location for exceptional organizations like Axiom that are looking to grow and expand, within a firm that has similar values and philosophies. And their deep knowledge of New Mexico and the southwest U.S. economy will only further extend the value that CLA brings to clients across the country.”

The deal will enable CLA to expand to New Mexico.

“As we continue to grow and serve more and more clients, we felt it was time to become part of a firm like CLA that is like-minded and that has the resources and technology to help our clients continue to thrive,” said Axiom partner Ron Saavedra in a news release. “Both firms believe in similar philosophies, like offering meaningful and valued services to clients, and continuing to invest in the future through artificial intelligence and digital technologies. We are excited to be part of such a progressive-thinking firm.”

In May, CLA acquired Engine B, a London-based AI company that helps accounting firms get more insights from their clients’ data, its first acquisition abroad. Earlier this year, it acquired Ronald Blue and Co, a tax, audit and accounting firm with offices in Atlanta, Georgia; Tempe, Arizona; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Santa Ana, California, effective May 1. Last year, CLA acquired Richard, Witt & Charles in Garden City, New York; Frost & Co. in Tacoma, Washington; and Gilmore Jasion Mahler in Toledo and Findlay, Ohio. In 2022, CLA did a number of mergers and acquisitions, including with Hayashi Wayland in Salinas, California, Concannon Miller in Florida and Pennsylvania, and Price CPAs in Nashville, Tennessee.

Continue Reading

Accounting

In the blogs: Just in time

Published

on

BOI is back; phantom stocks; continuous compliance; and other highlights from our favorite tax bloggers.

Just in time

  • Tax Vox (https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxvox): Who benefits and who loses from extending major provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act?
  • Taxing Subjects (https://www.drakesoftware.com/blog): The Republican party can shape legislative priorities for the next two years, setting the stage for long-term policy changes. A downloadable resource offers a breakdown of key policy areas and action steps for tax pros and small businesses. 
  • AICPA & CIMA Insights (https://www.aicpa-cima.com/blog): How the IRS and tax pros can both start prepping for any government shutdown.
  • Eide Bailly (https://www.eidebailly.com/taxblog): “Just in time for the holidays,” a federal appeals court has restored the Corporate Transparency Act requirement for businesses to disclose their beneficial owners.
  • Taxable Talk (http://www.taxabletalk.com/): And just like that, yet again, with an injunction’s stay, course is reversed.
  • Current Federal Tax Developments (https://www.currentfederaltaxdevelopments.com/): At least they extended the deadlines a whisker.
  • The Tax Times (https://www.thetaxtimes.com): The IRS continues to claw back from non-filers, to the tune of 10 figures and counting.
  • The National Association of Tax Professionals (https://blog.natptax.com/): Favorite headline of the week: “The best gifts for the tax pro in your life this holiday season.”
  • National Taxpayer Advocate (https://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/taxnews-information/blogs-nta/): “‘Twas the night before tax season, and all through the land; Tax professionals were working, each with pen in hand; The forms were all sorted with numbers just right; who says tax accounting can’t thrill and excite?”

2025

Continuity

Size matters

Continue Reading

Accounting

H&R Block releases Santa Claus’s tax return

Published

on

p195u5dhs3pmh1ufo1oo27ml818.jpg

That doesn’t look like a 1040 … .

H&R Block has given the world just what it wants to see this holiday season: Santa Claus’s tax return.

Santa has a lot of itemizations to consider. Eight tiny reindeer depend on him for food and shelter, for instance, but are they dependents? How much can you give to one person before reporting it? Does Santa keep good mileage records for his 41.5 million miles? Santa isn’t an employee, so compensation (even in cookie form) over the threshold may create a 1099-NEC.

Old St. Nick, who files MFJ with Mrs. Claus, did all right on 1040 Line 34, but some of his numbers do bear examination: 6.3 million cookies and 2 million gallons of milk means a third of a gallon of milk per cookie. Will the deduction of coal, magic dust and sleighbells stand up to audit? At least Santa has plenty of time on his hands between January and April to find a good preparer.

Santa's tax return

“Even the jolly man in red takes time to report taxes,” reads the announcement from the tax prep giant. “He’s probably the world’s most famous small-business owner, running a gift-giving workshop and distribution network across the globe … Santa is giving us the first ever peek at his tax return and showing us how he used H&R Block Online and AI Tax Assist to get his maximum refund.”

Continue Reading

Accounting

5 changes coming to IRAs and 401(k)s in 2025

Published

on

The SECURE 2.0 Act contained several changes to traditional and Roth individual retirement accounts and 401(k) plans that are being phased in over the coming years, with several notable changes coming in 2025. The Illinois CPA Society highlighted five changes coming to IRAs and 401(k)s in 2025:

Continue Reading

Trending