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NASBA announces research grant recipients, opens 2025 applications

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The National Association of State Boards of Accountancy announced the recipients of its 2024 Accounting Education Research Grants and opened its 2025 grant application.

Since its establishment in 2011, the grant program, led by members of NASBA’s Education Committee, has awarded over $200,000. Its aim is to advance academic research on the educational issues impacting CPAs and the accounting profession. 

This year’s recipients are the University of Alabama’s associate professor Kris Hoang and doctoral student Amy Matthews. They received $5,500 for their study which will investigate job stressors among early-career auditors and their influence on well-being in the workplace and career commitment. 

NASBA

The team of Virginia Tech associate professor Denis Gracanin and Morgan State University associate professor Dina El Mahdy received $9,750 for their study which aims to demystify accounting and make it an exciting education experience to increase enrollment, recruitment and retention by developing an immersive data analytics tool called DataWorld. 

Finally, Drexel University assistant clinical professor JT Thazhathel received $9,750 for their study which will examine the prevalence and practical uses of artificial intelligence among accountants. 

The call for next year’s grant proposals opened on Aug. 13, 2024 and will close March 3, 2025 at 11:59 p.m. CST. Suggested research interest areas include the integration of data analytics and AI as part of the accounting education, inclusivity within the CPA profession, items related to the pipeline problem and the impact of licensing requirements on students’ decisions to pursue accounting careers. Suggested research areas are subject to change throughout the year.

NASBA encourages post-doctoral researchers and professors seeking funding to submit their proposals for consideration prior to the March deadline. The 2025 class of grant recipients will be announced in the summer of 2025. 

Eligibility requirements and application guidelines can be found here. For questions regarding the program, email: [email protected].

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Accounting

Citrin gets new PE owner as Blackstone buys New Mountain’s stake

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Citrin Cooperman announced today it will receive a significant investment from Blackstone, the world’s largest private equity firm, which will acquire a majority stake in the firm from New Mountain Capital.

The deal is the first instance of an accounting firm to transfer private equity ownership from one group to another in the U.S. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

“We are excited to have reached an agreement for Blackstone to invest in Citrin Cooperman as we enter our next chapter of growth,” Citrin Cooperman CEO Alan Badey said in a statement Tuesday. “Blackstone will help us make additional investments in expanded service offerings and technology as we deliver on our continued commitment to best-in-class firm culture and providing an exceptional client experience. We thank New Mountain for their years of partnership in helping to build and support our business.”

Citrin Cooperman outdoor signage

Allan Koltin, CEO of Koltin Consulting Group, who advised on the deal, commented: “For many in the profession, the biggest question was whether something like this could ever happen, and my belief is there will now be many other transactions like this in the future. Kudos to Citrin Cooperman, New Mountain Capital and Blackstone on making history today.”

New Mountain first acquired a majority interest in New York-based Citrin Cooperman in April 2022, fueling a wave of mergers and acquisitions at the firm. Two years later, New Mountain took a majority stake in Top 10 Firm Grant Thornton — marking the biggest PE deal to date in the accounting field.

“We are proud of our successful partnership with Citrin Cooperman, and we thank the management team, partners and staff of Citrin Cooperman for all we have accomplished together over the last three years,” Andre Moura and Nikhil Devulapalli, managing directors at New Mountain, said in a statement. “We look forward to seeing Citrin Cooperman continue to thrive for the benefit of all its clients and stakeholders.”

“The Citrin Cooperman partners and staff have done an exceptional job making the firm a leader through an unwavering commitment to excellence and client service,” Eli Nagler, a senior managing director at Blackstone, and Kelly Wannop, a managing director at Blackstone, said in a statement. “We are excited to invest in the business to help it continue to provide the highest quality offerings moving forward.”

Deutsche Bank Securities is serving as financial advisor, and Kirkland & Ellis and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher are serving as legal advisors to Blackstone. Guggenheim Securities is serving as lead financial advisor to New Mountain and Citrin Cooperman. Koltin Consulting Group is serving as an additional financial adviser to both parties. Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, Zukerman Gore Brandeis & Crossman and Hunton Andrews Kurth are serving as legal advisers to New Mountain and Citrin Cooperman.

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Accounting

Five trends that will redefine finance and accounting in 2025

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“Accounting is the best place to start because it’s the purest form of finance,” wrote Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Man Poor Dad series of personal finance books. “You can’t fool it; it’s empirical.”

This insight resonates deeply in today’s business environment, where organizations must navigate macroeconomic uncertainties, technological disruptions and transformational opportunities. Amid these buffeting currents, finance and accounting have evolved from a number-crunching function to a strategic and consultative one, playing three critical roles — safeguarding assets, streamlining operations and influencing future growth. As we move into 2025, five key trends will define the F&A landscape and its ability to drive strategic value.

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Kacee Johnson departs CPA.com | Accounting Today

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Kacee Johnson, CPA.com’s vice president of strategy and innovation, announced that she has ended her tenure as a full-time employee there.

Johnson, who has been in her position for six-and-a-half years, said on LinkedIn that she officially stepped away on Dec. 31.

“The past 6.5 years have been nothing short of transformative. I am deeply grateful to have been part of such a visionary organization that consistently pushes the boundaries of innovation in the accounting & finance profession,” she said in her post.

Johnson-Kacee-CPAcom NEW 2022

In an email she said that the timing was right for her to pursue other interests she is passionate about. However, while she is stepping away from her position, she plans to stay involved and collaborate with the AICPA and CPA.com on strategic initiatives. When asked about specifics in an email, Johnson said she will still be very involved in the AICPA/CPA.com Startup Accelerator program (which she said was the most rewarding part of working at CPA.com) and serve as an overall strategic advisor to the organization working on key initiatives like the AI Symposium and Digital CPA.

In her goodbye message on LinkedIn, she thanked the AICPA leadership for helping her grow as a professional, and gave particular thanks to her research team, saying they are the true embodiment of change makers.

Regarding her immediate plans, Johnson told Accounting Today she plans to take a few months to reset and invest in some personal development interests. She added that she also completed her NACD Corporate Director certification and has been accepted to the Harvard Business School’s Executive Program on Private Equity and Venture Capitalism for the first quarter of 2025.

When asked about what her proudest achievement was during her tenure, she pointed to the AICPA Town Hall.

“I’m most proud of being part of the team that developed and produced the AICPA Town Hall. It’s inception was at the beginning of COVID; so many practitioners needed guidance on how to support clients and navigate all of the uncertainty. To see what the Series has grown into is nothing short of incredible,” she told Accounting Today.

Johnson joined CPA.com in 2018 as a strategic advisor before, in 2021, becoming senior director of strategy and innovation and then, in 2022, vice president of strategy and innovation. Prior to her joining CPA.com, she was the founder of accounting-focused tech consultancy firm Blue Ocean.

Accounting Today named Johnson a “One to Watch” in 2018 when she first joined CPA.com. She has since been named as one of Accounting Today’s Top 100 Most influential People in 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and, most recently, 2024.

Among other accomplishments, she was a major force behind CPA.com’s generative AI toolkit. Johnson has identified artificial intelligence as one of the key issues facing the profession, mentioning it as a vital matter in both her 2023 and 2024 survey responses. She has also expressed concerns about a certain polarization and cultural divide she has observed within the profession between firms where technology is an asset that drives value and firms where it is viewed merely as an operational expense. She has also expressed some skepticism of AI leading to a technological singularity that fundamentally alters human civilization and our conception as the dominant intelligence on Earth.

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