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KPMG US forms Independent Audit Quality Advisory Committee

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KPMG US has established an Independent Audit Quality Advisory Committee, along the lines of its fellow Big Four firms, in an effort to improve its audits amid tougher inspections and enforcement by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.

The new committee at the New York-based firm will include audit and accounting leaders with experience from the PCAOB, Securities and Exchange Commission. American Institute of CPAs, COSO (Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission) and the International Financial Reporting Standards Foundation.

The committee will offer an independent, informed perspective on matters related to audit quality, complementing the governance of the firm’s board of directors, which includes three independent members.

“Our audit transformation has delivered incredibly positive results and empowered our auditors to deliver high quality audits during a time of compounding market risks,” said KPMG US chair and CEO Paul Knopp in a statement Wednesday, “This committee will provide an informed and independent perspective as we continue to transform the audit to best protect the capital markets.” 

In 2019, KPMG began an initiative to drive significant continuous improvements in audit quality. The IAQAC will be responsible for advising KPMG on matters underpinning the firm’s commitment to audit quality, including efforts to meet new quality standards from regulatory bodies and respond to PCAOB inspections, including root cause analysis, and the design, development, implementation and measurement of strategic audit quality initiatives.  

In recent years, KPMG has deployed new data analytics and artificial intelligence capabilities to enable engagements to extract and analyze tens of thousands of transactions to refine the audit. The committee will advise on how the firm continues to deploy these Trusted AI capabilities into our audits.  

The IAQAC operates in a strictly advisory capacity, and committee members have no voting, decision-making or similar rights. 

Members of the IAQAC include: 

  • Zoe-Vonna Palmrose is the Accounting Circle professor emerita of accounting at the University of Southern California. Palmrose formerly served as deputy chief accountant for professional practice at the SEC, where she played a pivotal role as part of the SOX 404 Team. Palmrose also served as an SEC observer on the U.S. Department of the Treasury Advisory Committee on the Auditing Profession and on the PCAOB Standing Advisory Group.  
  • Doug Prawitt is the LeRay McAllister/Deloitte Foundation distinguished professor and director of the School of Accountancy at Brigham Young University. He is also the lead director on COSO’s Executive Board and played a key role in producing COSO’s ERM Framework, as well as its most recent Internal Control Integrated Framework. Prior to these roles, Prawitt served a three-year term as a member of the AICPA Auditing Standards Board. 
  • Larry A. Leva was most recently the vice chair of the board of trustees of the IFRS Foundation, where he oversaw the development of globally accepted accounting and sustainability disclosure standards. Prior to that role, he was the former KPMG global vice chairman for quality, risk and regulatory after serving in leadership roles at the U.S. firm, including on the firm’s Management Committee, board of directors and as an SEC reviewing partner.  

 

KPMG logo on wall
The offices of KPMG in Chicago

Tannen Maury/Bloomberg

A recent PCAOB inspection of KPMG found 15 of the 58 audits reviewed in 2023 were of such significance that there were included in Part I.A of the inspection report. The identified deficiencies primarily related to the firm’s testing of controls over and/or substantive testing of investment securities and revenue and related accounts. That translated into a 26% Part I.A audit deficiency rate.

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Tech roundup: Intuit guarantees tax refunds 5 Days early into any bank account

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Intuit guarantees tax refunds 5 Days early into any bank account; IRIS beefs up Firm Management solution, customer success function; and other accounting tech news and updates.

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Ex-Credit Suisse client charged by US amid tax evasion probe

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A former Credit Suisse Group AG client was charged with a tax-evasion conspiracy in the U.S. as officials weigh whether the bank — now owned by UBS Group AG — breached a 2014 plea deal in which it paid $2.6 billion and admitted helping thousands of Americans evade taxes.

Gilda Rosenberg, a Florida businesswoman, conspired with two family members in hiding $90 million in assets from the Internal Revenue Service between 2010 and 2017, federal prosecutors charged Wednesday. She’s accused of acting to conceal money in undeclared foreign accounts while also filing false returns and evading taxes on unreported income. 

The extent to which Credit Suisse complied with its plea deal took on new focus after a 2023 Senate Finance Committee report said there were “major violations” of its agreement that requires the bank to identify undeclared U.S. accounts to the IRS. In the report, Democratic staff on the committee said the bank had still failed to fully disclose US assets despite having identified “thousands of previously undeclared accounts” valued at more than $1.3 billion. 

In response to the report, Credit Suisse said it was cooperating and had provided information to U.S. authorities on potentially undeclared accounts held by American clients.

A spokesman for UBS declined to comment Thursday on the case against Rosenberg. An attorney for Rosenberg declined to comment.   

Telling the IRS

The 2023 report doesn’t name the Rosenbergs but describes how the bank allegedly helped a family of dual citizens of the U.S. and Latin American country evade taxes. Whistleblowers told the committee the family members held nearly $100 million at Credit Suisse for a decade before transferring those assets to other banks without telling the IRS. 

The charge against Rosenberg doesn’t identify Credit Suisse, but refer to the same allegations described in the Senate report, according to people familiar with the matter. U.S. authorities are weighing whether the Swiss bank breached the terms of its 2014 deal, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing internal discussions.

UBS said in its third-quarter report that it had a provision for potential costs tied to inquiries into its cross-border wealth management services, including Credit Suisse’s compliance with the 2014 plea deal. It didn’t disclose an amount for the provision.

UBS could announce a settlement with prosecutors for violating terms of the 2014 deal as soon as this week, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday. The bank could agree to pay at least hundreds of millions of dollars, according to the report. The UBS spokesperson declined to comment on a possible settlement. 

Under its plea agreement with the U.S., Credit Suisse had to disclose all undeclared U.S. accounts closed and transferred from 2008 to 2014. Disclosing those account holders, known as “leaver lists,” was a U.S. requirement for Credit Suisse, several other Swiss banks that faced criminal charges, and 80 Swiss banks that made deals to avoid prosecution.

At the time of the report in 2023, Senator Ron Wyden, the Oregon Democrat who chairs the committee, slammed “greedy Swiss bankers” who appeared to be engaged in a “massive, ongoing conspiracy to help ultra-wealthy U.S. citizens to evade taxes.”

The report was released around the same time that Credit Suisse was being sold to rival UBS in a 3 billion franc ($3.3 billion) deal brokered by the Swiss government after years of scandal and mismanagement. 

‘Donate’ assets

Gilda Rosenberg was charged in a so-called criminal information. In a separate case last year, she pleaded guilty in Texas to conspiracy to commit wire fraud involving a Miami vending machine company she owns. She is scheduled to be sentenced on April 30. 

Rosenberg, a U.S. citizen, was born in Colombia and lives in south Florida, according to the tax charge. She conspired with two family members also born in Colombia, the U.S. alleges. They hid money in accounts in Switzerland, Spain, Israel and Andorra, prosecutors charged. 

Rosenberg and one relative agreed to sign documents purporting to “donate” assets in undeclared accounts to the other relative, the U.S. alleges. She also caused her return preparer to underreport income to the IRS and falsely say she had no interest in a foreign financial account, according to the charge.  

Since the bank’s 2014 guilty plea, other U.S. clients of Credit Suisse have been charged in tax cases. In 2016, Dan Horsky pleaded guilty to hiding more than $200 million in assets from the IRS. A Brazilian-American businessman, Dan Rotta, was indicted last year for allegedly using Credit Suisse, UBS and other Swiss banks to hide more than $20 million in assets from U.S. tax authorities over 35 years.

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Deadline extended for Top New Products submissions

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Due to extensive interest, Accounting Today has extended the deadline for submissions to its 2025 Top New Products report. Submissions, which were originally due Jan. 10, can now be made until the end of the day on Wednesday, Jan. 15.

The report will recognize the best new and significantly improved products aimed at tax and accounting professionals, as judged by the editors of Accounting Today.

Products for consideration must be designed for the tax and accounting profession; must have been released no earlier than January 2024; and must be currently available (i.e., not in beta testing) in the U.S. market.

Top-New-Products-trophy-abacus

Submissions must include:

  • Release date;
  • Pricing;
  • A website URL and/or phone number for customer contact;
  • 200 words or less describing the product’s functionality and its relevance to the tax and accounting profession; and
  • A digital image or logo for the product, if available (images can be in JPG, EPS or TIFF format, at 300 dpi or higher).

We will accept up to three submissions per vendor, or three per major division of a vendor.

Submissions may be sent by email to our technology editor, Chris Gaetano, at [email protected],

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