Connect with us

Accounting

IIA drafts Topical Requirement on third-party relationships

Published

on

The Institute of Internal Auditors has released a draft version of proposed requirements on third-party governance, risk management and control processes to include in audit plans.

The IIA is asking for feedback on the document, Third-Party Topical Requirement, which will be open for public comment until April 20. Internal auditors and stakeholders can participate in the public comment survey to share their input on the draft and help shape the criteria and requirements for providing assurance on governance, risk management, and control processes related to third parties.

The Topical Requirements are part of the IIA’s broader International Professional Practices Framework alongside its Global Internal Audit Standards and Global Guidance. They don’t mandate that a specific risk area be included in audit plans, but provide practitioners with a set of baseline requirements for assessing key risk areas that impact organizations globally and are likely to be included in most audit plans. 

The document was developed with input from internal audit practitioners and stakeholders globally, and offers a consistent and comprehensive approach to assessing the design and implementation of third-party governance, risk management, and control processes.

“We’ve developed a Topical Requirement on third-party relationships due to the pervasiveness of third-party risks for organizations today,” said IIA CEO Anthony Pugliese in a statement Thursday. “Particularly in light of geopolitical shifts that are driving global trade and supply chain disruptions, third-party relationships can present a number of threats to organizations including operational, reputational and compliance risks. It’s more important than ever that organizations today have a robust and consistent approach to assessing third-party risk management and control processes.” 

The first Topical Requirement was released in February and provided requirements for internal auditors providing assurance on cybersecurity governance, risk management and control processes. More topics are under development, including business culture, business resilience, and anti-corruption and bribery.

Participants can review the draft Third-Party Topical Requirement in English and submit their feedback between March 6 – April 20 through the survey. Both the draft and the survey are available in different languages. The Third-Party Topical Requirement is also accompanied by a user guide that offers supplementary considerations. All the documents are available at www.theiia.org/comment.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Accounting

AICPA releases framework for stablecoin reporting

Published

on

The American Institute of CPAs published information on reporting on stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency, providing a framework to stablecoin issuers for presenting and disclosing information related to the tokens they issue, and to report on the availability of cash or other assets that back them.

Stablecoins are a kind of digital asset where the value is pegged to the assets backing them, such as U.S. currency, exchange-traded commodities like precious or industrial metals, or some other form of crypto.

The purpose of the AICPA’s Assurance Services Executive Committee document, 2025 Criteria for Stablecoin Reporting: Specific to Asset-Backed Fiat-Pegged Tokens, is to offer a framework for presenting and disclosing information about stablecoins to promote consistent reporting among issuers and boost trust in the stablecoin space.

The release comes as the Trump administration is taking a decidedly more welcoming attitude to the crypto industry, including announcing a crypto reserve and setting up a crypto task force at the previously skeptical Securities and Exchange Commission. 

Next month, as a second part of the stablecoin reporting criteria, the Assurance Services Executive Committee plans to release Proposed Criteria for Controls Supporting Token Operations: Specific to Asset-Backed Fiat-Pegged Tokens for public comment. As these control criteria are part of overall stablecoin reporting, they eventually will be incorporated into the 2025 Criteria for Stablecoin Reporting document once they’re finalized. 

“This is the first available framework for stablecoin issuers to report on stablecoins, and the AICPA is excited to be at the forefront of bringing transparency and consistency to the digital assets space,” said Ami Beers, senior director, assurance and advisory innovation at the AICPA & CIMA, in a statement Thursday. “These criteria will serve as the basis for evaluating the availability of redemption assets that back stablecoins in attestation services that practitioners provide to their clients, driving this dynamic practice area forward for the accounting profession.”

The 2025 Criteria for Stablecoin Reporting: Specific to Asset-Backed Fiat-Pegged Tokens can be found here. For more information relevant to stablecoins, practitioners can access the stablecoin reporting and assurance page.

Continue Reading

Accounting

CPA execs feel shakier about US economy

Published

on

CPA business executives’ outlook on the U.S. economy appears to be dimming, thanks to persistent inflation and growing worry over tariffs, according to a new survey from the AICPA & CIMA.

The quarterly survey found that the post-election jump in business executives’ optimism about the U.S. economy has moderated, dropping from a more than three-year high of 67% in the fourth quarter to 47% in the first quarter of this year. The survey polls chief executive officers, chief financial officers, controllers and other CPAs in U.S. companies who hold executive and senior management accounting roles.

The survey was conducted before the Trump Administration imposed tariffs this week on Canada, Mexico and China (and then delaying the tariffs today on Canada and Mexico for a month), but respondents were asked their general views about unspecified tariffs if they were put in place. Fifty-nine percent indicated that tariffs would have a negative effect on their businesses, while 85% said uncertainty surrounding the subject had influenced their business planning to some degree — nearly one in five (18%) described that impact as significant.

Inflation remained the top concern for CPA business execs, followed by issues related to staffing — employee and benefit costs (No. 2), availability of skilled personnel (No. 3), and staff turnover (No. 10). Domestic political leadership, which was absent from last quarter’s top 10 concerns, reemerged at No. 6.

“There are a lot of warning signs right now for business executives, particularly around inflation, payroll costs and consumer confidence, with tariffs adding another layer of uncertainty,” said Tom Hood, AICPA & CIMA’s executive vice president for business engagement and growth, in a statement Thursday. “That said, it’s important to recognize that economic optimism remains higher than at any point since mid-2021, aside from last quarter’s notable increase. Additionally, expansion plans have held steady from the previous quarter.”

The survey also found that business executives who said they were optimistic about their own organization’s outlook over the next 12 months dropped from 53% to 50%, quarter over quarter.

Revenue and profit expectations for the next 12 months both eased from the fourth quarter’s large increases. Revenue growth is now anticipated to be 3%, down from a 3.3% projection in the fourth quarter. Profit projections are now 2%, down from 2.2% last quarter.

Survey respondents who expect their businesses to expand over the next 12 months remained unchanged at 57%.

Some 39% of the business executives polled indicated they had too few employees in the first quarter, a 1% increase from the fourth quarter. One-in-five said they were ready to hire immediately, unchanged from last quarter.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Inside the 2025 Top 100 Accounting Firms

Published

on

After a couple of very strong years, the biggest firms in the accounting profession as a group were a little slower in 2024 — though they still performed perfectly respectably, and there were plenty of very bright spots and extraordinary performances on the part of individual firms.

The overall growth rate for the Top 100 Firms was off significantly from what they reported in 2023, but that was driven by a return on the part of the very biggest names in the field — the Big Four and the dozen or so other firms over a billion dollars in revenue — to more sedate rates of growth. The median growth rate for the entire Top 100 was actually close to 17%, and there were actually three firms with growth rates above 100%.

That reflects the ongoing strength of the profession and its largest firms, as well as the diversity among them, with a wealth of different firm structures, growth strategies, service offerings and cultural approaches that they’re using to position themselves for the rapid change that characterizes the future of the profession.

We’ve served up a selection of key statistics about the Top 100 and the Regional Leaders below, and you can see the full report (including our Regional Leaders rankings) here.

Continue Reading

Trending