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Accounting

In the blogs: Everyone loves a parade

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Taxes’ immediate future; a new retail delivery fee; owners’ income; and other highlights from our favorite tax bloggers.

Everyone loves a parade

  • The National Association of Tax Professionals (https://blog.natptax.com/): What a Trump victory means for next season.
  • Tax Vox (https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxvox): Trump’s return to the White House combined with Republican control of the Senate and perhaps the House will place taxes high on the policy hit parade. Trump will get much of what he promised during the campaign — but some elements of his agenda likely will be sidetracked, either because he does not seriously pursue them or because of resistance, including from Republicans, on Capitol Hill.
  • TaxProf Blog (http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/): A recent article explores the resurgence of high tariffs in U.S. trade policy, beginning with the Trump administration and continuing into the Biden administration, that were initially intended to protect domestic industries and reduce trade deficits but instead increased consumer prices, strained diplomatic relationships and harmed dynamics of global trade.
  • Tax Foundation (https://taxfoundation.org/blog): Promised steep new taxes on trade have also ignited estimates that show the tariffs will hurt the American economy, reduce trade and distort production and lead to lower standards of living.
  • Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (https://itep.org/category/blog/): President-elect Trump and Republicans in Congress have announced plans to pass a tax bill next spring. Analysis of the campaign proposals clearly show that “a tax package based on these changes would be disastrous for families, communities and the country.”
  • CLA (https://www.claconnect.com/en/resources?pageNum=0): Real estate clients had a tough 2024, which started way back with the Fed’s hiking interest rates over 16 months. A look at looming federal tax topics that could further affect these clients.

Thinking again

At heart 

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Accounting

Accountants shouldn’t drown in employee purchase reconciliations

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Among the challenges accountants face is accounting for purchases employees make to get their work done. While the expense report process attempts to address this, it often falls short in providing accurate accounting because it relies on non-accountants entering financial data. The result is typically a time-consuming process for accountants, who must review, reconcile and correct the accounting entries submitted by employees.

The emergence of virtual cards, especially when combined with AI-powered fintech apps, offers accountants a new approach to solving this long-standing challenge.

What is a virtual card?

As many may already know, virtual cards are a type of company-paid credit card that functions like a traditional, physical card with one key difference: There’s no physical card involved. This allows for the creation of an almost unlimited number of unique card numbers, highlighting the brilliance behind virtual cards: intended use.

The concept of “intended use” recognizes that employees have specific scenarios in mind when using a virtual card. This could be to cover the expenses involved in an upcoming business trip, purchasing construction materials for a job or covering necessary permits or fees for cell tower repairs.

Fintech apps can issue virtual cards to employees based on intended use. These apps leverage intended use to determine the appropriate accounting for purchases made with each virtual card. Utilizing virtual cards through a fintech app, the employee experience becomes streamlined, making the process user-friendly. Employees simply select an intended use from a list provided by their organization and enter the desired spending limit. Unlike expense reports, they do not need to enter accounting codes or other financial details. The fintech app automatically determines the correct accounting in the background, eliminating the need for employees to manage complex accounting information.

AI can help improve accuracy

While intended use allows fintech apps to predict the correct accounting, some intended uses allow for an amount of accuracy that isn’t adequate.

An example is the business trip intended use discussed above. The accounting accuracy depends on the chart of accounts for travel-related expenses. If the COA has only one account for travel, then the trip’s intended use will have the necessary accuracy.  If there are expenses for subaccounts such as airfare, lodging, ground transportation and so forth, the trip needs to involve more detail to have the necessary accuracy. This is where AI can help.  

Fintech apps can use AI to analyze purchases made with a given virtual card and its intended use to arrive at the precise accounting for each purchase. The AI involved analyzes large sets of purchases by employees, looking for patterns in accounting. AI is able to consider a wide range of parameters found in these purchases and consider a vast array of possibilities to arrive at the correct accounting.  AI is especially impressive for sophisticated, multidimensional COAs because of its ability to analyze complex patterns.

AI ensures accurate accounting happens automatically, thus avoiding the need for accountants to review the accounting prior to booking purchases into the general ledger. Some fintech apps can automatically make these bookings by posting them to the GL, delivering accountants a completely automated process.

Reconciling credit card statements

In addition, some fintech apps, when combined with virtual card use, can automatically reconcile credit card statements, saving dozens of hours of month-end accounting work. These apps compare the transactions on a statement with purchases made using virtual cards and, because the accounting for these transactions is already confirmed, mark them as reconciled.

They also flag transactions paid with a physical card, instead of a virtual card; how these are handled depends on the fintech app. Some apps integrate with expense management services to verify if accounting data is available for these transactions. If so, the app uses this data and marks the transactions as reconciled.

For transactions without expense management data, AI-enabled apps can automatically predict the appropriate accounting. These apps then give accountants the choice to either use this predicted accounting as final or treat it as an accrual until the transactions appear in the expense management service. In both cases, the apps mark the transactions as reconciled, resulting in a fully reconciled credit card statement, ready for period close.

Streamlining the process

AI-powered fintech apps create a streamlined purchasing and accounting process for both employees and accountants. Before purchasing a good or service, employees simply request a virtual card and indicate its intended use, eliminating the need to input accounting data manually.

These apps can save accountants hours of work by automating the correct accounting for employee purchases and reconciling monthly statements from card issuers, ensuring a smoother, more accurate and efficient process.

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Accounting

Sotheby’s pays $6M to settle NY sales tax evasion probe

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Sotheby’s Inc. agreed to pay $6.25 million to settle a New York state lawsuit that accused it of advising wealthy clients they could avoid sales taxes by falsely claiming they were buying art for resale purposes.

New York Attorney General Letitia James announced the deal in a statement Thursday. She said Sotheby’s employees from 2010 to 2020 encouraged clients to make the false claims even though they knew the purchases were actually for private collections or intended as gifts.

“Sotheby’s intentionally broke the law to help its clients dodge millions of dollars in taxes, and now they are going to pay for it,” James said. “Every person and company in New York knows they are required to pay taxes, and when people break the rules, we all lose out.”

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Sotheby’s Auction House in New York

Robert Caplin/Bloomberg

James sued Sotheby’s in 2020, accusing the auction house of helping a shipping executive use a false resale certificate to dodge taxes. The state later expanded the case by including allegations involving seven additional collectors and numerous Sotheby’s employees from across the organization, including its tax department.

In a statement, Sotheby’s said that it admitted no wrongdoing in connection with the settlement and was committed to full compliance with the law.

“These allegations relate to activity from many years ago — in some cases over a decade — and Sotheby’s provided much of the evidence which the AG used to obtain a settlement with the taxpayer referenced in the complaint six years ago,” the auction house said in its statement.

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Accounting

Discover delays filing over accounting disagreement with SEC

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Discover Financial Services said it will miss a deadline to file its quarterly report with regulators, citing disagreements with the Securities and Exchange Commission over its accounting treatment of a credit-card misclassification blunder. 

The company said in a filing Wednesday that it was unable to file the 10-Q form for the three months through Sept. 30 by the required date after SEC staff disagreed with “certain aspects of the company’s accounting approach for the card product misclassification matter.”

Discover disclosed last year that it overcharged merchants after misclassifying certain credit-card accounts into its highest pricing tier, and the Chief Executive Officer stepped down as compliance woes mounted. The credit-card company said in July that it had reached an agreement to settle class-action litigation with the affected retailers, and that it expected the $1.2 billion it already set aside for related liabilities to be enough to resolve the issue. 

Discover credit card
Discover credit card

Angus Mordant/Bloomberg

Discover expects that when it files its 10-Q form, it will likely reflect re-allocations to prior periods of about $600 million of the charge to other expenses recorded in its quarterly report for the period ended March 31, it said. The firm said that because the reallocations would reverse a charge to other expenses recorded for the first quarter, “this would result in an increase in pre-tax income by the same amount in the three months ended March 31, 2024 and the nine months ended September 30.”

Capital One Financial Corp. is expected to buy Discover in one of the biggest mergers announced this year. The SEC was reviewing Discover’s financial statements in connection with the pending merger, according to the filing. 

A representative for Discover declined to comment beyond the filing. A representative for Capital One didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

A late financial statement can be considered a financial reporting red flag and large companies go to great lengths to avoid missing SEC deadlines. In the filing Wednesday, Riverwoods, Illinois-based Discover said it likely won’t file under the allotted extension period of five calendar days because it needs more time to address the issues. The company also hasn’t determined if it will have to redo, or restate, its prior financial statements to address any potential accounting errors, it said.

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