7 research outputs found
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On the Analysis of Firms' Cash Flows
This paper revisits the whys and hows of cash flows analysis. The analysis maintains a strict common shareholders' perspective with an equity valuation focus. The paper argues that analysts turn to cash flows to evaluate the potential ambiguity inherent in accruals. The GAAP statement of cash flows, however, (i) relies on a too narrow concept of cash and (ii) lacks a clear bottom-line directly comparable to net income per GAAP. To circumvent (i) and (ii), the paper proposes a framework of Modified Cash Accounting (MCA). A MCA statement of cash earnings satisfies a crucial property: It works like a regular income statement yet eschews all accruals. The paper discusses not only how one motivates and develops a MCA statement of cash earnings, but also how it should be put to use. A crucial issue deals with how one compares the two bottom-lines -- GAAP income vs. that of MCA cash earnings -- given alternative growth scenarios. The paper shows how one can estimate a "normal accrual," which can be added to MCA cash earnings, given assumptions about the firm's growth
Comments by the Auditing Standards Committee of the Auditing Section of the American Accounting Association on the PCAOB Rulemaking Docket Matter 029: PCAOB Release No. 2011-007, Improving Transparency Through Disclosure of Engagement Partner and Certain Other Participants in Audits
In October 2011, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB or Board) issued a release to solicit public comment on amendments to its standards that would improve the transparency of pubic company audits. The objective of the release was to solicit public comments on a proposed standard that would (1) require registered public accounting firms to disclose the name of the engagement partner in the audit report, (2) amend the Board\u27s Annual Report Form to require registered firms to disclose the name of the engagement partner for each audit report already required to be reported on the form, and (3) require disclosure in the audit report of other independent public accounting firms and other persons that took part in the audit. The PCAOB provided for a 91-day exposure period (from October 11, 2011, to January 9, 2012) for interested parties to examine the release and provide comments. The Auditing Standards Committee of the Auditing Section of the American Accounting Association provided the comments in the letter below to the PCAOB on PCAOB Rulemaking Docket Matter 029: PCAOB Release No. 2011-007, Improving Transparency Through Disclosure of Engagement Partner and Certain Other Participants in Audits