SEC May Let Companies Abandon U.S. Accounting Rules

Quote from sjfan:

Try to keep in mind that most the rules are almost identical and where they differ, the IFRS is often times more stringent.

Christ... and this is supposed to a board for traders...

What are you comparing IFRS to? Are you sure they are more stringent when compared to the "conventional" German standards?
 
Companies can mark the assets based on different accounting rules, for example mark according to different models... great news for bankers!
 
Quote from gucci:

What are you comparing IFRS to? Are you sure they are more stringent when compared to the "conventional" German standards?

US standards... since that's what we are moving away from...
 
Quote from codedeep007:

Companies can mark the assets based on different accounting rules, for example mark according to different models... great news for bankers!

Where in the world is this coming from? Harmonizing to an international standards used by most of the 1st world countries means LESS choice for accounting games.
 
Quote from sjfan:

US standards... since that's what we are moving away from...

Sorry for misunderstanding. I falsely took your comment as a general claim about IFRS being a standard, that is worth to strive for.
 
Quote from sjfan:

Did you not even read the link you quoted? They mean the IFRS, which is a set of standards adopted by the international accounting standards board and used by the EU, Hong Kong, Australia, as well as Turkey and Russia and etc.

This is a move to harmonize reporting standards. Try to keep in mind that most the rules are almost identical and where they differ, the IFRS is often times more stringent.

Christ... and this is supposed to a board for traders...

I read the article and I posted it. Show me the quote that says the IFRS rules are more stringent.
 
Quote from BullAlert:

I read the article and I posted it. Show me the quote that says the IFRS rules are more stringent.

um... how about the actual rules themselves... for example, IFRS rules disallowed the pooling method of merger accounting before US rules. I'm not an accountant - but I do recall the IFRS treatment of securities classification (whether they are held to maturity and no marked to market) is more stringent. Also, I believe for the rules for retirement benefits also favors a more stringent expensing schedule under IFRS.
 
Quote from sjfan:

um... how about the actual rules themselves... for example, IFRS rules disallowed the pooling method of merger accounting before US rules. I'm not an accountant - but I do recall the IFRS treatment of securities classification (whether they are held to maturity and no marked to market) is more stringent. Also, I believe for the rules for retirement benefits also favors a more stringent expensing schedule under IFRS.

OK, this is where the 99% of non-CPA investors (like me) are going to get buffaloed by the globalists. It's going to lay the foundation for more shady creativity regardless IMO. The change may tout cost savings by elimination of duplicate accounting standards, but what about all those corporate beancounters who now need new training in the international standards? I'm looking for a reason behind lame duck slamdunks like this one...and it ain't transparency or cost reduction.
 
Back
Top