Listed Company S Accounting Fraud Of The

Page 4 of 50 - About 500 Essays
  • Premium Essay

    Auditing Cases

    accounting fraud and auditor legal liability c a S eS inc lu de d in t hiS Se ction 4 89 99 4.1 Enron Corporation and Andersen, LLP Analyzing the Fall of Two Giants . . . . . . . . . . . 4.2 Comptronix Corporation 4.3 Cendant Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Identifying Inherent Risk and Control Risk Factors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 119 127 137 Assessing the Control Environment and Evaluating Risk of Financial Statement

    Words: 33542 - Pages: 135

  • Premium Essay

    Parmalat Scandal

    gio.dorio@unical.it 1.1. Introduction The collapse of the Parmalat food empire reveals a troubling aspect about Italian capitalism - the lack of effective financial control over its family-owned companies. But was Parmalat scandal a pure problem of corporate governance or was it simply a “fraud”? Bearle and Means (1932 pg. 6) famously explained: “The separation of ownership from control produces a condition where the interests of owner and of ultimate manager may, and often do, diverge

    Words: 4378 - Pages: 18

  • Premium Essay

    Parmalat

    eighth largest company in Italy. (Soltani, & Soltani, 2008) In mid-November 2003 Parmalat defaulted on a $187 million bond payment. That pressed auditors and banks to inspect company accounts. Grant Thorton SPA served as auditors for Parmalat from 1990 to 1999. The scandal may have stayed undetected if not for Italian law which required that companies must to change audit firms every nine years. In 1999 Deloitte & Touche replaced a Grant Thornton company and was the first company who started

    Words: 1382 - Pages: 6

  • Premium Essay

    Is Ethics the Reason Accounting Scandals Exist

    Running Head: Is Ethics The Main Reason For Accounting Scandals? Is Ethics The Most Important Reason Behind Years of Accounting Scandals? Joshua A. Williams DeVry University Is Ethics The Main Reason For Accounting Scandals? Ethics: Is It The Most Important Reason Behind Years of Accounting Scandals? Ethics is a term that refers to a code or moral system that provides criteria for evaluating right and wrong (Spiceland, Spe, Tomassini, 2007). An ethical dilemma is a situation in which

    Words: 2093 - Pages: 9

  • Premium Essay

    Jamaica Water Properties Case 1.1 Analysis

    What measures can and should be taken to make it easier for corporate employees to “blow the whistle” on a fraudulent scheme they uncover within their firm? 3.- Should business, accounting firms, and other organizations explicitly reward ethical behavior by their employees and executives? 4.- What measures accounting firms can take to reduce the risk that personal relationships between client personnel and members of an audit engagement team will adversely affect the quality of the audit? 5.-

    Words: 3089 - Pages: 13

  • Premium Essay

    Auditing

    Chapter 2: The Risk of Fraud and Mechanisms to Address Fraud: Regulation, Corporate Governance, and Audit Quality 1. The auditor is not responsible for the presentation of financial statements; therefore, the auditor has no responsibility for fraud in the financial statements. FALSE 2. An example of fraudulent financial reporting is the CFO intentionally overstating sales to boost profits. TRUE 3. The auditor is responsible for actively considering fraud risks in order to obtain

    Words: 6460 - Pages: 26

  • Premium Essay

    Case Study 2

    Introduction This letter is to address some concerns that the president of LJB Company has come to the author to address. The particular areas of concern are the internal controls that are present at the company. Additional concerns include changes that may need to be made if the company goes public, best practices that should be kept, and practices that need to be altered. This letter will address the issues listed in order with a summary and conclusion at the end. Required Changes This section

    Words: 821 - Pages: 4

  • Premium Essay

    Sarbanes Oxley Act

    corporate fraud that included the infamous Enron, Tyco, and WorldCom. These scandals cost investors billions of dollars when the share prices of these companies collapsed after the cases were filed. These cases of fraud indicated to both the public and the government that there was not enough regulation over financial statements of publically traded companies specifically. It focused specifically on publically traded companies to contain the fallout of lost investor’s money when these frauds come to

    Words: 1560 - Pages: 7

  • Premium Essay

    The Role of Federal Regulations in Corporate America

    executives for fortune 500 companies to manipulate the system and its people? The corporate governance system started with the corporate debacles and the ultimate crash of the stock market in the late 1920s. As a result government stepped in and created regulations such as the Securities Act of 1933 and 1934, to the ever so popular Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, to the more recent Dodd-Franck Law of 2010. The aim behind these regulations is noble. They are formed to prevent fraud, misrepresentation, bring

    Words: 2794 - Pages: 12

  • Premium Essay

    Accounting Frauds

    An Analysis of Accounting Frauds and the Timing of Analyst Coverage Decisions and Recommendation Revisions: Evidence From the US Susan M. Young* Associate Professor Fordham University New York, NY 10019 syoung16@fordham.edu Emma Peng Assistant Professor Fordham University New York, NY 10019 ypeng@fordham.edu *Corresponding author We thank workshop participants at the AAA annual meeting, City University of New York, CUNY Baruch College Emory University, and the editor for their helpful

    Words: 17008 - Pages: 69

Page   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 50