Assets (Accounting);Corporations -- Accounting;Financial statements -- United States -- History;Valuations -- Corporations
The paper is a historical study of the asset revaluation movement and the subsequent establishment of the cost basis in the United States. A survey of the corporate report leads to a generalization that the asset revaluations were fundamentally the...
Auditing -- Standards -- United States;Business consultants -- United States;Consultants;Auditors' reports --Standards -- United States
This statement provides guidance that an accountant in public practice (“reporting accountant”), either in connection with a proposal to obtain a new client or otherwise, should apply3—a. When preparing a written report on the application of...
International Congress on Accounting (1st : 1904 : St. Louis)
The International accounting congresses, which are held every five years, are numbered under the assumption that the first such international gathering was the one held in St. Louis in 1904. In this paper, the question is raised whether this 1904...
Auditing -- Standards -- United States;Accounting -- Law and legislation;Auditing -- Law and legislation
This Statement provides guidance on the procedures an independent auditor should consider for identifying litigation, claims, and assessments and for satisfying himself as to the financial accounting and reporting for such matters when he is...
Auditing -- Standards -- United States;Disclosure in accounting
This Statement provides guidance on the considerations and procedures to be applied by an auditor who, subsequent to the date of his report on audited financial statements, concludes that one or more auditing procedures considered necessary at the...
Auditing -- Standards -- United States;Financial statements -- Standards -- United States;Securities -- United States -- Accounting
When an independent accountant's report is included in registration statements, proxy statements, or periodic reports filed under the federal securities statutes, the accountant's responsibility, generally, is in substance no different from that...