by Royal Rother » 15 Jun 2009 21:53
by The 17 Bus » 15 Jun 2009 22:51
by Royal Lady » 16 Jun 2009 09:12
by westendgirl » 16 Jun 2009 10:22
Royal Lady They are not fiddling, but nor are a lot of sets of business accounts the "true picture". HTH.
by Royal Lady » 16 Jun 2009 11:01
Experience. HTH.westendgirlRoyal Lady They are not fiddling, but nor are a lot of sets of business accounts the "true picture". HTH.
This is an interesting assertion - is this based on experience or the 'everyone knows' school of learning.
It is true I am an accountant (so hissy fit in place) but not for the sort of business that RFC is - I deal with the self-employed and I know that even among those who use accountants the real awareness of what their accounts mean is very low (which tbh does keep me in work) and the ignorance of what the accounting standards allow and don't allow is immense and although I don't deal with any limited companies my CPE does at least keep me aware of the more restrictive standards allpied to PLCs.
by West Stand Man » 16 Jun 2009 11:20
Royal Lady They are not fiddling, but nor are a lot of sets of business accounts the "true picture". HTH.
by Royal Rother » 16 Jun 2009 12:10
by The 17 Bus » 16 Jun 2009 19:13
by Ian Royal » 16 Jun 2009 23:54
by Royal Rother » 17 Jun 2009 00:15
by Elm Park » 17 Jun 2009 12:09
The 17 Bus Losing money inbvolves someone else gaining it and it ending in their accounts.
by westendgirl » 18 Jun 2009 12:56
Elm PArkThe 17 Bus Losing money inbvolves someone else gaining it and it ending in their accounts.
Not true, at least not where accounts are concerned. Provisions, for example, are allowed (such as for invoices not yet received which relate to the period the accounts are prepared for), this results in reducing the profit, so it is possible to 'lose' money without someone else gaining it. However, this is now strictly regulated.
In the past it was possible to use provisions to 'hide' money away on the balance sheet and thereby manipulate the amount of profit shown by a company. In a poor year those provisions could then be released to show a higher profit. Thereby smoothing a companies results over a number of years. Hence, if a director asked how much profit was being made, the reply would be "how much would you like".
by Elm Park » 18 Jun 2009 13:15
westendgirlElm PArkThe 17 Bus Losing money inbvolves someone else gaining it and it ending in their accounts.
Not true, at least not where accounts are concerned. Provisions, for example, are allowed (such as for invoices not yet received which relate to the period the accounts are prepared for), this results in reducing the profit, so it is possible to 'lose' money without someone else gaining it. However, this is now strictly regulated.
In the past it was possible to use provisions to 'hide' money away on the balance sheet and thereby manipulate the amount of profit shown by a company. In a poor year those provisions could then be released to show a higher profit. Thereby smoothing a companies results over a number of years. Hence, if a director asked how much profit was being made, the reply would be "how much would you like".
But this does not contradict the bus as the gaining is a time issue - you are not disposing of anything in the long term so the total profit/loss over say a 10 year period is the same. However I would also say that your 'in the past' is possibly the most relevant and accounting standards are more restrictive now than they used to be.
In my experience unless you are in a volatile industry, changing your profits by the use of provisions is a short-term one-off procedure that is frequently regretted as it has an equal and opposite effect on the following year.
by Royal Rother » 18 Jun 2009 14:25
by The 17 Bus » 18 Jun 2009 18:05
by Elm Park » 19 Jun 2009 11:26
Royal Rother I try not to get involved in tax at all, but IIRC, if provisions are to be treated as allowable for tax purposes they must be specific (not general in way) so there's not much value in creating a load of old hogwash provisions and stashing them away for future release when the time is considered appropriate, (as I acknowledge DID used to happen in previous decades).
I'm sure these things DO still happen somewhere, with accountants who are not fully mindful of the rules governing their profession, but really, with respect, I think you are living in the past somewhat. These days you have to be very very careful about manipulating profits for any of the purposes you suggest.
by Royal Rother » 19 Jun 2009 13:39
by Elm Park » 19 Jun 2009 16:42
Royal Rother 8 years ago and I don't think it was UK auditors who were culpable was it?
The fraud was conceived by the internal accountants / management at ENRON - it was just crap auditing that meant it didn't get picked up - I think....
by swansea jack » 19 Jun 2009 18:08
Elm PArk
But he said it inbvolves someone else gaining it, which is different.
You are right it can have an effect the following year, but, then, accounts could be filed up to 13 months after the year end, which means that a company would already have a reasonable idea of the following years profits (or losses). Also, a lot would depend on what the Directors are trying to achieve, especially if it is a private company or with very few shareholders. Having provisions stashed away, that could be realeased to profit, if a Company is being sold could be beneficial to the sellers. There might be other things going on such as the maturity of share options in which the share price is important which, partly, is influanced by the profits made.
by Seal » 21 Jun 2009 14:46
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