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A provider of webcasts is Thomson Financial, whose Thomson/CCBN sub- sidiary can be reached at www.thomson.com/financial. This company facilitates web- casts by setting up basic audio webcasts for quarterly conference calls; it also offers an enhanced audio webcast that is set up through a separate Web page that looks like a page from a company’s regular Web site but that has special features, such as a time delay on the broadcast and access to detailed audience reporting, in order to find out who has monitored the webcast. The company also offers an advanced feature called “Virtual Presentations” that synchronizes audio presentations with PowerPoint slides, using its TalkPoint TM technology. This option can be used for other purposes, such as training presentations, product demonstrations, and advertising. Cost: Installation time: 11–12 Automate Option Tracking When a large number of employees have company options, either the finance or human resources department will be the target of ongoing questions about the vest- ing, valuation, and tax implications of these options. Because the tax laws are so complex in this area, employees keep returning with follow-up clarification ques- tions, as well as to run what-if scenarios on what they should do under various cir- cumstances. Given a large number of employees with many option grants, this can turn into a major drain on company resources. In addition, a company runs the risk of giving bad advice to its employees, which may have legal repercussions if employees using this advice lose money through the exercise of options. A solution for larger companies is to purchase an options tracking package, which they can use alternatively as an in-house solution or as a featured service on the external site of an application service provider. An example of such software is Express Options, which is sold by Transcentive, Inc. The system stores all options information in a single database, allowing one to handle multiple grant types, determine vesting schedules, track option exercises and cancellations, and provide employees with tax-related information. It also calculates option valua- tions, exports data to the company stock transfer agent, and provides a variety of reports for regulatory purposes. By using Transcentive’s add-on product, Express Desktop, employees can access such information about their options as portfolio valuations based on different stock pricing assumptions, what-if modeling, trans- action histories, and frequently asked questions. They can also place orders to exer- cise their options through the system. For this type of service, one can expect to pay a minimum of $15,000 annu- ally, with the price exceeding one-third of a million dollars per year for larger installations. Given its cost, this best practice is most applicable to corporations with at least several hundred option holders. Cost: Installation time: 254 Finance Best Practices ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:22 AM Page 254 11–13 Use Internet-Based Options Pricing Services Any accounting or treasury staff that deals with options knows that this is a diffi- cult area to analyze in terms of whether an options price is reasonable or exces- sive. One can now gain assistance in this effort by accessing the excellent www.ivolatility.com Web site. This site compares the historical volatility of a stock to its estimated activity for the next few months, as determined through an exam- ination of options purchased. If the forward-looking volatility is greater than the historical volatility, then the options on that stock may be overpriced. The site also includes daily charts and statistics about market performance, as well as link- ages to news sources for each selected stock. Cost: Installation time: 11–14 Automate 401(k) Plan Enrollment In smaller organizations, the accounting department is tasked with the manage- ment of 401(k) plan additions, changes, and deletions. This is not an efficient process, for someone must arrange for a meeting with each employee who has now been working for the minimum amount of time, as specified in the plan doc- umentation, explain the plan’s features to them, wait for them to take the plan materials home for review, and, finally, enter the returned documents into the sys- tem of the 401(k) provider. This is a lengthy and time-consuming process. An alternative is to automatically enroll employees in the 401(k) plan. This is also known as a “negative election,” since an employee must make a decision not to be enrolled in the plan, rather than the reverse. This approach has the con- siderable advantage of reducing the paperwork needed to enter a person into the 401(k) plan, since it is done as part of the hiring process, along with all other paperwork needed to set up a new employee. There are only minor downsides to this best practice. With more employees in the plan, there will be somewhat higher fees charged by the 401(k) service provider (which are typically charged on a per-person basis). Also, there will still be some paperwork associated with those employees who do make a negative election. Finally, since the group of employees who tend to be added to the 401(k) plan through this method are at the lower end of the income stratum, it is more likely that they will want to take out loans against their invested funds, each of which calls for more paperwork. Cost: Installation time: 11–15 Grant Employees Immediate 401(k) Eligibility The most common way to enroll employees into a company’s 401(k) pension plan is to make them wait either 90 days or a year from the date of hire. This calls 11–16 Grant Employees Immediate 401(k) Eligibility 255 ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:22 AM Page 255 for the maintenance of a list of dates for newly hired employees that must be watched to ascertain when someone becomes available for this benefit. Then they must be contacted and scheduled for a short lecture about how the plan works and how to invest in it. Then they complete paperwork to enroll, which is forwarded to the payroll department so that deductions can be made from their paychecks for advancement to the 401(k) plan administrator. All of the steps can more easily be compressed into the hiring process, as was just noted in the “Automate 401(k) Plan Enrollment” section in this chapter. However, the issue can be taken one step further not only by completing all of the paperwork at the time of hire, but also by actually allowing immediate participation in the plan at the time of hire. This represents less a matter of improved efficiency than of giving new employ- ees a fine new benefit, for they can begin investing funds at once, which may lead to a reduced level of employee turnover. The main problem is that new employees can impact a company’s ability to pass pension plan nondiscrimination tests, especially if the new hires are at low pay scales. If these new employees do not invest a reasonable proportion of their salaries in the 401(k) plan, this can force highly compensated employees to limit their plan contributions to less than the maximum amounts. Nonetheless, if there is a perception that immediate eligibility for the plan will improve the employee turnover rate, then this should be considered the overriding issue. Cost: Installation time: 11–16 Consolidate Insurance Policies Insurance policies are frequently added to a company’s insurance portfolio in a piecemeal manner. Someone on the management team decides that some addi- tional coverage is needed to mitigate a perceived risk, and so an additional pol- icy is added—sometimes beginning at a different time of the year from the other policies already in existence, and perhaps with different insurance companies. This can be an expensive approach, for each insurer must factor in potential loss costs plus operating expenses and profit—on each policy it issues. A better alternative is to aggregate the policies with a single insurer. By doing so, insurers can see that their administrative cost will be the same, despite the much higher volume of insurance, and so they can reduce their insurance prices. Also, there is little risk that claims will arise on every single policy held, so the overall risk to the insurer declines—which in turn can reduce prices yet again. This option is best used by large companies with large-dollar insurance poli- cies, since insurers will want their business badly enough to be willing to reduce prices based on the factors just noted. Cost: Installation time: 256 Finance Best Practices ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:22 AM Page 256 11–17 Obtain Key Man Life Insurance for the CFO It is common for companies to take out key man life insurance policies on their chief executive officers or the holders of key product knowledge—but what about the CFO? First, let’s look at the reasons for key-man insurance. It is intended to at least cover the cost of recruiting and training a replacement, and can also be used to fulfill any contractual pay or benefit obligations to the person’s surviving spouse. The most justifiable use of this insurance is when the partners in a partnership need the resources to buy out the shares of any partner who dies. These traditional reasons do not warrant the purchase of key-man insurance for the CFO. Companies should have a sufficiently deep management team to be able to promote a CFO from within, or at least adequately backfill the position until an outsider is hired. However, there is a scenario when such insurance might make sense. If the current CFO is deeply involved in financing arrangements and there is a serious risk that the financing could be lost in the event of the CFO’s demise, then the insurance proceeds could compensate for the lost funds. If this scenario is the reason for having key-man life insurance, then the amount of the insurance should approximate the amount of funding at risk of being lost. Cost: Installation time: 11–18 Obtain Advance Rating Assessments A company with publicly held debt can never be sure about the change in its rat- ing by a major rating service after it has taken some significant action, such as an acquisition or a major capital investment. If the rating agency decides after the fact that the company’s action has downgraded the credit level on its debt, then the reduced ranking may trigger a number of adverse financial items—such as a drop in the market price of the debt in order to increase its effective interest rate, or difficulty in obtaining additional debt at a reasonable price. This problem can be overcome by using Standard & Poor’s Rating Evalua- tion Service. This service allows a company to obtain a confidential review of its credit rating by a Standard & Poor’s analyst who will issue a prospective credit rating based on the proposed action. This is a particularly valuable service when a company has a range of action items to choose from and is willing to change its strategic direction based on which action results in the best credit rating. Since the ratings derived by Standard & Poor’s are based on prospective actions that may never be implemented, the ratings will be kept confidential until such time as the company makes its plans public. Examples of possible activities that could require a prospective credit analysis are asset sales or divestitures, stock buy-backs, 11–18 Obtain Advance Rating Assessments 257 ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:22 AM Page 257 mergers or acquisitions, financial restructurings, recapitalizations, expansions into new lines of business, and modifications to the corporate legal structure. The primary difficulty with this best practice is the considerable fee required to have these analyses performed. The fee charged will increase for each addi- tional strategic option a company wishes to have analyzed, so having a broad range of possible actions reviewed will be expensive. Cost: Installation time: 11–19 Rent a Captive Insurance Company Companies are having increasing difficulty obtaining reasonably priced insurance of all types, if they can obtain insurance at all. Captive insurance companies have been used to provide access to insurance. They are run by a single company, an association of companies, or by an entire industry in order to solve particular insurance problems. Though the use of captive insurance companies has been a longstanding option for obtaining at least some of the necessary insurance, this option has required extensive legal analysis, incorporation costs, and significant initial capitalization fees that have limited their use. Also, sharing a captive with other companies has, until now, meant that a company must share in the risks incurred by other companies, which can present an uncomfortably high risk profile. Over the past few years, changes in the legal requirements for captive insur- ance companies have brought about the creation of the rent-a-captive. Under this legal structure, a captive insurance company has already been created by a third party that rents it out for use by multiple companies. The structure is usually in the format of “protected cells,” whereby each company using one can shield its contributed capital and surplus from other renters that are also using the captive. Not only does this format prevent a company from dealing with the initial start-up costs of a captive insurance company, but it also allows it to retain any underwriting profit and investment income from contributed funds. The company can even recover a low-claim bonus at the end of the rent-a-captive contract, though it can also be liable for additional claims payments that exceed its initial or subsequent contributions into the captive. This format is especially useful for those companies faced with moderate risks that have reduced their frequency of claim incurrence. Conversely, it is less useful for companies seeking catastrophic coverage or that have high volumes of small-claim activity. The creators of rent-a-captive insurance companies usually charge a percent- age fee of premiums paid into the captives in exchange for their use, while some also take a share of the investment profit. This option is cost-effective for those companies paying at least half a million dollars in insurance expenses per year. One should also pay for up-front legal advice on both the applicability of this approach and the tax deductibility of contributions made into a rent-a-captive. Cost: Installation time: 258 Finance Best Practices ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:22 AM Page 258 11–20 Use Internet-Based Risk Measurement Services Anyone who invests in various types of equity on behalf of a company may, from time to time, have a queasy feeling that there is some degree of risk associated with those investments, but has no way of quantifying it without paying for the services of a finance expert. Also, it may be useful to report to senior management on the measured risk of the current basket of investments, if only to provide a defense in case there is a drop in their value at some point in the future. This valuable risk analysis tool is now available through the Internet at www.riskgrades.com. This on-line service grades the risk of any equity that the user enters into the system, reviewing its equity, interest rate, currency, and commodity risk. This results in a “RiskGrade” that is an indicator of risk based on the volatility of returns. RiskGrades are determined by comparing the current estimated return volatility of an asset to the market-cap weighted average return volatility of a set of equity markets during normal market conditions. A RiskGrade of zero indicates price volatility of zero (as would be the case for pure cash holdings), with higher RiskGrade ratings indicating a higher degree of volatility. These RiskGrade scores can then be used to compare the risks of various assets or entire portfolios. Cost: Installation time: 11–21 Issue Catastrophe Bonds A company may issue debt and then be unable to pay it back to creditors, due to the impact of a natural disaster on its facilities. A good way to reduce the impact of a natural disaster on debt repayment is the catastrophe bond. More commonly known as a cat bond, it is designed to raise money in the event of a major catastrophe, which is usually defined as an earthquake, hurricane, or windstorm. If the issuer suffers a loss from a predefined catastrophe, then its obligation to repay the interest or principal is either deferred or canceled. Some cat bonds are indemnity based, which means that they pay out based on actual claims stemming from the catastro- phe; these bonds are considered more risky for bond purchasers, since a wide vari- ety of claims may be brought. Another type of cat bond is based on parametric data, so they pay out only if precise physical measurements of the actual event occur, such as wind speed or earthquake magnitude exceeding a threshold level. Large cat bonds are almost always issued by reinsurance companies, and are typically rated as junk bonds. The only recent exceptions have been the Oriental Land Company (Japanese earthquake), Vivendi Universal (California earthquake), and FIFA (terrorism during the 2006 World Cup). The most recent information about cat bond issuances and risk profiles by country is listed in the excellent World Catastrophe Reinsurance Market report, which is available for free from Guy Carpenter at www.guycarp.com. Cat bonds are also available in smaller sizes for individual corporations, though these are usually specially designed private placements to one or two 11–21 Issue Catastrophe Bonds 259 ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:23 AM Page 259 investors. This approach to catastrophe coverage is especially useful when tradi- tional insurance coverage is too expensive, allowing issuers to essentially extract insurance coverage from the securities market. Cost: Installation time: 11–22 Centralize Foreign Exchange Management A company that has multiple divisions conducting business with other countries may be spending too much money hedging its foreign exchange risk. Each divi- sion will hedge its exposure without regard to the exchange positions of the other divisions, which may result in excess hedging costs. The reason for the excess costs is that one division may have a large account receivable that is payable in (for example) British pounds, while another division may have a payable in British pounds. Each one may pay to hedge the risk on pounds, when in reality, from the perspective of the entire company, the receivable and payable positions of the two divisions offset each other. Only the difference between the two positions needs to be hedged, which is less expensive. Another problem is that there are intercompany payments between sub- sidiaries located in different countries; these transactions should be netted to arrive at the minimum possible flow of foreign exchange. To take advantage of these offsetting positions, a company needs to central- ize its foreign exchange management in one place, so that a coordinated effort to net out all exchange risks can be created. This is not just a matter of moving all of the foreign exchange people from outlying locations into one building, but also (and much more importantly) a matter of channeling the flow of foreign exchange information from all divisions into a single location. This may call for customized interfaces from each division’s accounting systems to the central database, or perhaps an extract of data from a centralized data warehouse (see Chapter 14). This function can also be outsourced to a bank that specializes in foreign exchange netting, such as CitiBank or Bank of America, though one should periodically comparison-shop their foreign exchange rates to ensure that they are competitive. It can even be manually stored in an electronic spreadsheet, though this approach requires some attention to the transfer of all intercompany payables and receivables to the person who is netting out the transactions; this involves setting a timetable that specifies a monthly settlement date, and then works back- wards from that date to determine the deadlines by which all subsidiaries must report their payables and receivables. Once this information is gathered, it must then be merged to determine a company’s net foreign exchange position at any given time. Once this information is available, a company can achieve significant cost reductions in its hedging activities. There are two other factors favoring the use of centralized foreign exchange management. One is that the reduced amount of currency being shifted between corporate subsidiaries results in a smaller amount of cash float within the organi- 260 Finance Best Practices ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:23 AM Page 260 zation (though this can be eliminated entirely with the use of wire transfers instead of checks). The other possibility is to use the netting of intercompany payables and receivables to make leading or lagging payments, which are effectively short-term loans that may assist in dealing with short-term cash flow problems at certain subsidiaries. However, these changes in the timing of payments can take on the appearance of intercompany loans, so expert international tax advice should be obtained before trying such an activity. Cost: Installation time: 11–23 Settle Foreign Exchange Transactions with the Continuous Link Settlement System Foreign exchange settlement has been a prolonged affair in which there is signif- icant risk of one party’s defaulting before a transaction has been completed. To avoid this risk while also speeding up the settlement process, a number of major banks banded together to create the Continuous Link Settlement (CLS) system, which is operated by CLS Bank (of which the founding banks are shareholders). In essence, member banks submit foreign exchange transactions to CLS Bank, which matches up both sides of each transaction during a five-hour period (which represents the overlapping business hours of the participating settlement sys- tems). If the exact settlement criteria are not met for each side of the trade during this time period, then no funds are exchanged. How does CLS impact the corporation? It gives the cash manager exact information about the availability of funds in various currencies, which had pre- viously been difficult to predict with precision. With foreign exchange informa- tion, they can now optimize their short-term investment strategies. Some of the better-known members of CLS Bank are Bank of America, CitiBank, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Mellon Bank, Morgan Stanley, and State Street Bank and Trust. Other banks can submit their foreign exchange trans- actions through these member banks, so access to the CLS system is quite broad. Cost: Installation time: 11–24 Use Natural Hedging for Transaction Risks When a company engages in transactions that involve another currency, it incurs a transaction risk that currency fluctuations will adversely impact its cash flows. They frequently purchase derivatives to hedge against these transaction risks. How- ever, some organizations are reluctant to follow this path, because (1) derivatives can be expensive, and (2) FAS Statement 133 requires a company to charge fluctu- ations in the value of a derivative to the current reporting period if it cannot prove 11–24 Use Natural Hedging for Transaction Risks 261 ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:23 AM Page 261 that the derivative effectively hedges an exposure. The latter issue also requires a considerable amount of documentation work. To avoid the use of derivatives, some companies have centralized their trea- sury operations, which gives the treasurer sufficient information about company- wide transaction flows to determine where transactions can offset each other. This information allows treasurers to create natural hedges, which require no FAS 133 documentation and are free. When using natural hedges, there will still be some residual exposure if revenues and costs do not exactly offset each other, but the remaining exposure is greatly reduced. This technique is possible only if treasury operations are centralized, or if the information needed to construct natural hedges can be obtained by other means, such as through a data warehouse that accumulates information from multiple sources. Cost: Installation time: 11–25 Install a Treasury Workstation The multitude of treasury-based transactions can take up a large part of the finance staff’s workday and is highly subject to error. These tasks involve management of a company’s cash position, investment and debt portfolio, and risk analysis. The normal approach to these tasks is to track, summarize, and analyze them on an electronic spreadsheet, with manual input derived from all of the company’s banks and investment firms on a daily basis. In addition, any changes resulting from this analysis, such as the centralization or investment of cash, must be manually shifted to the general ledger. Given the highly manual nature of these tasks, this frequently results in errors that must be corrected through the bank reconciliation process. A treasury workstation can greatly reduce many of these work steps. A treasury workstation is a combination of hardware and software that will manage cash, investments, debt issuance and tracking, as well as provide some risk analysis functions. It is an expensive item to purchase, typically ranging from $30,000 for a bare-bones installation to $300,000 for a fully configured one. The difference between these prices is the amount of functionality and bank interfaces added to the treasury workstation—if a buyer wants every possible fea- ture and must share data with a large number of financial suppliers, then the cost will be much closer to the top of the range. Given these costs, this best practice is not cost-effective for companies with sales volumes under $50 million. Also, because of the large number of interfaces needed to connect the workstation to other entities, the installation time can range from one to nine months. Why spend so much money and installation time on a treasury workstation? Because it automates so much of the rote finance tasks. For example, if an employee enters an investment into the system, it will create a transaction for the settlement, one for the maturity, and another for the interest. It will then alter the cash forecast 262 Finance Best Practices ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:23 AM Page 262 with this information, as well as create a wire transfer to send the money to an investing entity. Here are some of the other functions that it can perform: • Bank reconciliation. It can do the bulk of a bank reconciliation, leaving just a few nonreconciling items to be resolved by an employee. • Cash forecasting. It can determine all company cash inflows and outflows from multiple sources in order to derive a cash forecast. • Cash movement. It can originate electronic funds transfers. • Debt tracking. It can follow short-term debt with a link to a dealer-based commercial paper program. • Financial exposure. It can identify and quantify financial exposure. • Foreign exchange. It can determine a company’s cash positions in any currency. • Investment tracking. It can track and summarize a company’s investment positions in money markets, mutual funds, short-term and fixed-income investments, equities, and options. • Risk analysis. It allows an employee to use it as a giant calculator, perform- ing what-if analyses with yield-curve manipulation and scenario analysis. Based on this lengthy list, it is evident that a large company can derive a suf- ficient benefit from a treasury workstation to offset its substantial cost. For more information about treasury workstations, contact any of the following workstation suppliers: SunGard Treasury Systems (www.sungard.com) and Thomson Finan- cial (www.selkirkfinancial.com). Cost: Installation time: 11–26 Optimize the Organization of Treasury Operations A large multinational company typically became large at least in part through acquisitions, which leaves it with a complex set of banking relationships and accounts, as well as a highly dispersed treasury management group that resides in a multitude of locations. This results in the inefficient use of cash, which in turn reduces interest income and does not allow a company to pay down the opti- mal amount of debt. These problems can be mitigated by implementing regional treasury manage- ment centers, usually one per continent. By doing so, the treasurer can concen- trate those treasury staff with the highest levels of expertise in the same locations, while also achieving a much higher level of control over the underlying cash pooling and foreign exchange transactions, not to mention better clerical tracking of any resulting intercompany loans. By concentrating activities into this smaller 11–26 Optimize the Organization of Treasury Operations 263 ch11_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:23 AM Page 263 [...]... production process Implementation Issues for Financial Statements Best Practices This section notes the relative level of implementation difficulty for all of the best practices that are discussed later in this chapter The primary source of information is contained in Exhibit 12.1, which shows the cost and duration of implementation for each best practice For this group of improvements, the table makes... cost The reason is that most alterations are confined to a small number of 266 ch12_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:24 AM Page 267 Implementation Issues for Financial Statements Best Practices 267 Exhibit 12.1 Summary of Financial Statements Best Practices Best Practice Cost Install Time Financial Reports 12–1 Move operating data to other reports 12–2 Post financial statements in an Excel PivotTable on the Internet... clear improvement over other methods for completing foreign exchange transactions Cost: Installation time: ch12_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:24 AM Page 266 Chapter 12 Financial Statements Best Practices This chapter covers the best practices that can be used to issue financial statements more rapidly This creation process can be one of the most convoluted and time-consuming of all activities, with a long time... advance (continues) ch12_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:24 AM Page 268 268 Financial Statements Best Practices Exhibit 12.1 (Continued) Best Practice Cost Install Time Work Timing 12–24 Use standard journal entry forms 12–25 Complete allocation bases in advance 12–26 Conduct daily review of the financial statements people within the accounting department, which makes it easier to alter the tasks of just that small... investment associated with most of these best practices are low The two glaring exceptions are automating the period-end cutoff and using inventory cycle counting to avoid month-end inventory counts In the first case, there is a need for programming; and in both cases, the complete cooperation of the warehouse staff is required Given these two additional variables, these best practices become not only the most... approvals is to train the accounting staff in the closing procedures so that they all become experts in their jobs After heavy and repeated training, it is quite common to find that the staff is more technically proficient in their tasks than their bosses, with ch12_4773.qxd 12/29/06 9:24 AM Page 276 276 Financial Statements Best Practices little need for any approval Also, newcomers to the accounting department... Consequently, it is necessary to review each recommended best practice carefully and only use those that will most easily be inserted into the existing system without causing either a stoppage in financial statement production or a reduction in their quality This chapter begins with a brief analysis of the level of implementation difficulty for each of the best practices, proceeds to a detailed review of each... Exchange Transactions over the Internet Companies typically purchase or sell spot or forward contracts in foreign currencies in order to hedge their transaction activities that involve other currencies However, this is a labor-intensive process involving calls to several banks to see which ones quote the best price In many cases, the accounting staff simply does not have time to make a number of calls, and... Thus, the ch12_4773.qxd 12/29/06 270 9:24 AM Page 270 Financial Statements Best Practices more reports included in the financial statements, the more time it takes to issue the statements The solution is to make a list of all the reports included in the financial statements, ignore those that are automatically created by the accounting software, and focus on eliminating or delaying those that are created... Financial Statements Best Practices to month If the journal entries have been highly inconsistent over time, it may even be necessary for the general ledger accountant to review all of them and create new journal entries to correct the original entries All of this work takes time, of course—and time is in short supply during the financial statement closing process Many general ledger accounting software . number of 266 ch12_ 477 3.qxd 12/29/06 9:24 AM Page 266 Implementation Issues for Financial Statements Best Practices 2 67 Exhibit 12.1 Summary of Financial Statements Best Practices Best Practice Cost. time: 11– 27 Process Foreign Exchange Transactions over the Internet 265 ch11_ 477 3.qxd 12/29/06 9:23 AM Page 265 Chapter 12 Financial Statements Best Practices This chapter covers the best practices. available for such work. Unfortunately, 270 Financial Statements Best Practices ch12_ 477 3.qxd 12/29/06 9:24 AM Page 270 12–6 Automate Recurring Journal Entries 271 many footnotes do require updates

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Mục lục

  • Accounting Best Practices, Fifth Edition

    • About the Author

    • Free On-Line Resources by Steve Bragg

    • Contents

    • Preface

    • Chapter 1: Introduction

    • Chapter 2: How to Use Best Practices

      • Types of Best Practices

      • The Most Fertile Ground for Best Practices

      • Planning for Best Practices

      • Timing of Best Practices

      • Implementing Best Practices

      • Best Practice Duplication

      • Why Best Practices Fail

      • The Impact of Best Practices on Employees

      • Summary

      • Chapter 3: Accounts Payable Best Practices

        • Implementation Issues for Accounts Payable Best Practices

        • 3– 1 Pay Based on Receiving Approval Only

        • 3– 2 Reduce Required Approvals

        • 3– 3 Use Negative Assurance for Invoice Approvals

        • 3– 4 Use Procurement Cards

        • 3– 5 Negotiate Procurement Card Rebates

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