32nd Annual SEC Reporting & FASB Forum

Hosted By: Practising Law Institute

Why You Should Attend

Our Annual Forum will keep you up to date with the ever-changing world of SEC reporting, accounting, and auditing – just in time for annual reporting season, or your next 10-Q. The Division of Corporation Finance has been busy revising their non-GAAP guidance and finalizing the pay ratio rule, while reviewing thousands of 10-Ks. The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) has adopted the narrow scope amendments and practical expedients, generated by the Transition Resource Group (TRG), for their Revenue Recognition standard. The Leases Standard is final, and the FASB is awash in simplification and other projects. Our SEC Reporting Roundtable will discuss important issues to consider for the upcoming 10-K and proxy. Our expert faculty will offer practical advice, based on real-world examples, to give you the information and tools needed to successfully meet the current and future challenges in accounting and SEC reporting.

What You Will Learn

  • Back by popular demand, our SEC Reporting Roundtable will be a lively discussion of current events, including simplification overload, disclosure effectiveness, and more
  • Important developments in the SEC’​s Division of Corporation Finance, including the new CDIs on non-GAAP measures, the Regulation S-K Concept Release – part of the disclosure effectiveness project, and frequent accounting and disclosure comments
  • Key FASB developments: new accounting standards and updates in process
  • The latest on implementation challenges and transition issues for FASB’s Revenue Recognition standard, including TRG discussions and the final ASUs – narrow scope amendments and practical expedients
  • Leases and most of the Financial Instruments project are final, learn the details
  • Updates from the SEC’s Office of Chief Accountant and Enforcement
  • Key focus areas and hot topics discussed throughout

Who Should Attend

SEC reporting professionals, including preparers of financial statements, partners of public accounting firms and their staff, lawyers and corporate legal staff, investor relations professionals, audit committee members, and others involved in preparation or review of the financial statements.​

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