Thursday, September 24, 2015

GASB to take a Fundamental look at Financial Statements

GASB will take a fundamental look at the reporting model for state and local government financial statements in an effort that aims to enhance the information available for decision-making and assessing a government’s accountability.
In adding a new project to its technical agenda Tuesday, GASB committed to examining a financial reporting model that was established in 1999 through Statement 34, Basic Financial Statements—and Management’s Discussion and Analysis—for State and Local Governments, and subsequent related pronouncements.
“The current model has been fully in effect for a decade,” GASB Chairman David Vaudt said in a news release. “It is an important part of effective standards setting to routinely seek to improve existing standards that have been in effect for some time.”
The board will consider concerns about the complexity of the current financial reporting model and the potential effects on the timeliness of financial reporting, Vaudt said.
The current structure of state and local government financial reporting was established in Statement No. 34, which set the foundation for the format and contents of the basic financial statements, certain related notes to the financial statements, and required supplementary information, including management’s discussion and analysis (MD&A).
One of the most significant additions to the reporting model that resulted from Statement No. 34 was the introduction of governmentwide financial statements including accrual information, which includes the reporting of infrastructure, other capital assets, and long-term liabilities.
GASB’s reexamination will take into account research GASB’s staff has conducted over the past two years with users, preparers, and auditors of governmental financial statements, who have shared views on how the financial reporting model is functioning.
Potential areas of improvement in the model include:
  • MD&A: Options for enhancing the financial statement analysis section of MD&A will be explored. Guidance may be clarified for presenting currently known facts, decisions, or conditions expected to have a significant effect on financial position or results of operations.
  • Governmentwide financial statements: Alternatives will be explored for the format of the statement of activities. GASB will assess whether the value of the information provided by a governmentwide statement of cash flows would outweigh the costs of providing that information.
  • Major funds: GASB will explore options for providing additional information about debt service funds.
  • Governmental fund financial statements: The board will explore a conceptually consistent measurement focus and basis of accounting and develop a related presentation format for governmental fund financial statements.
  • Proprietary fund financial statements: Options will be explored for enhancing the consistency and usefulness of presenting operating and nonoperating revenues and expenses.
  • Budgetary information: GASB will explore options for enhancing the consistency of the presentation method and the value of budgetary information.

GASB will look for opportunities to reduce the complexity of financial statements in each of these areas, which may improve the timeliness of reporting. Deliberations are scheduled to begin in October, and the board expects to issue an initial due process document by the end of 2016.



IASB to Propose Temporary Measures for Insurance Companies

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) will propose temporary measures to address concerns about issues insurance companies are facing with implementation of the new financial instruments standard.

IFRS 9, Financial Instruments, was issued in July 2014 and takes effect on Jan. 1, 2018. The IASB confirmed Wednesday that it will propose amending IFRS 4, Insurance Contracts, to give companies whose business model is to predominantly issue insurance contracts an option to defer the effective date of IFRS 9 until 2021.

The board also will propose giving insurers that implement IFRS 9 the option—which would be called the “overlay approach”—to remove from profit or loss some of the accounting mismatches and temporary volatility that could occur before the new insurance contracts standard is implemented. The IASB is deliberating on the insurance contracts standard, which is expected to be issued next year.

Later this year, the IASB will publish an exposure draft seeking public comment on these measures. Companies that do not issue insurance contracts would not be affected by these measures.


The Malaysian Institute of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA)

Background

The Malaysian Institute of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA) has been developing the accounting profession in Malaysia for over five decades by providing accounting graduates with an avenue to become a Certified Public Accountant (CPA). Since its establishment in 1958, MICPA has played a key role in the setting of accounting standards and technical advisory for the Malaysian regulatory bodies responsible for carving out the business and financial landscape of this nation.
MICPA has more than 3,200 members and over 500 registered candidates. Members of the Institute are professionally qualified “certified public accountants” bearing the CPA qualification.
The Institute is a founding member of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) and has contributed significantly to sustaining the accounting profession nationally, as well as globally. MICPA has demonstrated its dedication in protecting public interest by promoting convergence to international standards through participation in the IFAC Compliance Program.
In 2009, a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed between MICPA and the Institute of Chartered Accountants Australia (ICAA), sealing a new era of professional ties marking an important milestone for both bodies in their quest to work together to promote the interest of students, members and the accountancy profession. The MoU provides for mutual advanced entry for candidates into both of the accountancy bodies’ professional examinations.
In 2014, we saw the amalgamation between ICAA and the New Zealand Institute of Chartered Accountants (NZICA) which led to the establishment of Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CAANZ). Now, graduates of the MICPA-CAANZ Programme will obtain 2 professional qualifications – CPA (Malaysia) and CA (ANZ).
The depth of technical accounting knowledge and understanding of the Malaysian business environment has helped MICPA shape its core professional accountancy programme – the MICPA-CAANZ Programme, to suit business professionals practicing in Malaysia whilst increasing their accessibility to the accounting profession on international shores. The partnership between MICPA and CAANZ has widened the horizons of programme graduates in terms of international opportunities and access to resources such as the Global Accounting Alliance (GAA) which provides support from a network of professional accounting bodies in 11 different countries.
Brief history

On July 26, 1958, the Malayan Association of Certified Public Accountants was incorporated under the Companies Ordinances (1940 – 1946) as a self-regulatory accountancy body. Subsequently, the Association became The Malaysian Association of Certified Public Accountants (MACPA) on July 6, 1964, and was finally renamed The Malaysian Institute of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA) on January 29, 2002.
In 2009, MICPA signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Institute of Chartered Accountants Australia (ICAA), sealing a new era of professional ties promoting the interest of students, members and the accounting profession. The MoU provides for:
·         The delivery of a joint Professional Accounting Programme in Malaysia, granting graduates of the Programme with the eligibility to become members of both Institutes
·         Mutual recognition for members of both Institutes
·         Collaboration between Institutes in the organising of thought leadership events in Malaysia
A new development in 2014 saw the amalgamation of ICAA and the New Zealand Institute of Chartered Accountants (NZICA) which led to the establishment of Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CAANZ), a 100,000-strong membership of professionals. With the merger, graduates of the joint Programme will obtain 2 professional qualifications and be entitled to use the credentials CPA (Malaysia) and CA (ANZ) as members of both Institutes.

Objects of the institute
The Principal Objects of the Institute as set out in the Memorandum and Articles of Association are as follows:
·         To advance the theory and practice of accountancy in all its aspects.
·         To recruit, educate, train and assess by means of examination or otherwise a body of members skilled in these areas.
·         To preserve at all times the professional independence of accountants in whatever capacities they may be serving.
·         To maintain high standards of practice and professional conduct by all its members.
·         To do all such things as may advance the profession of accountancy in relation to public practice, industry, commerce, education and the public service.

Vision
To be the premier business qualification in Malaysia, comparable to the best in the world.

Mission
·         To enhance the value and distinctiveness of the Certified Public Accountant (CPA) qualification.
·         To promote high standards of professional conduct and technical competence of members to safeguard public interest.
·         To provide quality professional education and training thereby creating a competitive advantage for members.









Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Born without Limbs ----> Nick Vujicic

'Born without limbs' star inspires with courage and 'trust in God'

Australian-born Nick Vujicic was born without arms and legs, but that has not stopped him from leading a full life. Now, 32 and founder of the Los Angeles-based nonprofit Life Without Limbs and a motivational speaker, he gives hope to those born with disabilities. Married with a 2-year-old son, Vujicic is the subject of a short documentary, "Born Without Limbs,"to be aired by TLC on June 17. He shares his inspirational story with NBC's Susan Donaldson James.


I believe there's a reason why something happens. You do your best and trust in God and never give up. I grew up with this mindset and was thankful for what I had. Not only did my parents raise me in such a beautiful way, but they had the courage to have more children.
Mum was a midwife and she knew all about the birth process. But she had a premonition that something would go wrong in her pregnancy. She had all the ultrasounds, so it was a shock to everyone when I was born without arms and legs.
On the morning of my birth, Dad was beside her and could see my shoulder had no arm. He nearly fainted and vomited, and the nurse had to take him out of the room. I had phocemelia, no limbs, and there was no medical explanation. It wasn't genetic and it wasn't thalidomide. They said I would be a vegetable.
My mum said, "Take him away — I don't want to see him." But my dad comforted her and said, "He's beautiful." They took me home, but it took three to four months for my mother to come to terms with it.
I tried prosthetics at 6-years-old, but after months of trying, I had already learned to do many things without them and they limited my movements.
I was the first disabled person integrated into the Australian school system. I was bullied in school. My parents said ignore them, but I didn't want to be special. I just wanted arms and legs to and to be like everyone else.
Everyone is looking for something to make them happy — money drugs alcohol. I wanted to know I was not just a write off. Every time a kid laughed at me or excluded me from a game, that fear came back. My parents told me they would never give up on me. My home was my refuge.
When I was 10 years old I wanted to commit suicide. I felt I had no value, and I thought I would always be a burden to my parents and never get married. That was until I saw a boy with no arms and legs like me, and I knew I could help him.
TLC
As a teenager, I wanted to be as independent as I could be. My parents told me, "You don't know what you can achieve until you try it." I go swimming and fishing and do many things now like snowboarding and surfing. I can brush my teeth and wash my hair. In any situation, I do the best that I can. It's not what you have, but what you do with it. I am not afraid to try and fail.
I started motivational speaking around Australia when I was 19 and then traveled the world for five years. I had relatives in California and they encouraged me to come over: "Nick, you can make your dreams come true and reach the world." I started up Life Without Limbs, and we just celebrated our 10th anniversary.
I have traveled to 58 countries and 3 million miles — that's no exaggeration. We are thankful to speak to world leaders, but also to orphans and the disadvantaged and forgotten. I have a caregiver to travel with me.
Talking to youth is so much fun. They are forming a concrete direction in life, their values and purpose. I say living in a broken home is worse than not having limbs.
I want them to not be afraid. It's not about the outside. Who you are matters most. My dad said, "You are a gift, just differently packaged."
I did get married. My wife Kanae is Japanese-American and I met her in Texas. It was love at first sight. We were so thankful we met each other. It was slow, but we couldn't deny the chemistry.
Three months into our relationship in 2011, I went through a personal crisis. I wanted to start a couple of businesses and they failed. Then someone stole money from me. I asked my parents for money and didn't realize that at age 28, I would tap into my depression and fear about being a burden for the rest of my life. I lost it and was crying all the time.
I didn't think Kanae would stay. She said, "It's OK, I'm not going anywhere. I'll get a nursing job." That's when I knew she would be my wife.
Nine months later I gave her an engagement ring. One year after we were married Kiyoshi was born. He's my shoulder height now and we give high-fives and hugs and kisses every day.
Now, I have to learn to be independent again because my wife obviously has a handful with our son, Kiyoshi. I try the best I can to help my family.
TLC
Nick and Kanea with their 2-years-old Kiyoshi
My public speaking is a non-denominational message, based on my faith in Jesus Christ. We go to corporate settings and suicide-prevention and anti-bullying programs.
I tell people to not give up. We sometimes wait for a miracle to happen in life — but the miracle never comes. I wish many things were different in my life. But knowing I can be a miracle for someone else makes my life worth living.
We all have worries. I am not a superhero. But I embrace life and focus on what is most important.

Young New ACCA President!


NEW ACCA PRESIDENT PLEDGES TO INSPIRE YOUNG PEOPLE IN HER YEAR IN OFFICE 

Alexandra Chin is Malaysian to hold prestigious role The new President of ACCA (the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants) and the first Malaysian to be elected to the role, Alexandra Chin, has pledged to inspire young finance professionals during her year in office.
Alexandra, who holds the prestigious honorary title ‘Datuk’ in Malaysia, has been in public practice since 1981 and has her own practice in Sabah, Malaysia. She is the fourth woman to be elected ACCA President.
Alexandra qualified as an ACCA member in 1986 and she has been a member of ACCA’s Council since 2005. Before being elected to Council, Alexandra was an International Assembly Member representing Malaysia from 2003 to 2005. She was also President of ACCA Sabah from 1999 to 2005. 
Alexandra has been Chairman of ACCA’s Qualifications Committee and will chair ACCA’s Nominating Committee during her year as President. 
Besides ACCA, Alexandra, who is married to Datuk Peter Thien, has also been actively involved in various professional bodies and community organisations in Sabah. These include the Malaysian Institute of Accountants (Sabah Branch) and the Chartered Tax Institute of Malaysia (CTIM) Sabah Branch. She has served as a member of the Board of Trustees of Sabah Park and as a Board Member of Sabah Sports Board. 
Alexandra is a Board member of the Sabah Tourism Board. She was appointed a Justice of the Peace in 2009 and is also a member of the Commonwealth Magistrates’ and Judges Association. 
Following her election, Alexandra Chin said: 'My main aim for my Presidential year is to inspire younger people in the way that ACCA has inspired me.
'As the first Malaysian and only the fourth female President of ACCA I also want to focus on diversity, particularly in relation to open access and opportunities for thousands of people around the world.
'Having worked in practice since 1986, and having had my own accounting practice in Sabah since 2006, I am also very interested in small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) and the issues which affect them. SMEs are critical since they form the backbone of all the world’s economies, and finance professionals have a huge role to play in supporting and advising them.' 

ACCA’s new Deputy President is Brian McEnery, a partner in BDO Ireland and a specialist in corporate restructuring and healthcare consulting, while Leo Lee, a former director of Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), has become global Vice President

Development in Islamic Finance

New regulatory and reporting development for Islamic finance.
Malaysian Institute of Accountants (MIA) and IBFIM organised the Islamic Finance Conference 2015 with its theme Islamic Finance: The New Regulatory and Reporting Development for professionals in the financial services industry as well as accountants, auditors and senior managers in various corporations including government link corporation (GLCs).

Designed specifically to provide a continuous learning atmosphere for professional learning and development, the conference discussed pertinent issues surrounding the new regulatory and reporting standards for Islamic finance that is in compliance with the Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 (IFSA 2013).

Delivered by the most prominent speakers from Islamic finance fraternity, IBFIM announced that it has now completed realigning its current training modules including the online learning, which complement the Islamic finance learning modules it launched earlier last year. “Malaysia as the centre for Islamic finance hub has seen a strong growth due to the government’s strong initiatives among others the various recommendations in the Bank Negara Malaysia’s Financial Sector Blueprint and Securities Commission’s Capital Market Masterplan 2 “, said Dato’ Dr. Adnan Alias, Chief Executive Officer of IBFIM.

Datuk Johan Idris, President of MIA, said with the exponential growth in the Islamic finance sector, we must continuously enhance our knowledge and skills especially in the area of regulatory and legal framework. The Islamic Finance Conference 2015 is timely as it will address the impact on the IFSA 2013 in the Islamic financial institutions in Malaysia.

Prof Dato’ Mohamed Ismail, a reputable lawyer and acknowledged as one of the pioneers in Islamic banking, commented on the greater responsibilities placed on the board of directors and senior officers of Islamic banks to ensure the operations of the banks are in compliance with IFSA 2013. He shared his views on how the last 10 years have provided evidence to demonstrate the resilience of Islamic banks during financial crisis and volatile times.

Attended by more than 100 participants comprising accountants, auditors and senior managers from various local corporations, the conference concluded with a better understanding on the financial reporting issues for Islamic finance.


Members of Malaysian Accounting Standards Board (MASB)

MEMBERS OF THE MALAYSIAN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD

The MASB is made up of eight (8) members who are appointed by the Minister of Finance. It comprises the Chairman of the MASB, the Accountant-General and six (6) other members who posses knowledge and experience in the matters of financial accounting and reporting, and in one or more of the fields of accountancy, law, business and finance. In addition, the Minister of Finance has appointed three (3) advisors to the MASB, one each from the Bank Negara Malaysia, the Securities Commission and the Registrar of Companies.

The members of MASB are:

ENCIK MOHAMED RASLAN ABDUL RAHMAN
CHAIRMAN, MALAYSIAN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD
Encik Raslan, a graduate of University of Melbourne with a Bachelor of Commerce, is a Fellow Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia, former Vice President and Council Member of the Malaysian Institute of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA), former Council Member of the Malaysian Institute of Accountants (MIA) and has chaired its disciplinary and investigation committees, and Associate Member, Malaysian Institute of Cooperative & Management Accountants (ICMA). Encik Raslan was also an EXCO member and Treasurer of TI-Malaysia. He is a partner of KPMG since 1994 carrying out audit and advisory work.

DATO' CHE PEE BIN SAMSUDIN
ACCOUNTANT GENERAL OF MALAYSIA
Dato' Haji Che Pee bin Samsudin was appointed as Accountant General of Malaysia on 5 January 2015. He was born in Kampung Sungai Layar Hujung, Sungai Petani, Kedah Darul Aman in 1957. He is a Chartered Accountant under the Malaysian Institute of Accountants and graduated from Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia with a Bachelor of Accounting with honours in 1981.
He began his career as an Administrative Officer in Bank Negara Malaysia in 1981, before being offered to serve under the Accountant General’s Department of Malaysia (AGD). Started as an accountant in AGD Kuala Lumpur, he was then transferred to the Jabatan Agama Islam Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur before being appointed as the Treasury Accountant in AGD Perlis. He has also worked in the Accounting Development Division in AGD, Treasury Budget Division and he was then seconded to the Langkawi Development Authority (LADA). His experience as an accountant in an agency of the Ministry of Finance has allowed him to be seconded to Institut Kefahaman Islam Malaysia for 6 years, before serving at the Economic Planning Unit in the Prime Minister’s Department for two years. Dato' Haji Che Pee was subsequently appointed as Treasurer of Kedah from 2001 to 2010.
His appointment as the Director of Central Operation and Agency Services Division (BPOPA) in 2010 was the best platform that showcased his leadership qualities and as an efficient administrator, before being appointed as the Accountant General of Malaysia. In addition, he also sits on a number of boards such as Amanah Raya Berhad, Kumpulan Wang Amanah Pencen, Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia, Malaysian Institute of Accountants and the Malaysian Accounting Standards Board (MASB).

DATUK TONG POH KEOW
GROUP CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, SIME DARBY BERHAD
Datuk Tong, 60, is the Group Chief Financial Officer of Sime Darby Berhad. Sime Darby is a Malaysia-based diversified multinational involved in key growth sectors, namely, plantation, property, motors, industrial equipment, energy & utilities and healthcare. She was the Chief Financial Officer of the Plantation Division of Sime Darby Berhad prior to her present appointment in June 2008 and prior to November 2007, she was the Chief Finance Officer of Kumpulan Guthrie Berhad (KGB). 
Datuk Tong is a member of the Malaysian Institute of Accountants, a member of the Institute of Chartered Secretaries and Administrators United Kingdom and a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, United Kingdom.

MR TAN SOO YAN
PARTNER, ERNST & YOUNG
Mr Tan Soo Yan is the Professional Practice Director of Ernst & Young Malaysia in the Assurance and Business Advisory Division. He is also the Country Independence Leader. His responsibilities include oversight of the Assurance Quality & Risk Management policies and procedures, including client and engagement acceptance, engagement quality reviews and resolution of complex accounting and auditing matters. He is also involved in development and training of assurance personnel on new auditing and accounting standards as well as sharing quality improvement ideas.
Mr Tan has 38 years of experience in providing various types of Assurance and Business Advisory Services.  His portfolio of clients includes banking, manufacturing, real estate and construction, retail & consumer products and concessionaire companies.
He is a member of the Malaysian Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Malaysian Institute of Accountants, MIA Ethics Board and Sloan Fellow of London Business School 1986/87.

MR CHAN KAM CHIEW
PARTNER, KPMG
Mr Chan Kam Chiew is a Partner and an Audit and Accounting Committee member at KPMG Malaysia, a member of the MIA and the MICPA.
He joined KPMG in 1984 and was on secondment to KPMG San Francisco from 1991 to 1993. He is the audit engagement partner for a wide range of public listed companies and multinationals in various industries including those in the chemical, electronics, retail, industrial products, consumer products and automotive products. He is well-versed with multinational audits including those whose parent entities are based in Europe and the United States of America. He has managed special assignments including IFRS, flotation exercises, financial due diligence reviews, provision of financial advisory services and reviews of policies and procedures. 

MR THAYA SANGARA PILLAI
PARTNER, PWC
Mr Thaya is a Partner in the Assurance practice at PricewaterhouseCoopers Malaysia, a Fellow of the ICAEW, a member of the MIA and the MICPA.
He has over 30 years of experience in providing audit and business advisory services to clients in a wide range of industries. His portfolio of clients includes major public listed companies involved in power, telecommunications, automotive, property development and manufacturing sectors.  Thaya has also led cross border assignments. Other than statutory audits, he has led numerous assignments on financial due diligences, mergers & acquisitions, initial public offerings, finance function effectiveness and other advisory work.

PROF DR MALIAH SULAIMAN
PROFESSOR OF ACCOUNTING, INTERNATIONAL ISLAMIC UNIVERSITY MALAYSIA
Dr. Maliah Sulaiman, a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (UK), holds a PhD from the University of Otago, New Zealand. She is currently a Professor of Accounting at the Department of Accounting, International Islamic University Malaysia. She started her career as an audit semi senior at a public accountants firm in Malaysia and later joined academia. She was a Chief Assessor for the Ministry of Higher Education’s Quality Assurance exercise and sits on the Panel of Assessors for the National Accreditation Board of the Bachelor of Accounting programs in Malaysia. She is also a member of the committee on Material Flow Cost Accounting of the Standard Industrial Research Institute of Malaysia (SIRIM). 
Dr Maliah is also a recipient of two prestigious awards: the Japan Society for the Promotion of Sciences Fellowship (JSPS-VCC) in 2003 and the Association of Commonwealth Universities Fellowship (ACU) in 2006.  She sits on the editorial boards of various international and national journals. Her current research interests are in Environmental Accounting and Islamic Accounting. The International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), New York, awarded her with the Article of Merit Award in 2007 for her work on Environmental Management Accounting. Most recently, in 2013, her work on Corporate Governance of Islamic Financial Institutions in Malaysia was awarded a Bronze medal by the Malaysian Institute of Accountants.

ENCIK MOHAMED RAFIQUE MERICAN
GROUP CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, MAYBANK GROUP
Mohamed Rafique Merican is the Group Chief Financial Officer of Maybank Group since 1 June 2012. He is responsible for the Group’s financial, capital and funding management. He oversees Group Finance Controller, Group Corporate Treasurer, Group Tax, Group Performance Reporting & Investor Relations, Group Strategic Procurement, Group Finance Strategic Office and Group Finance Operations (Corporate Remedial Management and Enterprise Information Management).
Encik Rafique has more than 20 years of experience in the corporate sector, including five years as Chief Financial Officer of Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB) and Malakoff Berhad. Prior to joining TNB in 2009, he served at Radicare (M) Sdn Bhd, the facilities management concessionaire for hospitals in Klang Valley, Selangor, Kelantan, Terengganu and Pahang as its Chief Operating Officer initially and subsequently as its Chief Executive Officer. He also held corporate finance and advisory roles with Amanah Capital Group and Bumiputra Merchant Bankers Berhad in the early part of his career.
Qualification
Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), United Kingdom; Chartered Accountant and member of the Malaysian Institute of Accountants (MIA).
Committee Membership/Appointments
Member of Malaysia Advisory Committee of Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) Malaysia.

MS JESSICA CHEW CHENG LIAN
ASSISTANT GOVERNOR BANK NEGARA MALAYSIA
Ms Jessica Chew is currently an Assistant Governor at Bank Negara Malaysia. Ms Jessica has over 20 years of experience in financial sector supervision and regulation with the Bank. She is currently responsible for financial regulation covering the banking and insurance sectors, and money services business. Her responsibilities include the development of prudential financial policies for the financial sector, financial surveillance, consumer and market conduct regulation and oversight over the regulation and supervision of money services business activities.
Ms Jessica holds a Bachelor of Commerce Degree with a major in accounting and finance from the University of Melbourne, Australia. She also currently serves as an adviser member of the Malaysian Accounting Standards Board (MASB) and is a board member of Agensi Kaunseling dan Pengurusan Kredit (AKPK)/Credit Counselling And Debt Management Agency (CCDMA) and FAA.

MR DAVID YAP WENG SEONG
SURUHANJAYA SYARIKAT MALAYSIA
Mr Yap Weng Seongis a Fellow Member of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, United Kingdom and a member of Malaysian Institute of Accountants. He also holds the “Certification in Training” certificate awarded by Pembangunan Sumber Manusia Berhad and Certificate IV in Training and Assessment awarded by Management Consultancy International Pty Ltd, Australia.
Mr Yap started his career with an international firm specialising in audit, accounting and business advisory services. Thereafter he joined the Royal Malaysian Customs in the Licensing and Enforcement Sections before returning to the private sector as a Financial Controller where he gained valuable knowledge and skills in the areas of administration, finance and accounting. He subsequently joined the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia (LHDNM) to further his career.
During his career with the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia, he had wide exposure and knowledge in personal and corporate tax, tax audit, withholding tax and compliance tax at the Corporate Tax and Withholding Tax Sections. He was also appointed by LHDNM to conduct civil proceedings in Malaysian courts pursuant to the Income Tax Act 1967.
Mr Yap has more than 27 years of working experience in a wide range of industries and is presently the Head of Statistics and Accounting Development Unit in the Corporate Development and Policy Division of Suruhanjaya Syarikat Malaysia. 

MR EUGENE WONG WENG SOON
SECURITIES COMMISSION MALAYSIA
Eugene Wong is the Executive Director of Corporate Finance & Investments Business Group, Securities Commission Malaysia ("SC") and is responsible for all matters pertaining to for issues and investments, which include issuances of equity and debt securities, corporate transactions, take-overs and mergers, collective investments schemes and investment products.
Encik Eugene is a Council Member of the Malaysian Institute of Accountants and currently serves as the Chairman of the Ethics Standard Board.
Encik Eugene has worked for a merchant bank, a stockbroking firm and in the audit and corporate finance divisions of international accounting firms. He is also a member of the Malaysian Institute of Accountants, Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia and Fellow of CPA Australia. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Melbourne.
  


Malaysian Accounting Standard Board (MASB)

Malaysian Accounting Standards Board (MASB)

The Malaysian Accounting Standards Board (MASB) is established under the Financial Reporting Act 1997 (the Act) as an independent authority to develop and issue accounting and financial reporting standards in Malaysia.

The MASB, together with the Financial Reporting Foundation (FRF), make up the frameworks for financial reporting in Malaysia. These frameworks comprises an independent standard-setting structure with representation from all relevant parties in the standard-setting process, including preparers, users, regulators and the accountancy profession.

The functions and powers of the MASB as provided under the Act are to:
v issue new accounting standards as approved accounting standards;
v review, revise or adopt  as approved accounting standards, existing accounting standards;
v amend, substitute, suspend, defer, withdraw or revoke any approved accounting standards in whole or in part;
v issue, approve, review, revise, amend, substitute, suspend, defer, withdraw or revoke any issues bulletin in whole or in part;
v issue, approve, review, revise, amend, substitute, suspend, defer, withdraw or revoke any statement of principles, any technical and other releases and any other document relating to financial reporting by whatever name called in whole or in part;
v sponsor or undertake development of possible accounting standards;
v collaborate with other national and international accounting standard-setters and monitor the development of other national and international accounting standards;
v participate in and contribute to the development of a single set of accounting standards for international use;
v conduct such public consultation as may be necessary in order to determine the contents of accounting concepts, principles and standards;
v develop a conceptual framework for the purpose of evaluating proposed accounting standards;
v make such changes to the form and content of proposed accounting standards as it considers necessary;
v monitor the operation of approved accounting standards to assess their continued relevance and their effectiveness; and
v to perform any other function conferred or imposed upon it by the Act or such other function as the Minister of Finance may prescribe by order published in the Gazette.


MISSION
The MASB's mission is to develop and promote high quality accounting and financial reporting standards that are consistent with international best practice for the benefit of users, preparers, auditors and the public in Malaysia. In a wider context, the MASB seeks to participate in and contribute to the development of a single set of financial reporting standards for international use.

In the pursuit of its mission, the MASB is guided by a clear set of policy objectives:
(a) to develop high quality, clear and enforceable national accounting and financial reporting standards that benefit users, preparers, auditors and the public.
(b) to participate in and contribute to the International Accounting Standard Board’s (IASB) standard-setting process in the development of a single set of accounting and financial reporting standards for international use.
(c) to promote the use and seek views on the application of accounting and financial reporting standards by way of engagement and dissemination of information to users, preparers, auditors and the public.
(d) to collaborate with other national standard-setters for the development of international accounting and financial reporting standards; and
(e) to promote and support research in the area of financial reporting, in particular, for emerging markets and Islamic markets.



MFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers

Accounting standard on revenue from contracts deferred by a year
         
The Malaysian Accounting Standards Board (MASB) confirmed today that the effective date of MFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers will be deferred to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2018, following the recent press release by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) confirming a one-year deferral of IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers. However, early application of MFRS 15 is still permitted.

As a result, the effective date for Transitioning Entities (TEs) to apply the Malaysian Financial Reporting Standards (MFRSs) will also be deferred to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2018.

The TEs are entities within the scope of MFRS 141 Agriculture and/or IC Interpretation 15 Agreements for the Construction of Real Estate, including their parents, significant investors and joint ventures. Generally, the TEs are entities in the real estate and agriculture industries that have been given the option to continue applying the Financial Reporting Standards Framework, the predecessor of the MFRSs Framework.

Reasons for the deferment
MFRS 15 was issued in September 2014 with the original effective date of 1 January 2017. MFRS 15 is word-for-word IFRS 15 (including the effective date), which was issued by the IASB in May 2014.

On 22 July 2015, the IASB announced its decision to defer the effective date of IFRS 15 by one year to 1 January 2018. This is mainly because on 30 July 2015, the IASB proposed some targeted amendments to IFRS 15. These proposed amendments are meant to aid implementation of IFRS 15 by clarifying some of the requirements, adding and amending illustrative examples and introducing additional practical expedients on transition.

Also, the deferral aligns the effective date of IFRS 15 with that of the US revenue standard (Topic 606). When Topic 606 and IFRS 15 were issued in 2014, they were fully converged, including the effective date. However, the effective date of Topic 606 was recently deferred by one year in response to stakeholders’ feedback. The IASB concluded that having the same effective date for IFRS 15 and Topic 606 is important for cost-benefit reasons, especially for group entities that have both IFRS and US reporting requirements. It will also ensure comparability of reporting results between IFRS and US reporting entities.

Given that the MFRSs are fully converged with the IFRSs, a parallel amendment is necessary to preserve the convergence of MFRS 15 with IFRS 15; and as such, the effective date of MFRS 15 will be deferred.

Notwithstanding the deferral, early application of the Standard is permitted. We believe entities that expect to be ready to implement MFRS 15 on its original effective date will welcome this option.

Deferral’s effect on TEs
The MASB has consistently used the effective date of MFRS 15 as the basis for setting the effective date for the TEs to apply the MFRSs. In the light of the IASB’s deferral of IFRS 15, the effective date for the TEs to apply the MFRSs will also be deferred to 1 January 2018.

MASB chairman Encik Mohamed Raslan Abdul Rahman explains, “A one-year deferral will be helpful for the TEs as it provides additional time to implement the internationally recognised framework. Furthermore, the quality of disclosure should improve as well. Nevertheless, the TEs ought to carefully consider adopting the MFRSs early so that their financial statements will receive the recognition they deserve.”

MASB executive director, Ms Tan Bee Leng further explains, “The formal amendment to IFRS 15, specifying the new effective date, is expected to be issued later this month. Once the IASB has issued the amendment, the MASB expects to issue a similar amendments to MFRS 15 by end of October 2015.”



Corruption in FIFA? Auditor saw nothing!

Despite longstanding suspicion of corruption, world soccer’s governing body has received a clean bill of financial health for 16 consecutive years from KPMG, one of the world’s top auditing, accounting and consulting firms.
No one has challenged the accuracy of the annual reports of the body, FIFA, which are prepared according to international accounting standards by KPMG’s office in Zurich, where FIFA is based. But that only heightens the puzzling disconnect between the different pictures that are emerging of FIFA as an organization: riddled with bribes and kickbacks in the view of prosecutors, yet spotless according to the outsider most privy to its internal financial dealings.

“It’s legitimate to raise questions about the effectiveness of the audits, given that the risks were already widely rumored,” said Barry Jay Epstein, a financial-reporting expert and certified public accountant who is a principal in Epstein & Nach, a consulting firm based in Chicago that specializes in forensic accounting. Mr. Epstein, who wrote a widely used professional handbook on accounting and auditing, added that if theJustice Department’s accusations of $150 million in bribes and kickbacksrelated to World Cup bidding and other soccer events “turn out to be founded, then analytically, something should have shown up” in KPMG’s audits “that would have required deeper investigation.”
Andreas Hammer, a spokesman in Zurich for KPMG’s Swiss offices, declined to comment, saying in an email that “as FIFA’s statutory auditor, we are bound by professional confidentiality and have to refrain from any comment regarding our client.”
As FIFA’s first and only outside auditor, KPMG has worked for the organization since 1999, one year after Sepp Blatter, who resigned on Tuesday as president just days after being re-elected to a fifth term, began his tenure. KPMG took on a client long criticized for its lack of transparency and its corporate governance issues.
But it is an important relationship for both sides. For FIFA, it means a member of the Big Four accounting club is signing off on its books. KPMG also audits, at FIFA’s request, dozens of FIFA member associations — 40 of them last year. “Having one of the big auditors of course helps to give some credibility to your accounts,” said Jean-Pierre Méan, an advisory council member at Transparency International Switzerland, part of a global anti-corruption organization.
Over its most recent four-year financial cycle, 2011 to 2014, FIFA had $5.7 billion in revenue, mostly from the sales of rights to marketing, licensing, television broadcasting and hospitality, and more than $5.4 billion in expenses. It has reserves of more than $1.5 billion. Referring to its “internal controls system,” or I.C.S., intended to root out fraud, FIFA wrote in its 2009 annual report that “communication with KPMG is extremely important for the members of the internal audit committee because KPMG as external auditors have a very detailed picture of the FIFA I.C.S. following the in-depth audits that they have performed.”
Roger Neininger, the board chairman of KPMG in Switzerland, took the podium last week at FIFA’s annual congress in Zurich, just two days after the United States Justice Department indicted 14 current and former senior FIFA officials and sports marketing executives on 47 counts of racketeering and corruption. Mr. Neininger has been the auditor-in-charge of FIFA’s annual report since 2011, though the 2014 report omits that title. His role at the closed-door sessions, to recommend that FIFA’s executive committee approve KPMG’s signoff on the year’s annual report, sent a clear signal: KPMG was standing by its client.
Accounting firms often contend that their audits are only as good as the information they receive from clients, but they are supposed to recognize patterns or anomalies that suggest they should dig a little deeper. A key element in the Justice Department’s case is a $10 million payment that prosecutors say was transferred in 2008 from FIFA to accounts controlled by a soccer official, Jack Warner, as a bribe in exchange for helping South Africa secure the right to host the 2010 World Cup.
Mr. Epstein said that while the $10 million payment could be insignificant, or immaterial in accounting terms, given FIFA’s size, it would not be immaterial in qualitative terms. “That’s something people would want to know about,” he said.
KPMG had questioned another payment a decade earlier. In a 1999 “Revised Audit Management Letter” sent to FIFA, KPMG noted an unusual payment in connection with the Confederations Cup — an important tournament involving soccer’s continental champions that is now held the year before the World Cup.
“To cover the excess expenditure at the Confederations Cup in Saudi Arabia, the organizer has made an additional payment of 470,000 Swiss francs,” the letter, obtained by the independent journalist Andrew Jennings, says in German. “The payment was authorized by the president of FIFA, but without the authorization of the finance committee or the executive committee.”
It is unclear to whom the payment was made or which Confederations Cup in Riyadh was involved — Saudi Arabia hosted them in 1995 and 1997, part of the four-year financial cycle covered in the 1999 letter. Even before the indictments, there was no shortage of potential red flags. In 2002, Michel Zen-Ruffinen, FIFA’s secretary general at the time, wrote an explosive report accusing Mr. Blatter and his lieutenants of extensive fraud. The report, parts of which were published in the Swiss news media, contended that from 1999 to 2002, FIFA, which was struggling financially, booked 336 million Swiss francs in revenue from its sale of marketing rights to the 2006 World Cup in Germany — an unusual move for an organization that at the time used accounting methods that recorded income when it was received, not in advance, according to accounting experts.
KPMG noted the move in its audit of the period. Mr. Zen-Ruffinen’s report added that FIFA had destroyed financial documents before 1998, a year before KPMG was hired.
In 2008, a trial in Zug, Switzerland, of former executives of International Sports and Leisure, a FIFA-affiliated marketing firm that had collapsed amid allegations of fraud and theft, fell apart after the group’s lawyers produced internal documents contending that FIFA was involved.
By 2012, FIFA named Michael J. Garcia, a prominent former federal prosecutor, as the lead investigator of its ethics committee. Mr. Garcia, who extended his inquiry into bidding practices for the 2018 World Cup in Russia and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, gave FIFA his final report last September but resigned from the role in December after FIFA released a redacted version that Mr. Garcia complained was erroneous and misleading.
And last November, a member of FIFA’s eight-person audit and compliance committee, Canover Watson, was charged in his native Cayman Islands with fraud and money laundering in connection with procurement of a card-swipe system for the public hospitals there. FIFA’s most recent annual report notes that Mr. Watson has “temporarily left the committee.”
“You’re looking for the tip of the iceberg in an audit,” Mr. Epstein said, adding that in KPMG’s work for FIFA, “the tip should have gotten the auditor’s attention sometime over the years.”