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The AAO Weblog covers accounting issues and current events as they relate the practice of investment analysis.

 
 
Aug 31

Written by: Jack Ciesielski
8/31/2005 6:39 AM 

At the beginning of the month, I mentioned the SEC Advisory Committee on Smaller Public Companies and their effort to gather inputs about the rigors of regulatory life for corporate small fry.

The Committee was also "very interested" in hearing from investors. Hopefully they hear from them - but I also hope that they aren't simply mouthpiecing the same tripe they've heard from managements. So, I spent much of Monday offering my views through their questionnaire. It's not yet visible on the SEC's website, but I posted the whole shebang on the main Analyst's Accounting Observer site. If you're interested, you can get directly to the response here.

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It's official: the State of Maryland has declared August 26 to September 5 to be "the Eleven Best Days of Summer." For once I agree with them: it's State Fair time in Timonium, about ten minutes from my home. About an hour and a half last night was the perfect antidote to being cooped up in an air-conditioned office clacking away at a keyboard for days on end: familiar faces, not seen often enough; fair food like a smoked turkey drumstick and a frozen chocolate-covered banana; exhibits of prized crops and wonderful things you take for granted, like honey. And the smell: the aroma of baking funnel cakes, mixed with the smoke from the barbecue pits. It's a perfume that hits you once a year and reminds you that winter, with its sterile but pure air, is lurking in the coming weeks. The animal pens are another antidote: stroking a hairy four-legged prize winner is a welcome difference from stroking a plastic keyboard. But the smell of the animal pens does bring you back to earth: it's really close to the smell emitted from the whole big company/small company brouhaha now being stirred up by the AICPA.

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Pension & Other Benefit Plans: A Look Ahead


    Investors in firms with defined benefit pension plans always face the risk of suddenly being pushed farther back in line when it comes to being served their returns. Variability in plan assets and variability in benefit plan obligations are the reason: poor asset returns coupled with sinking interest rates always spell tough times for defined benefit plan funding. In that regard, this year’s asset returns combined with the Fed’s “Operation Twist” add up to “Operation Agony” for defined benefit pension plans. If trends continue along their current path, firms that may have anticipated moving to more realistic pension accounting - like Honeywell, AT&T and Verizon already have done - might forego that decision. It could be just too painful. 

    Pensions aren’t the only kind of benefit plan affected by Operation Twist. Other postemployment benefit (OPEB) plans share much the same accounting model as pensions, including the calculation of a projected benefit obligation that similarly incorporates a discount rate - one that will also be affected by Operation Twist. The net OPEB obligations were slightly less than pension obligations at the end of 2010, but also promise to grow in 2011. Investors perceive them as less threatening than pension obligations because they don’t require funding. Strangely, there are a number of firms that are recognizing income from these benefit plans - without ever creating a dime of cash for investors.

A recent edition of The Analyst’s Accounting Observer dissects these issues, and is available only to paid subscribers. A condensed version is available for free upon request. To receive it, send an e-mail to Brenda Rappold at brappold@accountingobserver.com, with “PENSIONS” in the subject line.

For information about subscribing to The Analyst’s Accounting Observer, click here.