Automated Accounting Systems and Procedures Handbook, 1995 Cumulative Supplement


Book Description

Automated accounting systems are responsible for the movement of billions of dollars every day. Describes the most advanced accounting systems, related support technologies, and procedures in use today and explains how they work using non-technical terms and definitions. Numerous charts, tables and examples prove extremely helpful. To accommodate small business needs, it provides a practical look at automation, demonstrating features generally automated in large corporations and explains how they may be used in different ways, or not used at all, by smaller companies.




Accountants' Handbook, 1994 Cumulative Supplement


Book Description

Known as the accountant's ``Bible,'' it has now been thoroughly revised and updated to reflect the latest financial reporting and corporate accounting procedures in one volume. Authoritative contributors from the Big Eight accounting firms cover all the essential topics and issues related to financial reporting with the emphasis on analysis and interpretation, rather than restatements of standards and pronouncements. In addition, it will be more practice-oriented with real-world examples and illustrations, and will now be supplemented annually, so you'll never be out of date or out of touch with the latest procedures in the accounting field.




Whitaker's Books in Print


Book Description




Model Rules of Professional Conduct


Book Description

The Model Rules of Professional Conduct provides an up-to-date resource for information on legal ethics. Federal, state and local courts in all jurisdictions look to the Rules for guidance in solving lawyer malpractice cases, disciplinary actions, disqualification issues, sanctions questions and much more. In this volume, black-letter Rules of Professional Conduct are followed by numbered Comments that explain each Rule's purpose and provide suggestions for its practical application. The Rules will help you identify proper conduct in a variety of given situations, review those instances where discretionary action is possible, and define the nature of the relationship between you and your clients, colleagues and the courts.




Law Books Published


Book Description




Behind the Swap


Book Description

Andrew DeJoy's Behind the Swap offers a middle office perspective on the risks and miscommunications in post-trade processing and provides a framework and solutions for a better approach. In August of 2020, Citibank made one of the worst mistakes in banking history: it accidently sent out almost $900 million of its own funds. Many of the recipients didn't give back the money. Citibank sued. And a federal court ruled that the recipients could keep the funds. Citibank's error is not surprising. The underlying contributors that led to the mistaken payment permeate the global financial services industry. Manual data entry, decades old technological infrastructure, inadequate training, and systems that can't interact with one another are just a few of the problems that face post-trade processing--the machinery behind financial markets. Unfortunately, years of neglect by regulators and financial institutions themselves has left this infrastructure needlessly complex, astoundingly inefficient, frequently inaccurate, and woefully inadequate for modern financial markets. The problems are easy to see but difficult to admit. For financial institutions, the current system costs billions of dollars each year in labor, systems maintenance, and lost funds. For regulators, the current system precludes the ability to track systemic risk. It also artificially inflates the stability of the global financial system. For lawyers and prosecutors, the current system allows ample opportunity for unlawful misconduct such as rogue trading and fraud. Andrew DeJoy's Behind the Swap examines the risks involved in post-trade processing in swaps and derivative markets and provides solutions to better control those risks. While Andrew doesn't claim to have all the answers, he does believe there is a better system that is both achievable and necessary.