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Basics of Accounting & Finance Summer 2004: What Every Practicing Lawyer Needs to Know
Chair(s):
Claudia P. Spencer, Karen Kincaid Balmer, Howard Blumstein
Practice Area:
Accounting and financial reporting,
Corporate law,
Securities and other financial products
Published:
Jul 2004
i
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ISBN:
1402404794
PLI Item #:
3367
CHB Spine #:
B1439
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Table of Contents
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Front Matter
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Business Financial Records and Financial Information
Chapter 2. GAAP and the Basic Financial Statements
Chapter 3. GAAP and the Basic Financial Statements
Chapter 4. GAAP, GAAS and the Basic Financial Statements
Chapter 5. The Balance Sheet
Chapter 6. Balance Sheet
Chapter 7. Balance Sheets: Assets, Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Chapter 8. Income Statement
Chapter 9. Statement of Cash Flows
Chapter 10. Understanding the Statement of Cash Flows
Chapter 11. Cash is King — Understanding the Statement of Cash Flows
Chapter 12. Notes to the Financial Statements Overviews and Insights
Chapter 13. Case Studies
Chapter 14. Mini Case Studies
Chapter 15. What’s New in Accounting & Disclosure 2004
Chapter 16. Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud and Understanding Insolvency Risks
Chapter 17. The Impact of FAS 141, FAS 142 and Sarbanes-Oxley on Financial Reporting for Intellectual Property
Chapter 18. Prospectus: 6,000,000 Shares FormFactor Common Stock
Chapter 19. Prospectus: 4,000,000 Shares Quinton Common Stock
Chapter 20. How Lawyers Use Financial Information: Mergers, Acquisitions, Valuation and Other Transactions—And Their Impact on Reported Financial Results
Chapter 21. Taking and Defending Depositions of Accountants
Chapter 22. Financial Fraud—Case Studies II
Chapter 23. The SEC and the Lawyer-Client Relationship: A Revolution in the Making
Chapter 24. Liability for Securities Lawyers in the Post-Enron Era
Chapter 25. The Ethics of Document Destruction: Andersen Agonistes
Chapter 26. Lessons Not to Be Learned from Enron’s Collapse
Chapter 27. Class Action Communications: Ex Parte or Not?
Chapter 28. Corporate Counsel and the Unauthorized Practice of Law: “Special” is Not Necessarily Better
Chapter 29. The Attorney-Client Privilege: The Best of Times, The Worst of Times
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