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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Dave Dix
(512) 257-1605
daved1@nacva.com
AICPA CONTRACTS NACVA TO DEVELOP COURSE FOR CPA FORENSIC CREDENTIAL
EXAM
NEW YORK (August 31, 2010)—The American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants has engaged the National Association of
Certified Valuation Analysts to develop a course to help CPAs
prepare for the qualifying exam for the Certified in Financial
Forensics (CFF) credential.
“Approximately 4,300 CPAs have qualified for the CFF credential
since the AICPA began offering it in 2008,” said James Metzler,
AICPA vice president—small firm interests. “As more CPAs seek the
CFF credential and forensic accounting continues to grow as a
practice discipline, the AICPA is committed to ensuring that its
members are the most prepared and well-trained professionals in the
forensic accounting field. The new exam is a key element of our
commitment.”
NACVA will deliver a five-day course covering the eight areas of the
CFF credential’s body of knowledge: computer forensic analysis;
family law; valuation; calculation of economic damages; financial
statement misrepresentation; bankruptcy; insolvency and
reorganization; and fraud prevention, detection and response. NACVA
intends to launch the course in late 2010 following the first CFF
exam. It will be offered onsite at locations yet to be selected.
“The financial forensics discipline relies significantly on the
expertise and skills of the CPA,” said Parnell Black, CEO of NACVA.
“We are honored to have been selected by the AICPA to offer training
to its members who are preparing to sit for the exam as a step
toward acquiring the CFF credential.”
The course will be designed to prepare CPA practitioners in
financial forensics for the four-hour computerized CFF exam, which
will be mandatory to obtain the credential beginning September 1,
2010. The 2010 exam is scheduled for September 29–October 29, 2010.
Information may be found at
www.aicpa.org/cffexam.
The AICPA launched the CFF credential in 2008 after research among
users of forensic accounting services. The Institute surveyed 150
law firms, which are the primary clients of forensic accountants.
Three quarters of the respondents said they expected a forensic
accounting expert to have a specialized credential. More than half
said they preferred a CPA and would value the blend of a CPA license
and an AICPA credential.
The AICPA’s research found that CPAs represented 94 percent of
forensic experts hired over the previous two years.
According to Metzler, the Institute always intended to offer an
exam. The AICPA’s original plan was to begin administering the exam
after reaching the initial target of 3,500 credential holders, which
was projected to take three years. Because it met the target in less
than two years, the AICPA accelerated the launch date.
The AICPA estimates that 20,000 to 30,000 CPAs currently provide
forensic accounting services. “Our objective is to provide this
increasingly important segment of the accounting profession with a
comprehensive path to acquire the CFF credential,” Metzler said.
About NACVA
Headquartered in Salt Lake City, the National Association of
Certified Valuation Analysts (www.nacva.com) is a global,
professional association that delivers training from the nation’s
leading experts in consulting fields such as business valuation,
financial litigation forensics, forensic accounting, risk fraud
management, mergers and acquisitions, business and intellectual
property damages, fair value, healthcare consulting, and exit
strategies. Along with its training and certification programs,
NACVA offers a range of support services, reference materials,
software, and customized databases to enhance the professional
capabilities and capacities of its members.
About the AICPA
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (www.aicpa.org)
is the national, professional association of CPAs, with more than
360,000 CPA members worldwide in business and industry, public
practice, government, education, student affiliates and
international associates. It sets ethical standards for the
profession and U.S. auditing standards for audits of private
companies, non-profit organizations, federal, state and local
governments. It develops and grades the Uniform CPA Examination. The
AICPA maintains offices in New York, Washington, D.C., Durham, N.C.,
Ewing, N.J. and Lewisville, TX.
Media representatives are invited to visit the AICPA Online Media
Center at www.aicpa.org/press.
# # #
More information will be forthcoming from NACVA.
Sincerely,

—Parnell Black
Chief Executive Officer
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