This course focuses on the use of specialists in financial reporting and the accounting areas where their input is often necessary. It helps CPAs recognize when to engage valuation, legal, actuarial, or tax experts to support management’s assumptions in complex or high-risk areas. The course covers transactions such as business combinations, impairments, share-based compensation, and legal or environmental contingencies. It also explains how to evaluate a specialist’s work, document key judgments, and respond to auditor expectations. This course provides lasting insight into the intersection of technical accounting and expert input, helping professionals navigate complexity with confidence.
Course Publication Date:
September 27, 2025
This course is available with
NO ADDITIONAL FEE if you have an active
self study membership or
all access membership or can be purchased for
$40.00!
Author: | Kelen Camehl |
Course No: | ACT-COMPSPEC-29005 |
Recommended CPE: | 4.00 |
Delivery Method: | QAS Self Study |
Level of Knowledge: | Overview |
Prerequisites: | None |
Advanced Preparation: | None |
Recommended Field of Study: | Accounting
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Learning Objectives
- Recognize circumstances where management may need to engage a specialist.
- Differentiate between the types of specialists commonly used in financial reporting.
- Identify the requirements with respect to evaluating a specialists qualifications.
- Distinguish between management’s responsibilities and the specialist’s role.
- Recognize accounting topics and transactions where specialist input is frequently applied.
- Recognize transactions that commonly require valuation specialist involvement.
- Identify key valuation assumptions that affect the measurement of various financial reporting areas.
- Identify accounting scenarios where use of a valuation report may be expected by auditors or regulators.
- Identify circumstances where legal counsel input is necessary to assess loss contingencies.
- Recognize the role of actuaries in measuring pension and postretirement benefit obligations.
- Determine when the use of a valuation specialist is appropriate in share-based payment arrangements.
- Recognize the importance of coordination between legal, tax, and accounting professionals.
- Recognize management’s responsibility to evaluate the appropriateness of a specialist’s work.
- Identify documentation practices that support the use of specialists in financial reporting.
- Determine the types of inquiries auditors may make regarding management’s use of a specialist.
- Recognize when and how auditors engage specialists.
- Distinguish between acceptable and unacceptable reliance on third-party reports.