-
Audit
In our firm we respond to the demands of our customers. We have modern methodologies and audit techniques operating in the best interests of your organization.
-
Statutory Audit
Audit services of the firm have been designed to support you to meet the challenges involved in managing risks, resources and information.
-
External Audit
The external audit service aims to express an independent opinion regarding the fairness of the financia!statements of the companies or certain business areas in which we use previously agreed procedures.
-
Managerial and Result External Audit
Our work consists of the execution of the defined procedures to review the accounting information and issue reports and documents.
-
Taxes
We work with our clients during all their processes to achieve an excellent statutory clase year, in order to optimize the taxes payment and ease the tax burden.
-
Transfer Pricing
The laws surrounding transfer pricing are becoming ever more complex, as tax affairs of multinational companies are facing scrutiny from media, regulators and the public.
-
Legal Services
Our legal advice involves professional lawyers, specialized in different fields.
-
Diagnosis and implementation of Full and SME IFRS
Servicio de Diagnóstico e implementación de NIIF plenas y NIIF para las PYMES.
-
Training and updating in IFRS
Services of Training and updating in IFRS
-
Calculation of accounting estimates under IFRS
Services of Calculation of accounting estimates under IFRS
-
Valuation of financial instruments
Services of Valuation of financial instruments
-
Advice on specialized topics
Services of Advice on specialized topics
-
IFRS advice for public sector entities
Services of IFRS advice for public sector entities
-
Preparation of financial statements and disclosures
Services of Preparation of financial statements and disclosures
-
Sarbanes-Oxley Service Audit (SOX)
Only those who have clearly structured numbers and a good view of their business, can identify weaknesses and opportunities early enough to react on time to events in their environment.
-
Audit of Organization
In order to help the service organization and its users to establish a reliable and standard process for the service organization's reports, we offer the following services:
-
IT Audit
IT Audit Services help the Organization manage risks and controls related to IT implementation and use to achieve business financial, operational, and regulatory objectives.
-
Computer Security
Cybersecurity frames a set of tools, policies, security safeguards, guidelines, risk management methods, actions, training and in summary a series of practices that can be used to protect the organization's assets and users in cyber-environment.
-
Performance Tests
Our service focuses on determining the speed at which a task is performed under particular working conditions on a specific information or application system.
-
Audit Security Social
As part of Social Security policies and strategies in Colombia, pensions and health are fundamental workers' rights, for which specialized support is required to guarantee access to these rights, in a transparent, equitable and the law.
-
BCP Services
We are certified by DRI International as Business Continuity Plans Consultant, CBCP and with training and certification as internal auditor in SGS, ISO 2005: 27001..
-
SAP Auditing and Computer Security
We have certified experts in security and auditing SAP in R / 3, CRM, BW. Our approach allows us to perform in SAP
-
Corporate Risk Management
This regulatory environment seeks to mitigate the risks and uncertainties of the banking industry, also responding to economic pressures and investor expectations.
-
Operational Improvement
Process management, within which operational improvement is framed, can be defined as a way of focusing the work, where the continuous improvement of the activities of an organization is sought through the identification, selection, description, documentation and continuous improvement of the processes. Any activity or sequence of activities that are carried out in the different business units, constitutes a process and as such, must be managed.
-
Change Management
Change management is the process, through tools and techniques, to manage the transition to a new reality, trying to make the people involved able and willing to work in the new defined context and achieve the expected results.
-
Business Intelligence and Analysis
Business intelligence acts as a strategic factor for an organization, generating a potential competitive advantage, which is none other than providing privileged information to respond to business problems.
-
Due diligence
Due Diligence is a term, usually used in the field of business acquisitions, to refer to the process of finding information about an organization.
-
Valuations
The valuation of a company is not an exact science and can vary depending on the type of business and the reason.
-
Financial accounting
Only those who have clearly structured numbers and a good view of their business, can identify weaknesses and opportunities early enough to react on time to events in their environment.
-
Tax and legal compliance
The tax authorities constantly keep entrepreneurs and freelancers on alert, with tax issues taking part as a crucial role in almost all business decisions.
-
Payroll
Payroll is one of the most challenging responsibilities that a company faces every year. Our service fulfill the client internal policies, understands the corporate strategic planning and focus on the record of the received newness.
Dominic King asks how much we should read into national accounting statistics
The second quarter of 2014 brought a raft of very cheery economic news. The pace of growth in China kicked back up to 7.5% following a mini-stimulus from the government, which included speeding up infrastructure project approvals, tax relief and credit easing. The United States roared back after a particularly bitter winter to post 4.0% growth (at the annual rate). Spain was buoyed by news that growth had accelerated to 0.6% (from the previous quarter) and the unemployment rate has started to fall.
But how much should we read into the GDP numbers? In the years following the financial crisis, the quarterly release became a bizarre battleground in many developed economies where the success or failure of economic policy was defined by which side of zero the growth figure emerged on. But the first estimates are calculated when fewer than 50% of business returns have been received. The figures are constantly being revised, so there is more confidence in subsequent releases, but the bulk of the noise from politicians and the media comes from the first estimate. Calculating GDP is also a notoriously difficult task. Government statisticians in Nigeria were pleased to announce earlier this year that their economy had grown by 89% overnight, after output was rebased to include sectors such as telecommunications and the film industry.
Statistical agencies in the developed world can justifiably claim to provide more accurate data but keeping pace with advances in technology and the digital economy is as tough for statisticians as it is for regulators. The UK statistics agency, the ONS, recently announced plans for a change in its national accounting methodology which will double the savings ratio; the United States underwent a similar exercise last year, adding 3% to the size of its economy. Jonathan Haskel, professor of economics at Imperial College Business School, says: “the ONS is probably doing the best it can.” Hardly a ringing endorsement.
Whether GDP figures mean much to those whose salaries have failed to keep pace with inflation over recent years or whose benefits have been cut is also debateable. Venezuela recently trumpeted growth of 1.2% for 2013, which must have seemed a poor joke to the thousands unable to buy food staples due to foreign exchange controls introduced by the government; the very controls which restrict imports giving the rather disingenuous impression of rising wealth.
But animal spirits are a curious thing: a positive economic growth trend may give businesses the confidence to take a risk; to invest in that piece of machinery, make that acquisition, develop that new product or hire that new person. Consumers may be inspired to buy that car or take out that mortgage expecting their wages to keep pace. What looks increasingly like a house price bubble in London and the southeast of the UK has its origins in the raft of positive economic data produced over recent months as much as it does in the lack of new construction and the influx of foreign capital.
The release of GDP data therefore has ramifications beyond the realms of economists and politicians. Positive news can boost the spending plans of households and businesses, driving growth and becoming self-fulfilling; a virtuous cycle you might call it. For now the global economy seems to be moving onto a more sustainable footing (despite pockets of conflict and the perennial spectre of the eurozone crisis) with business investment and consumer spending creeping upwards. Long may the good news continue.