PCAOB chair Jim Logothetis has been on the job since February 10—in finance parlance, more than a quarter. At the Institute of Management Accountants’ 2026 Accounting and Finance Conference in Tampa, Florida, earlier this month, he shared what he’s learned and his priorities for the board going forward. Reputational concerns. Logothetis raised concerns about the visibility and reputation of the PCAOB. During his first months on the job, he “was also surprised in a negative way, you might say, at the credibility of the organization,” he said, noting that that board has become too political. “Unfortunately, from what I can tell,” he said, “the organization, just like many regulators, has been politicized.” The PCAOB, he argued, needs to be apolitical and retain its focus on professional skepticism and what’s best for investors. Logothetis also said that “many people around the country, from politicians on down to preparers, don’t really know enough or much about the PCAOB.” The organization “should not be kind of a black box,” he said. To address this issue, he plans to increase stakeholder engagement with the board, noting that it recently solicited public comments on its strategic plan for the first time in its 24-year history. “We received 80, I would say, significant comment letters, and I have them all off my desk, and it was eye-opening,” he said, adding that he and his staff plan to, with the help of AI, summarize the comments and map them to a first draft of the strategic plan. The lack of technology investment by the PCAOB is a problem.—CV |