(Reuters) -
The "Big Four" global auditors could be broken up, leaving them
susceptible to takeovers if radical European Union plans to boost competition
go ahead, a UK auditing official said on Tuesday.
EU Internal
Market Commissioner Michel Barnier is due to publish a draft law in November to
curb what he sees as a conflict of interest when auditors check the books of
and supply lucrative consultancy services to the same customer.
Auditors,
KPMG, Ernst & Young, Deloitte and PwC, audit nearly all big companies in
the world, often serving the same clients for decades.
A copy of
Barnier's draft law seen by Reuters proposes that auditors be banned from
offering consultancy services to the companies they audit, or even banned from
consulting altogether -- a move that could force the firms to split their
operations.
"Breaking
up the Big Four audit firms would make them more susceptible to be taken over
by emerging Chinese firms," a UK audit official said on Tuesday on
condition of anonymity due to the sensitivities involved.
Barnier's
spokeswoman said he has made it clear that the audit sector displayed clear
failings during the crisis, giving banks a clean bill of health just before
they were rescued.
He has
trailed his plans for a year and the industry had hoped they would be watered
down by the time he formally proposed them next month.
"To
reinforce independence and professional skepticism, the prohibition of the
provision of non-audit services to the audited entities and even the
prohibition of the provision of non-audit services in general would effectively
address this issue," the draft said.
"Better
audits and more informative audit reports will enhance confidence in the
markets while also informing stakeholders of any problems with regards to any
particular entity," the draft added.
The EU
plans go much further than the United States, another major base for the Big
Four, where the standard setter PCAOB is mulling requiring firms to switch
auditors regularly, but has stopped short of recommending audit-only firms.
BREAK UPS
Deloitte
said it supports improving audit quality but rejects joint audits, mandatory
rotation and tendering, and a complete ban on non-audit services.
Rolf
Nonnemmacher, co-chairman of KPMG Europe, said the reform goes as far as a
breakup of the best performing firms.
"The
implementation of these proposals would lead to a massive reduction in quality
of audits, to the detriment of companies. In addition this would impose high
costs on companies," Nonnemmacher said.
Ernst &
Young had no immediate comment, while PWC said there was no evidence that the
radical measures would improve audit quality.
However,
auditor Grant Thornton, which along with peer BDO has tried to end the
stranglehold of the Big Four, welcomed Barnier's plans.
"While
we believe there could be some implementation issues, we still applaud what the
Commissioner is attempting to achieve," a Grant Thornton spokesman said.
Accounting
officials believe the Big Four would be forced to choose between auditing or
consultancy.
"It
would certainly mean a different profession," said Michael Izza, chief
executive of the UK accounting body ICAEW.
The ACCA,
another UK accounting body, said it was unclear whether imposing extensive
rules and curbs was the best way to promote independence and skepticism.
The
European Parliament, which will have the final say with EU states, has broadly
backed the plans.
Auditing
industry officials estimate that 28-30 percent of global revenues come from
statutory audits, with about 18 percent from non-audit services provided to the
same audit client. This means that about half of total revenues is earned from
providing consultancy services to clients which are not being audited as well.
Britain, as
home to the Big Four's European base, is likely to oppose some of Barnier's
more radical proposals though its Office of Fair Trading said in July a
full-blown competition probe into the sector is warranted.
Accounting
officials say such a probe would become redundant if Barnier's draft makes it
onto the statute book.
"If I
was the UK Competition Authorities I would be inclined to leave this up to
Europe. It's not a UK issue, it's actually a global issue," the auditing
official said.
Other
elements of the draft regulation include:
- Regular
dialogue between auditors and their regulators about the firms they audit, a
move aimed largely at banks;
- A
company would have to change or "rotate" auditors every nine years to
end the custom of decades-long auditing by the same firm;
- A ban on
covenants whereby banks insist that a company receiving a loan must be audited
by one of the Big Four;
- Introduction of "joint audits," so that the Big Four share auditing
work with smaller rivals. Would apply to companies whose balance sheet is above
1 billion euros;
- The
European Securities and Markets Authority to play a coordinating role in
supervising auditors in the EU;
- Making international auditing standards mandatory.
(Reporting
by Huw Jones; Additional reporting by Juliane von Reppert-Bismarck in Brussels,
Kathrin Jones in Frankfurt and Dena Aubin in New York; Editing by Erica
Billingham and Helen Massy-Beresford)
Related Article:
Not all
auditors get a look in with the big multinationals
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.