
Britain’s audit watchdog has asked the top seven accountancy firms to press ahead with separating the running of their audit and consultancy services without waiting for a change in the law, reported Reuters.
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) told the firms it wants operational separation to improve audit quality and market resilience.
Last April, Britain’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) recommended the move to stop conflicts of interest at EY, KPMG, PwC, and Deloitte, the “Big Four” accountancy firms that dominate audits of major companies worldwide.
The FRC stated Mazars, BDO, and Grant Thornton were also sent a letter spelling out its expectations.
Regulators worry that firms could be tempted to go soft on audits to get more lucrative consultancy work. The CMA recommendation needs legislation to make it mandatory, which is unlikely until later in 2020.
The CMA proposed separate management, accounts, remuneration, chief executive, and board for the audit arm, but it still allows auditors to draw on non-audit expertise of the wider company.
However, it stops short of a call from lawmakers to break up the Big Four, and the business ministry has yet to say if it will put the recommendation into law at a time when the government is keen to avoid damaging Britain’s competitiveness in financial services.
Claire Lindridge, the FRC’s director of audit firm monitoring and supervision, said the aim is to move the largest firms to operational separation faster than can be achieved through legislation.
“The FRC’s focus is to ensure audit firms put audit quality front and centre, with new independence and financial transparency guidelines to support this,” Lindridge said.
“We expect the firms to put in place independent governance for the audit practice and ensure that the audit practice is appropriately ring fenced from the rest of the firm so that financial results are clear and transparent.”
Full Content: Reuters
Want more news? Subscribe to CPI’s free daily newsletter for more headlines and updates on antitrust developments around the world.
Featured News
Australia’s Major Supermarkets Face Scrutiny Over Profit Margins Amid Rising Prices
Mar 21, 2025 by
CPI
Fired FTC Commissioners Warn of Potential White House Influence Over Mergers
Mar 20, 2025 by
CPI
Dr. Matthew Backus Joins Compass Lexecon as an Affiliate
Mar 20, 2025 by
CPI
UK to Boost Broadband Competition While Capping Openreach Charges, Says Ofcom
Mar 20, 2025 by
CPI
Singapore Competition Watchdog Yet to Receive Formal Notification on Grab-GoTo Merger
Mar 20, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Self-Preferencing
Feb 26, 2025 by
CPI
Platform Self-Preferencing: Focusing the Policy Debate
Feb 26, 2025 by
Michael Katz
Weaponized Opacity: Self-Preferencing in Digital Audience Measurement
Feb 26, 2025 by
Thomas Hoppner & Philipp Westerhoff
Self-Preferencing: An Economic Literature-Based Assessment Advocating a Case-By-Case Approach and Compliance Requirements
Feb 26, 2025 by
Patrice Bougette & Frederic Marty
Self-Preferencing in Adjacent Markets
Feb 26, 2025 by
Muxin Li