www.expressindia.com - Weather | Horoscope | Stocks | RSS
expressindia web city
HomeBlogsCricketAstrology TendersClassifieds Reader Comments Hotels
Sign In / Register | Archive
Expressindia » Story

PwC hit with record fine for audit failure

Font Size

Agencies

Posted: Jan 06, 2012 at 1035 hrs IST

London Bad news about its 'ethical' approach to business is hounding PwC non-stop.

Top auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) has been fined a record 1.4 million pounds in Britain for wrongly telling local regulators for seven years that JPMorgan Securities was keeping client money safe.

The successful case brought by the Accountancy and Actuarial Discipline Board (AADB) is the latest sign of how regulators are taking a harder line on auditors, seen by policymakers as being too soft on banks in the run-up to the financial crisis.

The AADB said PwC, one of the world's Big Four auditors, which check the books of nearly all blue-chip companies, admitted it failed to obtain sufficient appropriate evidence to report that JPMorgan Securities complied with strict client money rules spanning several years.

Most of the client money from futures and options trading was being daily swept into interest-bearing, unsegregated accounts overnight at JPMorgan Chase bank, the firm's parent, the AADB said.

In June 2010 the UK Financial Services Authority (FSA)slapped a record 33.32 million pound fine on JPMorgan Securities for failing to keep client money separate at all times from the firm's money over a seven-year period to July 2009.

Sums ranging between $1.9 billion and $23 billion of client money were being held in unsegregated accounts that would have been at risk of loss had the lender become insolvent, the FSA said at the time.

On Friday the AADB said an independent tribunal found that PwC's misconduct was very serious.

The tribunal would have fined PwC 2 million pounds but reduced the penalty because the auditor had cooperated. The tribunal also made PwC pay the AADB's costs in investigating and prosecuting the case.

SURPRISED AND CONCERNED

The AADB had proposed a 6 million pound fine, while PwC had suggested to the tribunal the fine should be at the lower end of a 500,000 to 1 million pound range.

It's an appropriate penalty, given the framework the tribunal had to deal with, Tom Martin, AADB executive counsel, told Reuters.

Sanctions are being reviewed, however, as part of updating the Financial Reporting Council, the regulatory umbrella group to which the AADB belongs.

We think there may be a time for debate about the level of sanctions for firms the size of the Big Four, Martin said.

The tribunal appeared to call for further action.

We wish to comment that we have been surprised and concerned that no partner at PwC has been named in relation to this matter or proceeded against by the (AADB's) Executive Counsel, the tribunal said in its ruling.

Martin said the AADB planned to take no further action against PwC in the JPMorgan Securities case.

Barclays was fined 1.1 million pounds in January last year for client money rules breaches, and the AADB is probing PwC's role as auditor.

PwC chalked up gross revenues of $29.2 billion in the financial year that ended June 30, 2011.

The complaint against PwC focuses on its reports to the FSA for the seven years ended Dec. 31, 2001 to Dec. 31, 2008. The segregation error came to light on July 8, 2009.

The safety of client money was thrust into the spotlight in September 2008 when U.S. bank Lehman Brothers went bust. The AADB is probing auditor Ernst & Young's role in Lehman's failure to hand back client money in Britain.

Following Lehman's demise, the FSA set up a team of nearly 40 staff to monitor client money rules, and its record fine on JPMorgan Securities is one of seven fines for breaches.

Britain's biggest fine for an auditor had been 1.2 million pounds in 1999, also for PwC, in relation to the failings of Coopers & Lybrand, which later merged with Price Waterhouse to form PwC, in its work on the accounts of the late Robert Maxwell's group of companies.

Discuss this story on expressindia forums
Post Comments
Name* Email ID*
Subject* Country*
Message*
Characters remaining
 
TERMS OF USE: The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
I agree to the terms of use.

Latest News

Business

Showbiz

Sports

Bihar minister’s husband 'beats' Dalit women

Paedophiles should be castrated: Court

Lokayukta unearths Rs 5 crore assets from MP engineer

Ahead of marriage, man 'drugged, sterilised'

Now, Mayawati dons ‘bua’ robe

Delhi trader, who killed self, key link in encounter case

NCTC: Narendra Modi fires a stinker to PM

More
© 2011 The Indian Express Limited. All rights reserved
Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Express Group | Site Map