The Guardian Australia

KPMG fined £3m for ‘serious failings’ in Conviviali­ty audit

- Jasper Jolly

KPMG has been fined £3m for failures during its audit of the Bargain Booze owner Conviviali­ty and severely reprimande­d in the latest blow to its reputation.

The accounting regulator, the Financial Reporting Council (FRC), found “a serious lack of competence” in KPMG’s 2017 audit of the company, which collapsed within nine months of the accounts being signed off. The initial fine was £4.3m, but this was reduced because the firm admitted the failings.

The KPMG partner in charge of the audit, Nicola Quayle, was also fined £110,000 and given a severe reprimand. Quayle, who previously led KPMG’s Manchester office and sat on its UK board, will pay £80,850, after receiving a discount for admitting the failures.

Conviviali­ty was the owner of brands including Wine Rack and the high-end wine retailer Bibendum, and it also distribute­d drinks to major hospitalit­y chains including JD Wetherspoo­n, Yates and Slug and Lettuce.

It was worth £500m and had 4,000 staff in March 2018, but by early April it had collapsed into administra­tion after investors realised that its series of acquisitio­ns had left it overextend­ed.

It is the latest in a string of audit scandals for KPMG. It has also admitted misconduct over its audit of Carillion, the government contractor that went bust in 2018.

A disciplina­ry tribunal heard on Tuesday that the partner leading that audit was deliberate­ly trying to portray himself as negligent to avoid a charge of misconduct, according to counsel for another member of the audit team. The partner denied the allegation and denies misconduct.

KPMG also received a near-record fine of £13m for misconduct in August related to a conflict of interest in the sale of the bed company Silentnigh­t to a private equity firm.

The FRC said “KPMG should have been more profession­ally sceptical” of Conviviali­ty’s claims to have somehow exceeded earnings targets at the last minute. It also failed to check adequately for fraud and failed to obtain evidence of the company’s claims across five separate areas, the regulator said.

The deputy executive counsel to the FRC, Claudia Mortimore, said: “The audit failings in this case were serious, spanned several significan­t areas of the financial statements and related to a number of fundamenta­l auditing standards including the requiremen­t to obtain sufficient appropriat­e audit evidence, apply sufficient profession­al scepticism, and prepare proper audit documentat­ion. The sanctions reflect the seriousnes­s of the failings.

“The sanctions also reflect the poor regulatory track record of each of the respondent­s and are intended to enhance the quality and reliabilit­y of future audits.”

The regulator also found, however, that the failures were not “intentiona­l, dishonest, deliberate or reckless”.

The chief executive of KPMG in the UK, Jon Holt, said: “I’m sorry that our work wasn’t good enough in this instance. I am committed to resolving, and learning from, our past cases and this developmen­t marks another step forward in dealing with these matters. We have fully cooperated with the FRC throughout their investigat­ion.”

 ?? Photograph: Reinhard Krause/Reuters ?? KPMG has also admitted misconduct over its audit of Carillion and received a near-record fine for misconduct in the sale of the bed firm Silentnigh­t.
Photograph: Reinhard Krause/Reuters KPMG has also admitted misconduct over its audit of Carillion and received a near-record fine for misconduct in the sale of the bed firm Silentnigh­t.

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