The Phnom Penh Post

UK probes auditors of Thomas Cook as foreign branches fall

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BRITAIN launched an i n v e s t i g a t i o n o n Tuesday i nt o t he auditors who signed off on accounts for the nowbankrup­t holiday giant Thomas Cook, as the company’s French branch went into receiversh­ip and its Belgian division collapsed.

The Financial Reporting Council said in a statement that it will examine whether accountanc­y firm EY – which replaced PwC as Thomas Cook’s auditors in 2017 – acted properly in scrutinisi­ng its books.

“The FRC has commenced an investigat­ion into the audit by EY of the financial statements of Thomas Cook Group Plc for the year ended 30 September 2018,” it said.

The regulator “will keep under close review both the scope of this investigat­ion and the question of whether to open any other investigat­ion in relation to Thomas Cook, liaising with other relevant regulators to the fullest extent permissibl­e”.

If the watchdog’s probe uncovers any wrongdoing, it could spark a severe reprimand and a fine for those involved.

The FRC probe comes after a parliament­ary business committee launched its own inquiry on Thursday into Thomas Cook’s management conduct, pay, accounting and auditors, and regulation.

‘Serious candidates’

Also on Tuesday, the French arm of Thomas Cook said that a commercial court had placed it in receiversh­ip, and that “several serious candidates” had already shown interest in buying the company.

Thomas Cook France, which employs 780 people, had already declared insolvency last week in the wake of its parent company’s bankruptcy.

It said the court in Nanterre, outside Paris, had set a deadline of October 22 for potential takeover bids, and a new court hearing on November 5 to examine any offers.

“The goal is to ensure continued operations for the French subsidiary and rapidly find a takeover solution,” Thomas Cook France said.

No candidates have so far come forward publicly, and the number one French player, TUI France, declined to comment last week.

The French arm of Thomas Cook owns 172 travel agency shops generating annual revenue of € 425 million ($464 million), and the bankruptcy initially stranded some 10,000 French clients.

In neighbouri­ng Belgium meanwhile, a commercial court in Ghent declared the local travel agency business of Thomas Cook bankrupt, putting 500 jobs at risk.

Thomas Cook Retail Belgium is the group’s largest Belgian subsidiary and the fourth and final one to collapse in the wake of the parent company’s failure.

A thought for taxpayers

Debt-plagued Thomas Cook collapsed last week after a lengthy period of financial turmoil, leaving 22,000 staff jobless and 600,000 passengers of different nationalit­ies stranded around the world.

Britain’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) regulator said on Tuesday that it has now flown home 115,000 UK nationals out of the 150,000 who were left stranded.

Irish low-cost airline Ryanair on Tuesday urged closer regulation on the sector.

“The CAA has done a very good job,” said Ryanair chief marketing officer Kenny Jacobs. “There needs to be new and improved type of stress tests put in place.

“If an airline is weak financiall­y that airline and the shareholde­rs should be forced by the CAA to put reserves aside to cover the cost of repatriati­ng customers if they get to that situation.

“That’s not the case today and hence the UK taxpayers are the ones paying the bill.”

The Department of Transport expects that the cost of the repatriati­on operation will come to about £100 million ($124 million).

 ?? JAIME REINA/AFP ?? People leave the headquarte­rs of the British travel group Thomas Cook in Palma de Mallorca.
JAIME REINA/AFP People leave the headquarte­rs of the British travel group Thomas Cook in Palma de Mallorca.

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