Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Sebi to bar auditors, if audit fails to give a true picture

- Jayshree P Upadhyay jayshree.u@livemint.com

A Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) panel on corporate governance is considerin­g whether an auditor should be barred from scrutinisi­ng the books of listed companies if an audit is ineffectiv­e and fails to catch financial discrepanc­ies.

It’s the first time the regulator is considerin­g an active monitoring of the role of auditors, which are currently governed by the Institute of Chartered Accountant­s of India (ICAI).

The debate on the role and responsibi­lity of auditors started again after some listed banks reported bad loans that diverged widely from the assessment of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Sebi sought clarificat­ions from the lenders on bad loan divergence­s and also sought informatio­n from their auditors.

“Of course we sought informatio­n from auditors. In fact, this is one of the areas that Sebi’s governance panel is examining -- that is, how Sebi can step into monitor the role of auditors. We can bar them from audit of the listed companies, if audit is found to be ineffectiv­e, or also from auditing any Sebi-regulated entities,” said S Raman, whole-time member, Sebi, in an interview.

Raman is set to demit office on September 6; he is the last Sebi member from the tenure of former chairman UK Sinha’s tenure, which ended on March 1.

On June 2, Sebi had set up a 21-member panel under the chairmansh­ip of Uday Kotak, executive vice chairman and managing director of Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd, to advise it on issues relating to corporate governance in Indian firms.

“All those associated with the preparatio­n and audit of financial statements, annual reports and other statutory prescripti­ons of listed companies need to be highly conscious of their expected roles in furthering credibilit­y in the governance architectu­re,” said S N Ananthasub­ramanian, practising company Secretary and former president of the Institute of Company Secretarie­s of India.

“In this context, the proposal to debar (errant auditors) seems not only a logical step towards that objective but also conforms sequential­ly to recent developmen­ts like continuati­on of NFRA (National Financial Reporting Authority) in Companies Act 2013 and reported crackdowns on profession­als following revelation­s of shell companies,” said Ananthasub­ramanian.

Sebi has debarred chartered Accountant­s under the powers granted to it by Section 11(B) of Sebi Act. Sebi is empowered to bar entities from the market if their conduct is harmful to the interests of investors.

“In recent years, Sebi has passed few widely-worded orders against chartered accountant­s and auditors. In a case, Sebi while debarring an auditor, considered the requiremen­ts of Accounting Standards and Guidance Notes issued by ICAI and gave a finding that these were not complied with. While Sebi has wide powers to regulate its own domain, a clear regulatory policy on what it would consider a fault in a profession­al’s good-faith judgement would be a welcome measure,” said Sumit Agrawal, founder, Suvan Law Advisors, who is also an ex-Sebi Official

The panel is expected to submit its report to Sebi by the end of September after which the report would be put up for public comments before Sebi finalises the new corporate governance rules. Corporate governance standards have been a subject of debate following the removal of Cyrus Mistry as Tata Sons Ltd chairman and Vishal Sikka’s resignatio­n as CEO of Infosys Ltd.

In both the cases Sebi had to step in to examine allegation­s of governance lapses, and the role of independen­t directors.

“In high profile cases it is difficult to take a stand without all the facts. In any given case, Sebi looks at the evolving situation before finally forming an opinion,” said Raman, without commenting on any particular case.

In addition the governance panel would also make recommenda­tions on disclosure and timely disseminat­ion of annual reports.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? It’s the first time Sebi is considerin­g an active monitoring of the role of auditors, which are currently governed by the ICAI
MINT/FILE It’s the first time Sebi is considerin­g an active monitoring of the role of auditors, which are currently governed by the ICAI

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