Financial watchdog extending its probe into Thomas Cook collapse
THE UK’s financial services watchdog has extended its investigation into the collapse of Thomas Cook.
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) announced that its enforcement division would now analyse financial statements by Thomas Cook’s auditors EY stretching back until September 2017.
Thomas Cook, the world’s oldest travel company, collapsed in September after failing to produce a funding lifeline, affecting 9,000 jobs.
A week after the company’s collapse, the FRC launched an investigation into EY’s audit of Thomas Cook’s accounts and said it would delve into statements for the period to September 30, 2018.
The watchdog said it will now extend its inquiries by a further year, more than two months after starting the process, but it did not reveal any of its current findings.
Business Secretary Andrea Leadsom said: “There are serious questions to be answered about the way in which Thomas Cook was managed and audited in the period prior to its collapse, so I welcome that the FRC are going to look into the years preceding 2019.”
EY started completing Thomas Cook’s audit work in 2017 after taking over from rival PwC. Over the past two years, the collapsed tour operator had three different finance chiefs as it failed to drive profitability and reduce the company’s significant debt burden.
In May, Thomas Cook reported a £1.5bn half-year loss and issued its third profit warning in a year in a set of accounts which also saw EY warn that there was “significant doubt” over whether the travel firm could continue as a going concern.
The FRC said: “The matters being investigated by the Financial Reporting Council concerning EY’s audit of the financial statements of Thomas Cook Group for the year ended September 30, 2018, will now include an investigation into EY’s audit of Thomas Cook’s financial statements for the year ended September 30, 2017.
“The FRC will continue to keep the scope of the investigations under close review.”
The FRC has the power to take EY to a tribunal if it finds evidence of wrongdoing over its two-year probe.