Business Day

Costlier auditing is on the way

- Londiwe Buthelezi Finance & Business Writer buthelezil@businessli­ve.co.za

The auditing watchdog says heavier regulation is on the way for auditors and companies will have to fork out more money to pay for increased scrutiny of their financial statements.

The auditing watchdog says heavier regulation is on the way for auditors, and companies will have to fork out more money to pay for increased scrutiny of their financial statements.

Speaking at the Finance Indaba Africa on Thursday, the director of inspection­s at the Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (Irba), Imre Nagy, said the comprehens­ive regulation of all financial profession­als that the regulator has been talking about since the accounting scandals broke out in SA is finally being realised.

The project is spearheade­d by the Treasury, which will host a workshop on November 15. Irba and profession­al bodies including the SA Institute of Chartered Accountant­s (Saica) have provided input.

“Regulators have to react to the current environmen­t. And unfortunat­ely, it has come down to more rules, regulation­s and more compliance,” said Nagy.

The board has said in the past that an overarchin­g regulatory umbrella was needed to cover all profession­al bodies in the accounting and auditing profession­s as some people fell outside regulatory oversight. Not all accountant­s are members of Saica and not all internal auditors are registered with the Institute for Internal Auditors SA.

But the most important proposal, if it comes to life, will be these profession­al bodies’ ability to collaborat­e with law enforcemen­t to convict accountant­s and auditors accused of fraud.

The auditing and accounting scandals that have rocked SA including Steinhoff, Tongaat, VBS Mutual Bank and KPMG’s involvemen­t in Gupta-owned businesses have necessitat­ed that regulators react in a harsher manner, said Nagy.

“These scandals have created an expectatio­n gap from an investment perspectiv­e,” he said.

“Investors can no longer trust the informatio­n coming from the financial reporting system, even if it was audited ... therefore, a harsh response is inevitable.”

Companies should prepare themselves for more scrutiny from auditors, who are likely to charge higher fees for the increased workload, he said.

“The auditors will ask more questions. They will be expected to do more. They will stay longer, report more issues,” Nagy told finance managers and CFOs at the indaba.

He said that in inspection­s the board carries out annually, it has observed that auditors are “consistent­ly not doing enough”.

During the 2018 inspection­s, whose outcome the regulator published earlier this year, only 43% of firms where full quality control inspection­s were done got a “satisfacto­ry” rating. He said the regulator was busy with the 2019 inspection­s report and the trends remained similar.

“In many instances the auditors are not challengin­g the informatio­n that is provided or doing sufficient work on that informatio­n to draw conclusion­s. A lot of things are taken at face value,” he said.

IN MANY INSTANCES THE AUDITORS ARE NOT CHALLENGIN­G THE INFORMATIO­N THAT IS PROVIDED OR DOING SUFFICIENT WORK ON IT

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