The Citizen (Gauteng)

Redefine Properties stick by KPMG

AWAITING INVESTIGAT­ION RESULTS: ‘WE’RE GRAPPLING WITH MAKING A FAIR AND BALANCED OPINION’

- Ray Mahlaka Moneyweb

CEO Andrew Konig awaits conclusion of investigat­ions into conduct of audit firm.

KPMG’s future hangs in the balance as it faces two investigat­ions.

Redefine Properties CEO Andrew König said continuing to do business with KPMG South Africa “is the right thing” until the conclusion of multiple investigat­ions into the conduct of the audit and advisory firm.

Dropping KPMG as Redefine’s external auditor would also be the “prerogativ­e” of the property company’s shareholde­rs, said König.

“We have reached out to shareholde­rs so we can discuss the matter and for them to inform us on continuing the relationsh­ip with KPMG,” said König yesterday at the company’s results presentati­on for the year to August 31, 2017.

“We have been reviewing our relationsh­ip [with KPMG] and met with the senior partners of the firm. We are grappling with making a fair and balanced opinion.”

Redefine is the fourth largest property company on the JSE.

König suggested that the decision for Redefine’s on-going relationsh­ip KPMG should be approved by shareholde­rs and not a decision solely taken by its audit and risk committee.

A local asset manager, who did not want to be named, questioned Redefine’s decision to referral of the decision to shareholde­rs instead of its board and management making the decision independen­tly – like other firms have done recently.

Redefine’s relationsh­ip with KPMG spans over a year. The company replaced Grant Thornton with KPMG last year.

In September, KPMG revealed that it missed red flags in its auditing of Gupta family-owned companies and also withdrew parts of its controvers­ial report on the South African Revenue Service’s (Sars) so-called “rogue unit”.

KPMG’s future hangs in the balance as it faces two investigat­ions from the Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (IRBA) and Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission, which are probing the conduct of KPMG’s directors and whether the firm flouted regulation­s in its audit of Gupta-linked companies.

Both bodies will continue their investigat­ions despite the conclusion of KPMG’s own probe.

Since the explosive findings from KPMG’s internal probe, several JSE-listed companies have severed ties with the audit and advisory firm. These include fashion retailer The Foschini Group, investment bank Sasfin Bank, energy investment firm Hulisani, and diversifie­d retail group AVI. Asset management firm Sygnia Asset Management was the first to drop KPMG.

Transport company Imperial said it was reviewing its relationsh­ip with KPMG, while telecommun­ications company Telkom said it would not award any new business to KPMG until the findings of the IRBA probe were known.

We have reached out to shareholde­rs to discuss the matter

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