Western Daily Press

Patisserie Valerie auditor fined £2.3m over failures

- SIMON NEVILLE business@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

THE auditors of collapsed cake chain Patisserie Valerie missed red flags, failed to question management properly and showed a serious lack of competence, according to regulators.

The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) made its findings against accounting giant Grant Thornton and auditor David Newstead, handing them fines of £2.34 million and £87,750 respective­ly.

Investigat­ors looked at three audits in 2015, 2016 and 2017 prior to the chain’s collapse in 2018, with the loss of 900 jobs and a police investigat­ion into fraud allegation­s.

The FRC said a fine against Grant Thronton would have been £4 million, but was adjusted for “exceptiona­l levels” of cooperatio­n.

But the company must now report annually to the regulator for three years to show what efforts it is making to improve its audits and change its culture.

A so-called “Severe Reprimand” was also issued and the company has agreed to pay the FRC’s costs for the investigat­ion.

Mr Newstead, who carried out the work for Grant Thornton, was given a three-year ban from carrying out audits or signing off audit reports.

Both accepted there had been failures in parts of their audit work.

The FRC said: “The breaches reveal a pattern of serious lapses in profession­al judgment, failures to exercise profession­al scepticism, failures to obtain sufficient appropriat­e audit evidence and/or to prepare sufficient audit documentat­ion.”

Claudia Mortimore, deputy executive counsel to the FRC, said: “This decision notice sets out numerous breaches of relevant requiremen­ts across three separate audit years, evidencing a serious lack of competence in conducting the audit work.

“The audit of Patisserie Holdings Plc’s revenue and cash in particular involved missed red flags, a failure to obtain sufficient audit evidence and a failure to stand back and question informatio­n provided by management.”

The company collapsed and was revealed to have been overstatin­g its accounts for years.

Following administra­tion, the chain was found to have overstated its cash position by £30 million and failed to disclose overdrafts of nearly £10 million.

Heavy cost-cutting to survive had seen the company remove key ingredient­s, including butter, replacing it with cheaper margarine in its products.

It led to several arrests for fraud and an investigat­ion by the Serious Fraud Office.

A spokespers­on for Grant Thornton said the company has invested significan­tly in audit practice since the scandal.

He added: “We have cooperated fully with the FRC and acknowledg­e the investigat­ion’s findings relating to our audits in 2015-2017.

“We regret the quality of our work fell short of what was expected of us in this instance.”

A civil case had previously been launched against Grant Thornton by liquidator­s at FRP Advisory, claiming the auditor was negligent.

The spokespers­on said: “We will continue to rigorously defend the civil claim brought by Patisserie Valerie’s liquidator­s, which ignores the board’s and management’s own failings in detecting the sustained and collusive fraud which took place.

“We recognise that there were shortcomin­gs in our audit work; however, our work did not cause the failure of the business.”

 ?? Nick Ansell ?? Patisserie Valerie collapsed in 2018 with the loss of 900 jobs
Nick Ansell Patisserie Valerie collapsed in 2018 with the loss of 900 jobs
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