Mint Delhi

‘Audit deficienci­es by accounting cos grow in latest inspection­s’

- Mark Maurer feedback@livemint.com

Several U.S. accounting giants had greater deficienci­es in their audits of public companies’ 2021 financial statements compared to the previous year, according to annual inspection reports released Wednesday by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB).

The regulator, which compiles its findings with a lag, inspected 215 audits conducted by the Big Four accounting firms in the U.S.—Deloitte, Ernst & Young, KPMG and Pricewater­houseCoope­rs—down from 220 a year earlier. Deloitte, EY and PwC had an average deficiency rate of about 24%, up from roughly 13% a year earlier.

The PCAOB inspects portions of selected U.S. publiccomp­any audits to evaluate firms’ state of compliance and assess the controls they use to test the quality of their work. A deficiency means the audit firm failed to obtain sufficient evidence to back up its opinion.

The PCAOB has been working to clear a backlog of inspection­s, but thus far its reports are arriving at a twoyear remove. KPMG’s auditdefic­iency rate was redacted from the PCAOB’s inspection report on the firm. It couldn’t be determined late Wednesday why it was redacted.

EY, Deloitte and PwC had previously disclosed these figures in their U.S. audit-quality reports. EY’s U.S. unit had a deficiency rate of 46% based on the 54 audits the PCAOB reviewed, well up from 21%. Its audit shortcomin­gs largely related to the testing of controls over revenue and related accounts, business combinatio­ns and inventory, the PCAOB said. In its December audit-quality report, EY called its 46% rate “unacceptab­le” and said it didn’t reflect the firm’s high standards.

Deloitte and PwC’s U.S. units had rates of 17% and 9% on 53 and 54 audits in 2021, respective­ly, up from 13% and 4% a year earlier.

These deficiency rates are “unacceptab­ly high,” PCAOB Chair Erica Williams said, referring to the inspection reports for the Big Four and another 10 firms. Looking at firms beyond just the Big Four, the PCAOB said in July that it expected deficienci­es in 40% of public-company audits covering 2021, up from 34% in 2020 and 29% in 2019.

But preliminar­y inspection results for 2022 audits show a “modest improvemen­t” in audit quality at some of the U.S. divisions of global accounting firms, Williams said on Wednesday.

“It will take time for the quality-control improvemen­ts to take root, and firms will need to be diligent to ensure they translate into improvemen­ts in engagement performanc­e,” she said.

The firms have said they are working to further strengthen audit quality. PwC is continuing to invest in its audit approach, people and technology, a U.S. spokeswoma­n said. In September, its U.S. unit said it would stop providing certain consulting work to its audit clients to avoid potential conflicts of interest.

KPMG remains focused on continuous­ly improving its audit approach, a U.S. spokesman said. EY’s U.S. unit began an in-depth review of its audit practice after facing its 2021 rate, a spokesman said.

“We have taken several transforma­tive actions to enhance audit quality and improve inspection results and are strengthen­ing our foundation to drive consistent execution across our practice,” he said.

Deloitte has made substantia­l, comprehens­ive investment­s to enhance audit quality, a U.S. spokeswoma­n said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? PwC, Deloitte and EY had an average deficiency rate of about 24%, up from roughly 13% a year earlier.
REUTERS PwC, Deloitte and EY had an average deficiency rate of about 24%, up from roughly 13% a year earlier.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India