Further probe for Fonterra audit work
Auditing regulator the Institute of Chartered Accountants has referred a complaint about PwC’s auditing of Fonterra accounts to its professional conduct committee after an investigation.
This follows one of Fonterra’s biggest shareholders, Colin Armer, in 2019 taking his concerns about Fonterra’s shock asset writedowns that year, and its 2015-19 financial statements, to the Financial Markets Authority (FMA).
The FMA yesterday said its investigation into the timing of the writedowns on Fonterra’s Beingmate and China Farms had turned up no evidence warranting action against New Zealand’s biggest business.
But the FMA referred the audit aspect of the complaint to the Institute of Chartered Accountants (NZICA), which told the Herald that as a result of its own investigation, the matter had been referred to its professional conduct committee.
In the 2019 full year, Fonterra posted asset writedowns and accounting adjustments of $826 million and a net loss of $605m.
About $4 billion — representing 5 per cent of dairy farm equity in New Zealand — was wiped off the balance sheets of Fonterra’s
10,000 farmer-owners in 2018 and 2019, according to calculations by shareholder watchdog the Fonterra Shareholders’ Council.
At the time of his complaint, Armer said shareholders had been “badly let down” by the co-operative’s leaders, the council and auditor PwC.
Armer also asked the FMA to investigate Fonterra directors’ calculations on executive performance pay, and why they were not independently audited.
PwC had been Fonterra’s auditor since the dairy exporter’s formation in 2001. It surrendered the contract in 2019 after pressure from shareholders, including Armer, who claimed it was too close to the Fonterra board. Two of Fonterra’s directors, Bruce Hassall and Brent Goldsack, are former PwC partners.
The chairman of the Fonterra Shareholders’ Fund, the listed entity set up by Fonterra in 2012, is former PwC chairman John Shewan.
A PwC spokesperson said: “This matter is ongoing and we continue to work with NZICA.” Armer has been approached for comment.
The FMA said its inquiries followed complaints about the timing of the accounting writedowns relating to Beingmate Baby and Child Food Co Ltd and China Farm assets. The values of these, and other, assets were restated in a Fonterra market announcement in August 2019.
Before these inquiries, the FMA said it had also reviewed Beingmate’s valuation in Fonterra’s 2017 financial statements and China Farms’ valuation in its 2018 financial statements. “In the context of these various inquiries, the FMA has spent considerable time seeking to assess the reasonableness and supportability of forecasts used, and assumptions applied, in valuing parts of Fonterra’s business and related disclosures,” the authority said.
“From September 2017 to April 2018, the FMA engaged with Fonterra on its valuation of Beingmate for the year ended 31 July 2017. The engagement focused primarily on the base share price and the premium applied in the valuation of this investment.
“Fonterra wrote down the Beingmate investment by $405m in its half-year financial statements for the period ended 31 January
2018, and enhanced its disclosures relating to the key inputs and assumptions, including the sensitivity of the value of the investment to changes in key assumptions.”
The FMA said it engaged with Fonterra regarding its valuation of China Farms before the release of Fonterra’s 2018 financial statements. As part of this engagement, the FMA reviewed the calculations and assumptions used by Fonterra management in valuing these assets.