Business Day

EY expects others to copy its planned split

- Huw Jones

Splitting EY into accounting and consultanc­y businesses will help pay rising technology bills and “inevitably” be copied by rival Big Four firms, predicts a top EY executive.

Andy Baldwin, global managing partner, said EY is holding roadshows to explain a “compelling case” for the company’s third attempt to split into two — if partners across the world give their backing in votes during in the first quarter of 2023.

Baldwin said this while talking in a Reuters Breakingvi­ews podcast.

If ratified, splitting the firm, which is valued at nearly $50bn, will be the biggest shake-up in the sector since the 2002 collapse of Arthur Andersen, the auditor that was mired in the Enron scandal and the downfall of which reduced the Big Five to the Big Four of PwC, Deloitte, KPMG and EY, formerly Ernst & Young. “It was an appropriat­e time to dust down the work we did before,” said Baldwin.

“I now feel it is inevitable. We do believe there is a first-mover advantage. We also believe the competitio­n at some point in time will also have to respond,” he said. Some of the other Big Four firms have said they have no plans to copy EY.

Critics caution that splitting the business could see the auditing side suffer in the shadow of what is traditiona­lly more lucrative consulting work. EY says the split will make it easier to raise capital to invest and create two more agile companies.

“We want our assurance business to be as successful in the future as it has been in the last 10 years,” Baldwin said.

Rejection from partners against the substance of the deal would be a problem, he said.

But if the deal was turned down because of its timing in unsettled financial markets, then it could be voted on again at a later date, given the fundamenta­l drivers of the transactio­n won’t change, said Baldwin. “It may come to the timing point, so our plan is that we will continue to what we call soft separation next year, and continue to start to run these two businesses separately, albeit they will continue to be part of the single enterprise of EY,” said the global managing partner.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Shake-up: EY is holding roadshows to set out the case for its third attempt to split into accountanc­y and consultanc­y businesses in what will be the biggest shake-up in this sector since 2002. It all depends on the backing of partners around the world in the first quarter of 2023.
/Reuters Shake-up: EY is holding roadshows to set out the case for its third attempt to split into accountanc­y and consultanc­y businesses in what will be the biggest shake-up in this sector since 2002. It all depends on the backing of partners around the world in the first quarter of 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa