Cape Times

Deloitte investigat­ion

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THE Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (IRBA) confirms that it had initiated an investigat­ion into Deloitte South Africa following the share price collapse of Steinhoff Internatio­nal DV and allegation­s of accounting irregulari­ties.

The IRBA will commence its investigat­ion into the conduct of the auditors of Steinhoff Internatio­nal Holdings (Pty) Ltd for the audits of financial years ended 2014 to 2016. This entity is audited by Deloitte South Africa, who has confirmed that it will fully co-operate with the IRBA during the investigat­ion.

The investigat­ion will follow due process and the timing will depend on informatio­n which will come to our attention once we have establishe­d the nature of the alleged irregulari­ties and have had further discussion­s with the relevant parties, including the audit regulators in Germany, where the company has its primary listing, and the Netherland­s. These discussion­s, including matters relating to jurisdicti­onal responsibi­lities, commenced in the previous week.

While co-operation with internatio­nal regulators will be important, it will be even more important that local regulators co-ordinate their efforts in their support to government to provide the public with the assurance needed to secure the required trust that their investment­s are safe.

The South African markets have always been resilient and responsive to disruption in the financial markets, partly because of the strength of its financial institutio­ns, and also because of the South African public’s increasing awareness and renewed focus on “doing the right thing”, ethics and the importance of good governance.

However, while the IRBA has always cautioned that more attention needs to be given to auditor independen­ce, it now urges authoritie­s and bodies to give equal attention to the independen­ce of governance structures. Irrespecti­ve of how competent auditors and those charged with governance are, any cosy relationsh­ips must necessaril­y impair, or at the least be perceived to impair, the exercise of good judgment and healthy profession­al scepticism. This applies to long and close relationsh­ips between auditors, company chief financial officers, and audit committees.

While the auditing profession still mostly delivers high quality services, it is also time for regulators to act decisively, cohesively and firmly against those who engage in any misconduct or wrongful behaviour. This is the only way that the public can have the confidence that any assurances they receive are sufficient­ly reliable to protect their hard-earned investment. Bernard Agulhas IRBA chief executive

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