The Herald

Accounting giant KPMG hit by complaint from regulator over Carillion audit

- By Alison Meikle

A FORMAL complaint has been filed against KPMG and its current and former staff by the accounting regulator for allegedly submitting false informatio­n as part of audit inspection­s of collapsed firm Carillion and Regenersis.

The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) said the disciplina­ry complaint alleges that KPMG and several individual­s gave false and misleading informatio­n and documents to the watchdog when it was carrying out a review of two audits.

One of the audits was for failed outsourcin­g giant Carillion and the other was a 2014 audit of then technology group Regenersis, according to the FRC.

It comes amid mounting pressure on KPMG over the quality of its audits after it was fined a nearrecord £13 million just weeks ago over the sale of bedmaker

Silentnigh­t to a private equity firm in 2011.

The FRC tribunal found that one of KPMG’S partners helped push client Silentnigh­t towards insolvency, enabling HIG Capital to buy the business out of administra­tion.

The individual­s who have been served with the formal complaint in the latest case include Peter Meehan, the engagement partner for the Carillion audit, and Stuart Smith, the engagement partner for the Regenersis audit.

The FRC said the complaint does not claim the audits were wrongly done or that financial statements were not properly prepared.

A disciplina­ry tribunal will review the formal complaint case, with a hearing scheduled to start on January 10.

The 2016 audit of Carillion’s financial statements is being investigat­ed in separate ongoing investigat­ions, with KPMG facing a potentiall­y hefty fine when the FRC probe wraps up in coming months.

KPMG and other Big Four accountanc­y firms are spinning off their restructur­ing arms in a bid to avoid conflicts of interest in its business.

It comes ahead of an expected Government move which would force them to split their audit divisions from the rest of the business to ensure they stay independen­t, following the Carillion demise and other major corporate failures.

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