PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) has been fined £1.75m by the accounting watchdog over its audit work for BT carried out in the wake of fraud in the telecoms giant’s Italian operations in 2016.
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) also fined audit partner Richard Hughes £42,000 over the work.
Both PwC and Hughes admitted breaches of the rules in relation to their audits of the financial impact disclosed by BT over the Italian fraud affair. As well as the fines, they were both issued with severe reprimands by the FRC.
It added that the penalties were reduced by 30% from £2.5m for PwC and £60,000 for Hughes, due to early admissions of rule breaches.
BT revealed a hit of around £513m from the Italian accounting fraud, as well as debt adjustments of £72m, in its accounts to the end of March 2017, which were examined by PwC.
The FRC said that PwC and Hughes “did not approach the audit of BT’s treatment of the debt adjustments with the necessary professional scepticism and they failed to adequately document their audit work across the entirety of the BT Italy adjustments”.
But it stressed that there was no finding that BT’s 2017 financial statements were misstated, that the total sum of the BT Italy adjustments were wrong, “or that the breaches were intentional, dishonest or reckless”.
Claudia Mortimore, deputy executive counsel at the FRC, said: “In determining the financial impact of a major fraud detected within a business, difficult but important issues relating to appropriate accounting treatment and disclosures will need to be addressed.
“It is vital that these are subject to robust audit so that the users of financial statements can have confidence that the financial impact is properly and accurately stated in subsequent financial statements.
“The sanctions imposed in this case, where certain elements of the adjustments following a fraud were not subject to the required level of professional scepticism, underscore this message and will serve as a timely reminder to the profession.”
The FRC added that the breaches were discovered as part of its wider probe into PwC’s audit work which also covered 2015 and 2016.
The investigation covering those earlier years was closed without enforcement action.
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