What – they expected gratitude?
“Managed shared audits” were at the center of the UK government’s March 18 Consultation paper on audit reform. The proposal, aimed to loosen the Big Four’s dominant hold on the audits of the FTSE 350, would specifically benefit the smaller, wretchedly-designated “challenger” firms, by mandatory carve-out of ten to thirty percent of each newly-tendered audit to be gifted to the latter.
For reasons outlined here on April 21, and detailed in my short book on the post-Carillion environment in the UK,[1] the imposition of shared audits across the FTSE 350, never realistic, was fatally flawed and doomed to rejection. Quickly summarized: for the companies themselves, the process would be unmanageable, while the Big Four would gain nothing but valueless inflation of their costs, effort and liability exposure, and the smaller firms could never provide the necessary skills, personnel and capability.
One deservedly skeptical response to this offer –- another version of “We’re from the government, and here to help you” -- is now essentially confirmed. Instead of thankful appreciation, the UK firms of BDO and Grant Thornton – ranked fifth and sixth in the league tables – have recognized and spurned the government’s poisoned chalice. Their “no thanks” -- reported in the Financial Times of May 25 –- was spun diplomatically, as their “considering not pitching for work on shared audits of FTSE 100 companies….”
Their demurrer echoes the mordant humor of Abraham Lincoln, who captured the pain and frustration of the American presidency by likening his position to the man tarred and feathered and carried out of town on a rail – who, asked how he liked it, replied that “if it were not for the honor of the thing, he would much rather walk.”
As put to the FT by Grant Thornton’s head of audit, “If the challenger firm is just going to get what’s left at the bottom of the barrel, that’s not interesting and doesn’t help….”
Although the FT coyly suggests that the two firms “are considering focusing on increasing the number of FTSE 250 companies they audit,” Grant Thornton’s shared audit stand-down aligns with the reasons that underlay its 2018 decision “to stop bidding for audit contracts from Britain’s largest companies after concluding it is too difficult to compete with the Big Four firms that dominate the market.”
Clear perspective on the scale necessary to perform large complex audits reveals these implications, too important to ignore:
- First are the size comparisons illustrated by the 2020 revenues of BDO and Grant Thornton (globally $ 10.3 billion and $ 5.76 billion) –- fractions of the Big Four which range from KPMG at $ 29 billion to Deloitte’s table-topping $ 47.6 billion. The inhibitions on the “challengers” are not (necessarily) those of performance quality. Rather, as one FT reader incisively commented, a house carpenter may be perfectly competent to build a single-family home, but could not possibly qualify to build a high-rise tower.
- Second, in the other direction, BDO and Grant Thornton –- as the largest among the smaller -- were noted by the FT to “earn more UK audit fees in aggregate than the next 14 challengers combined.” Not only should their strategically rational risk and capacity assessments compel a reality check for their brethren down the size chart. In addition, their opting out of a shared audit regime emphatically rebuts the possibility that the remaining firms, however willing, could make up a critical mass of delivery capacity.
The Consultation’s move for “managed shared audit” took a deliberate pass on even less achievable proposals, to enforce Big Four caps or market share re-distribution of the FTSE 350 audit sector. Its single idea so discredited, whither now?[2]
Fundamental re-engineering of large-company information assurance, guided by the insights of Sir Donald Brydon in his December 2019 “Independent Review Into the Quality and Effectiveness of Audit,” requires attention to the dysfunctionalities embedded in the current model. Those include the archaic and outmoded constraints on the scope of permissible auditor services, and the potentially fatal litigation impact on the firms’ financial and business structures, awaiting with the inevitable financial failures on the magnitude of Enron that disintegrated Arthur Andersen in 2002.
Assurance sufficiently extensive and flexible to be fit for today’s demands will remain beyond reach, until and unless the public dialog embraces discussion of these issues. Otherwise, as BDO and Grant Thornton have now confirmed, the dominance of the Big Four as presently configured –- even inhibited as they are by the golden handcuffs of their franchise -- is the only game in town.
[1] “DOA: Can Big Audit Survive the UK Regulators” (Amazon 2019)
[2] One of the aggressive voices for mandated sector re-structuring was that of the Competition & Markets Authority, then led by since-departed Sir Andrew Tyrie. Even with its bust-up advocacy, the CMA’s April 2019 “Statutory Audit Services Market Study” gave legitimacy to the strategic reluctance of Grant Thornton to pursue FTSE 350 audits, conceding (¶ 3.135) that it “may be a rational reaction….”
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