Need of independent regulator for Auditors - SEBI Panel
Listen to this Article
The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance had in 2012 specified the need for a quasi-regulatory body for supervising audit quality. This would in the form of a National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) provided for in Section 132 of the Companies Act, 2013 for matters relating to accounting and auditing.
However, earlier this year, the Veerappa Moily-headed Standing Committee on Finance had said it was not in favour of a separate regulator for auditors.
The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) is a statutory body that regulates chartered accountants in India. The body had recently come under fire from Prime Minister Narendra Modi after his criticism of the body's disciplinary record.
Among other things, the Sebi's panel has recommended that the Quality Review Board (QRB) be strengthened to meet the independence criteria laid down by the International Forum of Independent Audit Regulators (IFIAR), an international body that comprises independent audit regulators from 52 jurisdictions. India is not yet a member of IFIAR but ICAI has maintained that QRB has applied for IFIAR membership.
The first QRB was set up by the government in 2007. Five of its members are nominated by the ICAI Council and five by the government.
The panels want QRB to be provided requisite financial resources as well as staffed with adequate full-time personnel to carry on its mandate. "Steps should be taken for the further operational independence of QRB such as providing infrastructural support by the government," the panel recommendation states.
"The proposed changes directionally point towards setting up of an independent audit regulator, which would be aligned to global practices," said a senior official of a large consultancy firm.
It could not be ascertained if the government planned to put the establishment of the NFRA on the front-burner again or if ICAI had taken up the matter afresh with the former. An email sent to ICAI in this regard went unanswered.
The Sebi panel has also batted for enhancing SEBI's powers to act against auditors and third-party fiduciaries with statutory duties under securities law subject to appropriate safeguards. It has pointed out that Sebi does not have the power to impose penal powers in relation to auditors. "This power ought to extend to act against the impugned individual(s), as well as against the firm in question with respect to their functions concerning listed entities. This power should be provided in case of gross negligence as well, and not just in case of fraud/connivance," the panel noted.
Notably, the ICAI has expressed its dissent on the above recommendation to avoid jurisdictional conflict and other issues as the regulation of chartered accountants is covered under the Chartered Accountants Act, 1949.#casansaar (Source - Business Standard)
Category : Auditing | Comments : 0 | Hits : 809
In a boost to the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA), the regulator for auditors and audit firms dealing with large and listed companies, the Supreme Court has upheld an order by the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) related to disciplinary action against errant auditors. Last month, the apex court dismissed an appeal filed by chartered accountant Sam Varghese, partner at K Varghese & Co. Varghese was one of the four auditors against whom NFRA had acted, and in...
Hindustan Unilever Ltd. has announced that its cost auditor has been disqualified from continuing amid a conflict of interest. The decision was made after it was discovered that Rasesh Vipin Chokshi, who is a partner at the firm R.A. & Co., was holding shares in the company. According to the Companies Act, 2013, a cost auditor cannot hold any shares in the company for which they're auditing the costs. Following this violation, M/S R.A. & Co. has been asked to vac...
The Bombay High Court has granted bail to Anita Kirdat, a former concurrent auditor of the Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank, in connection with a multi-crore loan fraud case. Kirdat, 48, a chartered accountant (CA) from Bhandup, who runs a firm, Anita Kirdat and Company, was arrested by the Economic Offence Wing of Mumbai Police in 2019 in the PMC Bank scam. She served as the concurrent auditor of PMC Bank from 2005 to 2019. She was alleged to have been appointed at the behest...
Tighter regulations and lower fees are making the auditing profession challenging, said panelists at an international conference held by the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) here on Tuesday. “The business model of pure audit is under significant pressure. It’s getting tighter and tighter from the point of avoiding conflict,” said Uday Kotak, former managing director and CEO of Kotak Mahindra Bank. Stating that regulators would want the best of talent in the audi...
The Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG), Girish Chandra Murmu, on Friday announced the setting up of the Supreme Audit Institution India’s International Centre for Audit of Local Governance (iCAL) in Rajkot, Gujarat. At the conclusion of the three-day international conference on ‘Strengthening of Grass Roots Democracy and Accountability’, Mr. Murmu said local governments played a pivotal role in shaping the lives of citizens. Effective accounting platforms and aud...


Comments