Title: Auditor Independence
1Auditor Independence
Curtis Gagné Michael McCue Terry Tang
2Agenda
- What is auditor independence?
- International View on auditor independence
- Auditor Independence Cases
- PwC
- Ernst Young
- KPMG
- Safeguards
3Opinions on Auditor Independence
In todays global markets, multiple stakeholders
investors, lenders, regulators, governments,
employees and customers- rely on assurance
provided by auditors on the reliability and
creditability of financial reporting. Auditors
play a vital role in enhancing the stability of
capital markets, promoting liquidity and lowering
the cost of capital. And for auditors to perform
this role, their objectivity and independence
must be without question. Robert E. Lord,
Chair of CICA
4Opinions on Auditor Independence
- Operating in our public capital markets is not,
however, an unqualified right it carries
responsibilities, and one of the most fundamental
is to provide full, true and plain disclosure on
a timely basis. - David A Brown, Chair of OSC
5What is Auditor Independence?
- Auditor independence is the ability of the
auditor to give an objective opinion on whether
the financial statements of a public company
follow GAAP based on their professional judgment. - This means their opinion is free of any bias,
influence, incentive or interest and truly
reflects the state of the financial statements.
6Independence in Appearance
- Independence in appearance means that individuals
outside the audit firm believe the audit report
objectively states the financial position of the
audit client. Independence in appearance give
the audit report creditability.
7Independence in Appearance
- Independence in appearance can be maintained by
- (1) Auditors and firm appear to have no financial
or personal ties to the audit client, such as
stock ownership in the audit client. - (2) Members of the audit team are not currently
employed by audit client (a member of the board
of directors) and have not recently been an
employee of the audit client.
8Independence in Appearance
- (3)Members of the audit team follow the ethical
and professional codes of conduct established by
their Accounting association. - (4) The auditing firm has a reputation of high
ethical and professional conduct. (I.e. after
the fall of Enron, Arthur Anderson would not have
a reputation of high ethical standards.
9Independence In Reality
- Independence in reality is the degree to which
the audit firm and members of the audit team are
actually independent. - How can an auditor remain independent?
- Have no financial or personal interest in client
- Maintain an independent frame of mind
- Complete auditor to the best of their ability,
and gather sufficient evidence to support their
opinion. - Report instances of fraud or peculiarities and do
try to cover up or take part in the situation.
10Who Benefits From Auditor Independence ?
- The Users of financial statements are the
beneficiaries of auditor independence - Investors Including individual investors, and
institutional investors - Creditors (bond holders and loan holders or
potential creditors) - Regulators and Security Commission
- Public in general
11Classification Of Accountants through time
- Throughout the twentieth century accountants have
had three classifications of their roles, these
are - Professional Man
- Judicial Man
- Economic Man
12Professional Man
- Up until the 1960s there was no formal rule on
auditor independence in the AICPA rules for CPAs - The rational for this is accountants were ethical
people from their life experiences and from their
socialization.
13Professional Man (Cont)
- It was believed that if an accountant was in a
position that would compromise their professional
opinion (their independence) they would recognize
this threat and handle it appropriately because
they are ethical people. - There were no need to have independence in
appearance because public had trust that
accountants and auditors were ethical and would
act in an ethical manner, not primarily in their
own self interest.
14Judicial Man
- Auditors were seen as the gatekeeper to the
securities market as companies needed audited
financial statement to get listed on public
exchanges and to receive bank loans. - The increasing responsibility of Auditors and the
implication of their work requires independence,
both in fact and in appearance. - To foster independence both SEC and AICPA
establish rules prohibiting ownership or
interests in audit clients. Conflicting opinions
resulted based on what was seen as being
independent in appearance, many changes in what
accountants could do and still remain
independent. - Division among CPAs with instituting
independence rules, some felt these rules implied
the profession was untrustworthy and were capable
of professional judgment
15Economic Man
- This mindset of accountants started in the late
1990s. - Accountants today are pursuing many other areas
within accounting other than just audit, examples
being consultancy, taxation, bookkeeping. These
services are more profitable than the audit
function. - Less emphasis is put on the appearance of
independence and more on the independence in
fact. This is because its easier to evaluate the
work of the auditor than their appearance. - Auditors are believed to follow independence and
professional standards because the cost of not
following them are too great (i.e. losing
professional designation). - This is just prior to the legislative reform of
the Sarbanes Oxley Act (SOX).
16Philosophies Of Independence
- There are three philosophies regarding
independence and they are - Independence in Separation
- Avoiding Dependence
- Independence in interests
17Independence In Separation
- This philosophy states that for an auditor to
have independence they cannot have any
relationship with the client they are auditing. - This philosophy is impossible to achieve because
a relationship exists as soon as a client engages
a firm to complete the audit. It is further
unachievable in that the client pays the auditor
for their work. The auditors duty of care is to
the financial statement users, however they still
have relationship with client. - Absolute independence is almost impossible to
achieve because even the slightest conflict of
interest can exist (i.e. auditor may have some
association with client, no matter how small
violates absolute independence).
18Avoiding Dependence
- This philosophy recognizes that there is
dependence in an auditor-client relationship
(i.e. auditor dependent on client for payment,
client dependent on auditor for their audit
report). - It is easier for the auditor to measure their
independence in fact rather than the public
measure the auditors independence. Auditor must
then make sure that the amount of dependence they
have with client is not to high in that it would
impair their professional judgment
19Independence In Interests
- This philosophy assumes that professional
judgment of the auditor will result in
independence. The short turn gain in unethical
practices is smaller than the long run
consequences of engaging in unethical conduct and
giving the profession and firm a bad reputation,
assuming this conduct is detected. - Through independence and ethical conduct the
auditor will retain clients and gain new clients,
with the over benefit of this larger than a short
run benefit of engaging unethically.
20International Viewsof Auditor Independence
21United States
22Japan
- Japanese Institute of Certified Public
Accountants has publicly voiced concern over
Sarbanes-Oxley Act. - Specifically concerned with the regulation of
foreign public accounting firms - HUH?
23European Union / UK?
24Auditor Independence Cases
25Case of Auditor IndependencePwC
- In the first quarter of 1999, PwC approved
capitalization of non-audit consulting fees. - Fees related to failed order-management system
under development by PwC. - Instead of writing off costs, Avon capitalized
60 of 42 million. - 60 consisted mainly of non-audit consulting fees.
26Case of Auditor IndependencePwC
- SEC Consequences
- An independent reviewing partner must
- Review audits of listed companies that have
capitalized non-audit fees - Perform verification audits of auditors
performance on risky engagements - Provide annual training for ALL employees
27Case of Auditor IndependenceErnst Young
- Ernst Young and Peoplesoft have marketing
arrangement while Ernst Young are the auditors
of Peoplesoft. - Ernst and Young pays royalties of 15-30 to
Peoplesoft for software that EY sells to its
clients. - This arrangement poses the question of does EY
have financial interest in an audit client? The
consultancy segment of EY has business
arrangement with Peoplesoft. This clearly
violates appearance of independence between audit
firm and client, but is independence in fact
violated also?
28Case of Auditor IndependenceErnst Young
- SEC accuses EY of violating independence
standards by having business relationship with
its audit client. SEC rules allow relationship
between auditor and clients only as a consumer
in normal course of business - EY claims that its arrangement with Peoplesoft
was within its regular business activities, SEC
believes the opposite. - SEC maintains that quality of work never suffered
from arrangement, but arrangement is in total
violation of Auditor Independence rules.
29Case of Auditor IndependenceErnst Young
- Ernst Young was fined 1.7 million for its
activities, which breaks down to its audit
revenue of 970,698 during 1993-2000 from
Peoplesoft audit and interest of 729,302. EY
made over 500 Million in consulting from
Peoplesoft - Ernst Young not allowed to take any new
corporate audit clients for 6 months in USA,
however Ernst and Young interprets this as
allowing them to take on Private Corporation
clients and internal audit engagements. EY also
allowed to continue serving its current clients.
30Case of Auditor IndependenceKPMG
- SEC censured KPMG LLP for engaging in improper
professional conduct because it purported to
serve as an independent accounting firm for an
audit client at the same time that it had made
substantial financial investments in the client. - KPMG consented to the SECs order with admitting
or denying the SECs findings.
31Case of Auditor IndependenceKPMG
- The SEC found, from May through December 2000,
KPMG held a substantial investment in the
Short-Term Investments Trust (STIT), a money
market fund within the AIM family of funds. - KPMG opened the money market account with an
initial deposit of 25 million on May 5, 2000,
and at one point the account balance constituted
approx. 15 of the funds net assets. - The SEC further found that KPMG repeatedly
confirmed its putative independence from the AIM
funds it audited, including STIT, during the
period in which KMPG invested in STIT.
32Case of Auditor IndependenceKPMG
- KPMG resulted in violation of the auditor
independence requirement imposed by the SECs
rule and by Generally Accepted Auditing Standards
(GAAS) - SEC ordered KPMG to undertake certain remedies
designed to prevent and defect future
independence violation caused by financial
relationships with, and investments in, the
firms audit clients.
33Safeguards
34Safeguards
- Restricted auditor activities and relationships
- Permits the activity or relationship, but
restricts its extent
35Safeguards (cont)
- Requires policies and procedures to address the
threat - Requires the auditor to disclose information
about it to the auditees management, audit
committee, board or others
36Wrap Up!
- Auditor Independence Explained
- International Views on Independence
- 3 Cases Auditor Independence Cases
- PwC
- Ernst Young
- KPMG
- Safeguards
37References
- Slide 3,4
- CICA, Guidance for Audit Committees ,Discussing
Auditor Independence Matters With Your
Auditor, pg 2 - Slide 5,6,9
- Arens, Alvin A., Loebbecke, James K, Lemon, W.,
Morley, Splettstoesser, Ingrid B., Auditing And
Other Assurance Services Canadian Ninth Edition, - Toronto, Pearson Education Canada. 2003 . Pp
68-71. -
- Slides 12-18
- Reiter, Sara Ann, et Paul F. Williamson. The
Philosophy and Rhetoric of Auditor Independence
Concepts Business Ethics Quarterly. Volume 14
Issue 3 - ISSN 1502-105X. Pp 357-370
- Slides 19-21
- Taub, Stephen, Auditor Draws Six-Month
New-Client Ban.CFO.com. April 20,2004. Online
http//www.cfo.com/article.cfm/3013309?frelated.
Retrieved February 18, 2005 - Sachdev, Ameet. SEC Judge Bars Accounting Giant
Ernst Young from New Business for 6 Months
Chicago Tribune Business News. April 17,2004.
Chicago Chicago Tribune.