Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

18 July 2017

ESMA recommends improvements in financial information enforcement


ESMA has published the results of a peer review conducted into how national competent authorities (NCAs) supervise financial information (IFRS) according to the Guidelines on Enforcement of Financial Information (Guidelines).

The report identifies areas where NCAs can improve their enforcement and makes recommendations to support these improvements.

The peer review was carried out on the basis of a questionnaire to all NCAs, as well as on-site visits to seven jurisdictions: Germany, Italy, Malta, Norway, Portugal, Romania, and the UK.

The report identifies that further improvements are needed in relation to:

- how issuers are selected to examine their financial information;

- the depth of inquiries into financial statements going beyond correcting disclosure; and

- the financial and human resources allocated by NCAs to the enforcement of financial information.

In particular, five of the jurisdictions – Malta, Portugal, Romania, Sweden and UK – do not fully comply with Guideline 5, which requires that NCAs use selection models in which all issuers are eligible to be selected for scrutiny.

The Report makes a number of recommendations where NCAs and/or ESMA should consider further action:

- Enforcement of financial information should not be an ancillary function. NCAs should ensure that sufficiently skilled and dedicated staff are available for this purpose;

- A list of common risk factors should be created, to be used by all NCAs in the selection of issuers for examination;

- All NCAs should use a common approach for the selection model, providing for the use of rotation and random selection in addition to selection based on identified risks;

- NCAs should ensure that the selection models allow the coverage of the whole population of issuers in a Member State within at least 10-15 years;

- The default type of examination should be unlimited in scope. This examination should cover all relevant areas of the accounting framework, i.e. recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosures, and all relevant documents published by an issuer, e.g. the management report, consolidated and separate financial statements; and

- NCAs are encouraged to ask issuers questions even where there is no suspicion of misstatement. 

Full press release

Full report



© ESMA


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment