Mr Haddrill said that investors should be given more information about the prospects of the company and a better picture of the future of the business and of the judgements made in the course of the preparation of the financial statements.
“In short, we want investors to learn about the business and its future from the directors; we want the directors to say more about the things that really keep them awake at night; and we want to empower auditors to challenge management by requiring them to say whether the Board have really given a balanced and fair view on these matters as well as on the accounts,” he said.
Mr Haddrill called on the European Commission to “forge a better balanced triangle between companies, auditors and investors and to create a partnership in which each plays their full role.”
In comments focused on Commission proposals to increase competition in the audit market, Mr Haddrill said: “We must not do anything in the name of competition that puts quality at risk.” Instead of introducing compulsory joint audits, Mr Haddrill said that measures such as the following should be taken:
- encouraging financial institutions to use non-Big Four firms as a source of advice to their risk committees;
- giving serious consideration to amending the current rules on audit firm ownership, allowing audit firms to access external capital to fund expansion; and
- prohibiting the use of “Big Four only” clauses in banking and loan covenants.
He said that audit regulators, competition authorities and firms needed to develop a contingency plan for handling the crisis that would result from a major firm failing.
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