FRC: Sharman panel publishes final report on going concern and liquidity risks

13 June 2012

The Sharman Panel of Inquiry, established at the invitation of the FRC to consider Going Concern and Liquidity Risks: Lessons for companies and auditors, published its final report and recommendations.

The Panel's key recommendations are that:

and that the FRC should:

The Panel also recommended that the FRC should take a more systematic approach to learning lessons when significant companies fail or suffer significant financial or economic distress but nonetheless survive.

The Panel also looked at whether a special going concern disclosure regime is required for banks, and concluded that this should not be necessary. However, the Panel considers it is critical to that conclusion that, in taking forward the recommendation to clarify and harmonise the differing definitions of going concern and related risks, the FRC should clarify that a conclusion that a bank is or would be reliant, in stressed circumstances, on access to liquidity support from central banks that is reasonably assured does not necessarily mean that the bank is not a going concern or that material uncertainty disclosures or an auditor’s emphasis of matter paragraph are required.

Press release

Sharman Inquiry


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