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PRA finalises rules on audit committees under the revised Statutory Audit Directive

20 May, 2016

The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has published its final rulebook text to implement the requirements of the revised Statutory Audit Directive (2014/56/EU). Under the previous version of the Directive, the UK had taken the member state option to exempt unlisted banks and insurance undertakings from the statutory requirement to have an audit committee. The revised Directive has no such exemption.

The final rulebook text follows an earlier PRA consultation in September 2015.  The new rules apply to the first financial year commencing on or after 17 June 2016, except as set out below.  The requirements can be grouped into four themes – Scope, Structure, Membership and Functions.

Scope 

Audit committees will be required for the following categories of PRA regulated firms:

  • CRD credit institutions (broadly UK banks and building societies but not credit unions)
  • Solvency II insurers;
  • the Society of Lloyd’s;
  • managing agents of Lloyd’s syndicates; and
  • PRA designated investment firms

A transitional provision provides that for financial years commencing prior to 17 June 2018:

  • subsidiaries of an EEA undertaking with an audit committee that meets the requirements of the Directive need not have an audit committee at all; and
  • for lower-impact firms and subsidiaries of non-EEA parents allows the board to perform equivalent functions to the audit committee.

Most of these will be public interest entities (PIEs), to which tougher auditor reporting and independence requirements will apply under the Financial Reporting Council’s (FRC’s) implementation of the revised Directive and EU Audit Regulation. However, unlisted managing agents are not themselves PIEs (just the syndicates that they are responsible for), and neither are unlisted PRA designated investment firms that are also not CRR firms. The smallest firms are invited to apply for a waiver or modification of the rules, having regard to the Directive minimum.

Structure and membership

A firm’s audit committee will in general need to be separate from any risk committee unless the firm is a lower-impact firm (in terms of prudential risk) and the members of the risk committee have the knowledge, skills and expertise required to exercise the functions of both an audit and a risk committee.

The audit committee:

  • must be a committee of the governing body of the firm;
  • must be composed only of non-executive members who together have competence relevant to the sector in which the firm operates, at least one of whom must have competence in accounting and auditing; and
  • must be suitably independent:

Transitional provisions defer some of the independence requirements for up to two years depending on the significance of the firm and whether or not it is a subsidiary, allowing time for recruitment of suitable non-executive directors.

Functions

The audit committee of a firm (or the governing body where allowed under the transitional provisions for lower-impact firms and subsidiaries of non-EEA parents) is responsible for:

  • informing the governing body of the entity of the outcome of the audit and explaining how the statutory audit contributed to the integrity of financial reporting, together with their own role in that process;
  • monitoring the financial reporting process, submitting recommendations or proposals to ensure its integrity;
  • monitoring the effectiveness of the entity’s internal quality control and risk management systems and, where applicable, its internal audit, regarding the financial reporting of the firm but without breaching the audit committee’s independence;
  • monitoring the audit of the entity’s financial statements (in the case of a syndicate, of the syndicate statutory accounts), including taking into account any findings and conclusions raised by the FRC’s Audit Quality Review Team;
  • reviewing and monitoring the independence of the external auditor under the law and the FRC’s Ethical Standard; and
  • taking responsibility for selection process for the external auditor of a PIE where a tender is required.

A firm that also has securities admitted to trading on an EEA regulated market must also apply the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA’s) forthcoming requirements on audit committees.  These were consulted on in September 2015.

The PRA’s Supervisory Statement SS21/15 Internal Governance has been updated to reflect these new audit committee requirements.

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FSB announces additional members to its Task Force to develop climate-related financial disclosures

20 May, 2016

The Financial Stability Board (FSB) has announced additional members to the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD).

The TCFD was set up to develop “voluntary, consistent climate-related financial disclosures for use by companies in providing information to lenders, insurers, investors and other stakeholders”. 

The TCFD issued its first report in April 2016.  The additional members will work on Phase 2.  During this phase the TCFD will “seek to develop a set of recommendations for consistent, comparable, reliable, clear and efficient climate-related disclosures”.

The TCFD will present a final report for consultation by the end of December.

The press release is available on the FSB website.

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EFRAG, EFFAS and ABAF/BVFA joint investor outreach on leases

20 May, 2016

The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG), the European Federation of Financial Analysts Societies (EFFAS), and the Association Belge des Analystes Financiers (ABAF/BVFA) will host a joint event on 5 July in Brussels on new leases standard, IFRS 16.

The event will feature discussions related to the main differences between the new leases standard (IFRS 16) and the existing standard (IAS 17). In addition, participates will have a chance to express their views concerning the implementation of the new standard. Views expressed will be considered by the EFRAG as it develops its endorsement status advice.

For more information, see the press release on the EFRAG’s website.

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FRC publishes audit quality inspection reports for the six largest audit firms

20 May, 2016

The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has published individual audit quality inspection reports for Deloitte LLP, Ernst & Young LLP, KPMG LLP, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, BDO LLP and Grant Thornton UK LLP.

The reports set out the principal findings arising from the audit quality inspection work carried out by the FRC’s Audit Quality Review (AQR) team for 2015/16.

The reports focus on the key findings from the reviews, why such findings are important and actions the individual firms are taking to address them.  Key findings address both the FRC’s inspection of individual audits and also each firm’s policies and procedures to support and promote audit quality.

The reports also identify some examples of good practice which contributed to audit quality at each firm.

The FRC indicates that it will issue, later in 2016, its first report monitoring and assessing developments in UK audit quality encompassing developments in standards and policy, professional oversight, audit quality review and enforcement.

The press release and links to individual reports are available on the FRC website.

IASB (International Accounting Standards Board) (blue) Image

IASB updates work plan

20 May, 2016

Following its May 2016 meeting, the IASB has updated its work plan. As mentioned before, directly tracing the Board's progress on the individual projects has become impossible since the change of the work plan format in July 2015, unless the Board makes definite progress or has to make larger corrections. Of these, only a few can be identified since the previous work plan. However, the IASB has begun to indicate the month which issuance of exposure drafts or final standards may occur.

Changes to the work plan include:

Major projects

  • No changes made to major projects.

Im­ple­men­ta­tion projects

In addition, the work plan has updated the details of the primary financial statements, income taxes, and share-based payment (where the IASB has decided not to perform any further research on this topic or to publish a formal consultation document) research projects and indicated that a feedback statement on the 2015 agenda consultation is expected within 6 months; previously it was after 6 months.

Independent of the work plan update the IASB has also confirmed that final amendments to IFRS 4 regarding the application of  IFRS 9 with IFRS 4 are expected to be published in September 2016.

The revised IASB work plan is available on the IASB's website.

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IASB posts eighth and last webinar on insurance contracts standard

20 May, 2016

The IASB has posted the final instalment of its weekly webinar series on the upcoming insurance contracts standard.

The series, hosted by IASB member Darrel Scott, discusses the following topics related to the upcoming insurance contracts standard:

For more information as well as presentation slides, see the webinar page on the IASB’s website.

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IASB publishes editorial corrections

20 May, 2016

The IASB has published editorial corrections to consequential amendments made by IFRS 16 'Leases'.

The editorial corrections affect the application guidance of the following standards:

  • IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Presentation
  • IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement

Editorial corrections do not change the meaning or application of pronouncements, but instead correct inadvertent errors. The editorial corrections can be viewed on the editorial corrections page of the IASB's website.

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May 2016 IASB meeting notes posted

19 May, 2016

The IASB met at its offices in London on 17–19 May 2016. We have posted the Deloitte observer notes from all of the sessions.

Please click through for direct access to the notes:

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Wednesday, 18 May 2016

Thursday, 19 May 2016

You can also access the preliminary and unofficial notes taken by Deloitte observers for the entire meeting.

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IFRS Foundation Annual Report 2015

19 May, 2016

The IFRS Foundation (IFRSF) has published its Annual Report for 2015, titled 'Focussing on the future'.

The report for 2015 sets out the organisation's strategic priorities for 2015-2017, broken down into four strategic goals:

  • develop a single set of high quality, globally enforceable accounting standards,
  • pursue the goal of global adoption of IFRS,
  • support consistent application and implementation of IFRS, and
  • ensure continued independence, stability and accountability of the IFRS Foundation

Please click to download the report from the IASB's website.

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Agenda published for the May 2016 IFRS Foundation Trustees meeting

19 May, 2016

The agenda for the public session of the upcoming meeting of the IFRS Foundation Trustees is now available. The Trustees will meet on 25 and 26 May 2016 in Jakarta.

The agenda for the public session of the meeting is summarised below. It includes feedback from an earlier (25 May), non-public DPOC meeting (the Trustees will discuss whether DPOC meetings shall be public going forward).

Thursday, 26 May 2016

IFRS Foundation Trustees meeting (11:45–12:45)

  • Report of the Chair of the IFRS Foundation Trustees
  • Report of the IASB Chair
    • Technical work overview
    • Agenda consultation
    • Engagement strategy
    • Consistency in the application of IFRS globally
  • Report of the Due Process Oversight Committee
    • Technical Activities: Key issues and update
    • Insurance contracts
    • IFRS Taxonomy
    • Proposal for the DPOC to meet in public
    • Benchmarking
    • Consultative groups: Update
    • Correspondence: Update

Agenda papers for the meeting are available on the IASB's website.

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