The Professional Oversight Board today published regulations requiring auditors of public interest entities to publish on their web-sites annual transparency reports and setting the minimum requirements such reports must meet. The requirements apply in respect of any financial year of a relevant audit firm starting on or after 6 April 2008. The regulations set the legal requirements on auditors of public interest entities to provide specific information about themselves, and for example about their systems of quality control and independence procedures and practices. These follow quite closely the requirements of the Statutory Audit Directive, from which this derives. The regulations come into force on 6 April.
The Professional Oversight Board has published also regulations relating to the UK audit register and examinations.
Paul George, Director of the Oversight Board said:
“We want audit firms to meet the spirit as well as the letter of the requirements for transparency reporting, and in particular to take the opportunity to differentiate themselves, for example by setting out the ways in which they achieve high quality audits. The Audit Quality Framework published in February may provide a helpful framework for such reports. We shall monitor the way in which the firms meet their obligations in practice”.
A number of the largest UK audit firms have published annual transparency reports on a voluntary basis following a 2003 recommendation from the Government-led group set up to consider the implications of Enron for UK audit regulation. However, this is the first time that such reports have been mandatory.