Financial Services Giant EY Halts Plan To Split Audit, Advisory Firms

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The company's US executive committee "decided not to move forward" with its plan. (Representational)

British financial services giant EY on Tuesday said it was stopping a project to split its audit and advisory units after opposition from its US branch.

The move, agreed in September, aimed to accelerate growth and avoid conflicts of interest but required the approval of EY's 13,000 worldwide partners.

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EY's global management said in a note that the company's US executive committee "decided not to move forward" with its plan, dubbed "Project Everest".

"Given the strategic importance of the US member firm to Project Everest, we are stopping work on the project," it said.

EY's global executive said it remained "committed to moving forward with creating two world-class organizations that further advance audit quality, independence and client choice".

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But it conceded that separating its businesses came with challenges, including giving both organisations the capabilities to compete effectively in the market, and that more time was needed to make necessary investments.

A vote on the split on a country-by-country basis was originally scheduled to conclude by early 2023 but was delayed on several occasions.

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Britain's audit sector, dominated by the "big four" comprising EY, Deloitte, KPMG and PwC, has come under increased scrutiny and faced criticism for failing to foresee a series of high-profile bankruptcies in recent years.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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