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PwC Slashes Financial Audit Staff in China After Clients’ Mass Exit

The auditing giant has been forced to slash its auditing staff in China following a mass exodus of clients in the wake of the China Evergrande accounting fiasco, sources say


The logo of PriceWaterhouseCoopers is seen at its office in Berlin. Photo: Reuters.

 

The crisis at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC)’s China unit is intensifying, with reports the group may halve the size of its financial services auditing staff in the country.

The news, from two sources who spoke to Reuters, follows an exodus of clients that have cast a shadow over the group’s business prospects amid regulatory scrutiny of PwC’s role as the auditor of the debt-laden property giant China Evergrande – after revelations that the developer grossly inflated its earnings in the two years to 2020.

PwC’s financial services auditing operation employs at least 2,000 people across mainland China with main hubs in Beijing and Shanghai servicing clients such as banks, insurers, and asset and wealth managers, according to the two people, who asked not to be identified.

 

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PwC, which had 781 partners and nearly 19,000 employees in mainland China as of last September, according to its website, is also mulling laying off about 20% of the staff in other auditing teams and non-auditing business lines, the sources added.

PwC’s China businesses range from consulting to tax services, besides auditing. The size of the cuts in its financial services auditing unit and other business lines has not been previously reported.

PwC China’s layoffs started last week, and the overall target is expected to be met over a period of time, said the sources, who declined to be identified as they were not authorized to speak to media.

“In light of changes to the external environment, we are making some adjustments to better optimize our organizational structure to align with market demand,” a PwC spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

Chinese authorities have been examining PwC’s role in Evergrande’s accounting practices after the securities regulator accused the developer in March of a $78-billion fraud over a period of two years through 2020.

PwC had been Evergrande’s auditor for almost 14 years until it resigned in early 2023.

The firm allegedly faces a record fine of at least 1 billion yuan ($138 million) and a halt to operations of some of its mainland China offices due to failings in auditing Evergrande.

 

Over 30 listed firms drop PwC

Over the past few months, a growing number of clients has been leaving PwC, mainly state-owned or -backed enterprises and financial institutions, following the launch of the regulatory investigation into its auditing of Evergrande.

The firm had about 400 Chinese clients, listed at home or in offshore markets such as Hong Kong or New York, by March this year, including tech behemoths Alibaba and Tencent.

A Reuters calculation based on filings showed more than 30 listed Chinese firms including state-owned China Life Insurance, China Cinda Asset Management Co Ltd, Bank of China and PetroChina, have dropped PwC as their auditor in recent months.

As client departures cloud revenue prospects, PwC has stepped up cost-cutting measures.

This month the firm asked its 1,000-strong financial services auditing team in Shanghai to take career-break leave of about 15 days in July and August, during which staff can still receive a fifth of their income, one of the sources said.

PwC’s onshore arm — PricewaterhouseCoopers Zhong Tian LLP — had revenues of 7.92 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) last year, making it China’s top-earning auditor, official figures show.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

China Checking ‘Big Four’ Auditors’ Work After Evergrande Fiasco

Evergrande Liquidators ‘Probing PwC, Others to Recoup Losses’

Chinese Clients Ditching PwC After China Evergrande Fiasco

PwC Probed For ‘Enabling Evergrande Misconduct For Years’

Mortgage Delinquencies in China Soared by 43% in 2023

Evergrande Chief’s Two Luxury Mansions ‘Seized by Creditor’

Evergrande Chief Suspected Of Transferring Assets Offshore: WSJ

China Evergrande Chairman ‘Suspected of Crimes’, Company Says

Hui Ka Yan and The Rise and Fall of China Evergrande

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.