TheCorporateCounsel.net

August 3, 2023

Financial Reporting: Handling Disagreements with Auditors

What alternatives do companies have if they disagree with their auditors concerning an accounting issue? This recent blog from Perkins Coie’s Ben Dale – himself a recovering auditor – discusses some of the options. Here’s an excerpt:

AS 1301.22 states in relevant part: “The auditor should communicate to the audit committee any disagreements with management about matters, whether or not satisfactorily resolved, that … could be significant to the company’s financial statements or the auditor’s report.” Importantly, disagreements with management don’t include differences of opinion based on incomplete facts or preliminary information that are later resolved by the auditor after obtaining additional relevant facts or information prior to the issuance of the auditor’s report.

In the four years I worked as an auditor, I never saw a disagreement with management make it to the audit committee. Rather, they were kept within the management ranks for several days or weeks while the auditors and management performed additional procedures, reviewed all relevant information and sought resolution of their disagreement. Only if the disagreement persisted at the end of the audit after all efforts were made to resolve it, would it be elevated to the audit committee (assuming it was significant to the financials or audit report).

If a disagreement remains unresolved after escalation to the audit committee, the company or auditor could choose to seek advice directly from the SEC Staff. While the SEC Staff may provide interpretive guidance on issues arising under GAAP or certain securities regulations, they are highly unlikely to referee disputes between companies and auditors – and notably, communications with the SEC may not remain confidential.

The blog says that, ultimately, you could also go nuclear and fire the auditor, but that’s a “whole ‘nother bag of snakes.” As a practical matter, the big problem with a potential disagreement is that the issue typically arises when the clock is ticking on your next SEC filing. If the auditor won’t sign off on the financials in your 10-K or provide a consent for your registration statements, then you ultimately don’t have a lot of good alternatives except to see things their way – and that may be the biggest reason why these seldom even make it to the audit committee.

John Jenkins