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Big Four accounting firms

The Big Four are the four largest professional services networks in the world, the global accounting networks Deloitte, Ernst & Young (EY), KPMG, and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). The four are often grouped because they are comparable in size relative to the rest of the market, both in terms of revenue and workforce; they are considered equal in their ability to provide a wide scope of professional services to their clients; and, among those looking to start a career in professional services, particularly accounting, they are considered equally attractive networks to work in, because of the frequency with which these firms engage with Fortune 500 companies.

The Big Four each offer audit, assurance, taxation, management consulting, actuarial, corporate finance, and legal services to their clients. A significant majority of the audits of public companies, as well as many audits of private companies, are conducted by these four networks.

Until the late 20th century, the market for professional services was actually dominated by eight networks which were nicknamed the "Big Eight". The Big Eight consisted of Arthur Andersen, Arthur Young, Coopers & Lybrand, Deloitte Haskins and Sells, Ernst & Whinney, Peat Marwick Mitchell, Price Waterhouse, and Touche Ross.

The Big Eight gradually reduced due to mergers between these firms, as well as the 2002 collapse of Arthur Andersen, leaving four networks dominating the market at the turn of the 21st century. In the United Kingdom in 2011, it was reported that the Big Four account for the audits of 99% of the companies in the FTSE 100 Index, and 96% of the companies in the FTSE 250 Index, an index of the leading mid-cap listing companies.[1] Such a high level of industry concentration has caused concern, and a desire among some in the investment community for the UK's Competition & Markets Authority (CMA) to consider breaking up the Big Four. In October 2018, the CMA announced it would launch a detailed study of the Big Four's dominance of the audit sector. In July 2020, the UK Financial Reporting Council told the Big Four that they must submit plans by October 2020 to separate their audit and consultancy operations by 2024.[2]

Legal structure

None of the "firms" within the Big Four is actually a single firm; rather, they are professional services networks. Each is a network of firms, owned and managed independently, which have entered into agreements with the other member firms in the network to share a common name, brand, intellectual property, and quality standards. Each network has established a global entity to co-ordinate the activities of the network.

Until 2020, KPMG[3] was the only Big Four firm not registered as a UK private company, but rather the co-ordinating entity was a Swiss association (verein). However, KPMG International changed its legal structure from a verein to a co-operative under Swiss law in 2003,[4] then to a UK limited company in 2020.[3] For Deloitte,[5] PricewaterhouseCoopers[6] and Ernst & Young,[7] the co-ordinating entity is a UK limited company. Those entities do not themselves perform external professional services, nor do they own or control the member firms. Nevertheless, these networks colloquially are referred to as "firms" for the sake of simplicity and to reduce confusion with lay-people. These accounting and professional services networks are similar in nature to how law firm networks in the legal profession work.

In many cases, each member firm practices in a single country, and is structured to comply with the regulatory environment in that country.

Ernst & Young also includes separate legal entities which manage three of its four geographic areas: the Americas, Asia-Pacific, and EMEIA (Europe, the Middle East, India and Africa) groups, the fourth area being Japan, which has no larger co-ordination branch. These entities coordinate services performed by local firms within their respective areas, but do not perform services or hold ownership in the local entities.[8] There are rare exceptions to this convention; in 2007, KPMG announced a merger of four internationally distinct member firms (in the United Kingdom, Germany, Switzerland and Liechtenstein) to form a single firm, KPMG Europe LLP.[9]

History of mergers

Since the 1980s, numerous mergers and one major scandal involving Arthur Andersen, have reduced the number of major professional-services firms from eight to four.

Big Eight

The firms were referred to as the Big Eight for most of the 20th century, reflecting the international dominance of the eight largest firms:

Most of the Big Eight originated in an alliance formed between UK and US audit firms in the 19th or early 20th centuries. The firms' initial international expansion were driven by the needs of British and American based multinationals for worldwide service. They expanded by forming local partnerships, or by forming alliances with local firms. Arthur Andersen was the exception: the firm originated in the United States, and then expanded internationally by establishing its own offices in other markets, including the United Kingdom.

Price Waterhouse was a UK firm which opened a US office in 1890, and later established a separate US partnership. The UK and US Peat Marwick Mitchell firms adopted a common name in 1925. Other firms used separate names for domestic business, and did not adopt common names until much later. For instance, Touche Ross was named such in 1960, Arthur Young, McLelland, Moores & Co in 1968, Coopers & Lybrand in 1973, Deloitte Haskins & Sells in 1978 and Ernst & Whinney in 1979.[10] Even now, Deloitte's legal name is Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited, which reflects its history of mergers.[11]

In the 1980s the Big Eight, each with global branding, adopted modern marketing and grew rapidly. They merged with many smaller firms. KPMG was the result of one of the largest of these mergers. In 1987, Peat Marwick merged with the Klynveld Main Goerdeler group to become KPMG Peat Marwick, later known simply as KPMG. Note that this was not the result of a merger between any of the Big Eight.

Big Six

Competition among these firms intensified, and the Big Eight became the Big Six in 1989. In that year, Ernst & Whinney merged with Arthur Young to form Ernst & Young in June, and Deloitte, Haskins & Sells merged with Touche Ross to form Deloitte & Touche in August.

The Big Six after both mergers occurred were:

  • Arthur Andersen
  • Coopers & Lybrand
  • Deloitte & Touche
  • Ernst & Young
  • KPMG
  • Price Waterhouse

There has been some merging of ancestor firms, in some localities, which would aggregate brands belonging to the Big Four today, but in different combinations than the present-day names would otherwise suggest. For example, the United Kingdom local firm of Deloitte, Haskins & Sells merged instead with the United Kingdom firm of Coopers & Lybrand. The resulting firm was called Coopers & Lybrand Deloitte, and the local firm of Touche Ross kept its original name. It wasn't until the mid-1990s that both UK firms changed their names to match those of their respective international organizations. Meanwhile, in Australia, the local firm of Touche Ross merged instead with KPMG.[12][13] It is for these reasons that the Deloitte & Touche international organization was known as DRT International (later DTT International), to avoid use of names which would have been ambiguous, as well as contested, in certain markets.[citation needed]

Big Five

In July 1998, the Big Six became the Big Five when Price Waterhouse merged with Coopers & Lybrand to form PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The Big Five at this point in time were:[14]

  • Arthur Andersen
  • Deloitte & Touche
  • Ernst & Young
  • KPMG
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers

Big Four

Finally, the insolvency of Arthur Andersen stemming from their involvement in the 2001 Enron Scandal produced the Big Four:

The Enron collapse and ensuing investigation prompted scrutiny of the company's financial reporting and its long time auditor, Arthur Andersen. The company was indicted for obstruction of justice for shredding documents related to the audit of Enron. The resulting conviction, although later overturned, doomed Arthur Andersen, because most clients dropped the firm, and the company was not allowed to take on new clients while they were under investigation. Most of Arthur Andersen’s international practices were sold to members of what is now the Big Four – notably EY globally; Deloitte in the United Kingdom, Canada, Spain, and Brazil; and PwC in China and Hong Kong.

Big Four merger history

The Big Four were all derived from a series of global mergers, the charts show year of formation through merger, or adoption of single brand name.

Revenue comparison

In 2010, Deloitte, with its 1.8% growth, was able to outpace PricewaterhouseCoopers' 1.5% growth, gaining "first place" in revenue size, and became the largest firm in the professional services industry. In 2011, PwC re-gained first place with 10% revenue growth. In 2013, these two firms claimed the top two spots with only a $200 million revenue difference, that is, within half a percent. However, Deloitte saw faster growth than PwC over the next few years (largely due to acquisitions) and reclaimed the title of largest of the Big Four in Fiscal Year 2016.[15][16]

It was estimated that the Big Four had about a 67% share of the global accountancy market in 2012, while most of the rest was divided among so called mid-tier players, such as BDO, Crowe Global and Grant Thornton.[17]

Rank Firm Fiscal year
ending
Revenues
(US$)
% revenue gap
to next largest
Employees Revenue
per employee
Audit &
Assurance
Tax &
Legal
Consulting &
Advisory (Note)
Source
1st Deloitte 2022-05-31 $59.3 bn
(  $9.1 bn, 18.1%)
N/A 411,951
(  66,577, 19.3%)
$143,949
(  $1,401, −1.0%)
$11.4 bn
(  $0.9 bn, 8.6%)
$9.9 bn
(  $1.0 bn, 11.2%)
$38.1 bn
(  $7.1 bn, 22.9%)
F2022[18]
2nd PwC 2022-06-30 $50.3 bn
(  $5.2 bn, 11.5%)
-15% vs Deloitte
(−10% vs Deloitte in PY)
328,000
(  33,000, 11.2%)
$153,354
(  $472, 0.3%)
$18.0 bn
(  $0.9 bn, 5.3%)
$11.6 bn
(  $0.6 bn, 5.5%)
$20.7 bn
(  $3.7 bn, 21.8%)
F2022[19]
3rd EY 2022-06-30 $45.4 bn
(  $5.4 bn, 13.5%)
-10% vs PwC
(−11% vs PwC in PY)
365,399
(  53,149, 17%)
$124,248
(  $3,855, −3.0%)
$14.4 bn
(  $0.8 bn, 5.9%)
$11.3 bn
(  $0.8 bn, 7.6%)
$19.7 bn
(  $3.8 bn, 23.9%)
F2022[20]
4th KPMG 2022-09-30 $34.6 bn
(  $2.5 bn, 7.8%)
-24% vs EY
(-20% vs EY in PY)
265,000
(  29,000, 12.3%)
$130,566
(  $5,451, −4.0%)
$11.9 bn
(  $0.4 bn, 3.5%)
$7.4 bn
(  $0.4 bn, 5.7%)
$15.4 bn
(  $1.7 bn, 12.4%)
F2022[21]
Total $189.6 bn
(  $22.2 bn, 13.3%)
N/A 1,370,350
(  181,726, 15.3%)
$138,359
(  $2,476, 1.8%)
$55.7 bn
(  $3.0 bn, 5.7%)
$40.2 bn
(  $2.8 bn, 7.5%)
$93.9 bn
(  $16.3 bn, 21.0%)
N/A
Note: Consulting & Advisory includes the following service lines reported by each firm. Further, columns may not cross-add due to rounding in numbers reported by each firm.
  • Deloitte: Consulting, Financial Advisory, Risk Advisory (F2022 financial statement categories)
  • PwC: Advisory (F2022 financial statement categories)
  • EY: Consulting, Strategy and Transactions (F2022 financial statement categories)
  • KPMG: Advisory (F2022 financial statement categories)

Revenue comparison charts

Big Four Accounting Firm Revenues (US$ bn)

Revenue gap to largest firm (%)

Revenue gap to largest firm (US$ bn)

Audit & Assurance Revenue (US$ bn)

Tax Revenue (US$ bn)

Consulting & Advisory Revenue (US$ bn)

Criticism

Audit quality and ethics

A 2019 analysis by Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) in the United States observed that the big four accounting firms bungled almost 31% of their audits since 2009. In another project study on government oversight, it was seen that while the auditors colluded to present audit reports that pleased their clients, the times they didn't resulted in a loss of business. Despite this large-scale collusion in audits, the PCAOB in its 16-year history has only made 18 enforcement cases against the "big four". Although these auditors have failed audits in 31% of cases (808 cases in total), they have only faced action by PCAOB in 6.6% of the cases. KPMG at that point had never been fined despite having the worst audit failure rate of 36.6%.[22]

As per the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) none of the Big Four – Deloitte, EY, KPMG, and PwC managed to surpass the 90% target of its audits. The inefficiency in audit was resulting in a loss of investors' money, people's pension plans, stakeholders' livelihoods and was putting a question mark on the credibility of audited financial statements. "At a time when the future of the audit sector is under the microscope, the latest audit quality results are not acceptable," said Stephen Haddrill, the FRC's Chief executive. Multiple ethics scandals and questionable practices across the globe led to multi-million dollar fines and subsequent settlements by all the Big Four firms.[23]

Despite repeated sanctions from regulators, the Big Four have seen continued challenges to audit quality and ethics as the 2020 decade comes to a close.

  1. In May 2018, KPMG was accused of being "complicit" in signing off Carillion's "increasingly fantastical figures" before Carillion ultimately collapsed.[24]
  2. In January 2020, PwC faces allegations of potential conflict of interest in its audit of Sonangol, given its dual roles of both auditor and consultant.[25]
  3. In September 2020, Deloitte was fined £15 million (US$19.4 million) by the FRC for failing to apply sufficient professional skepticism in its audits of Autonomy's 2009 to 2011 financial statements prior to Autonomy's acquisition by Hewlett-Packard.[26]
  4. In June 2020, EY was accused of poor auditing for failing to discover that €1.9 billion in cash was missing at Wirecard AG, precipitating Wirecard's collapse and eventual sale to Santander Bank for €100 million in November 2020.[27][28][29][30]

Tax avoidance

According to Australian taxation expert George Rozvany, the Big Four are "the masterminds of multinational tax avoidance and the architects of tax schemes which cost governments and their taxpayers an estimated US$1 trillion a year". At the same time they are advising governments on tax reforms, they are advising their multinational clients on how to avoid taxes.[31][32]

Market concentration and alleged collusion amongst the Big Four

In the wake of industry concentration and the occasional firm failure, the issue of a credible alternative industry structure has been raised.[33] The limiting factor on the expansion of the Big Four to include additional firms, is that although some of the firms in the next tier have become quite substantially large, or have formed international networks, effectively all large public companies insist on having an audit performed by a Big Four network. This creates the complication that smaller firms have no way to compete well enough to make it into the top end of the market.

Documents published in June 2010 show that some UK companies' banking covenants required them to use one of the Big Four. This approach from the lender prevents firms in the next tier from competing for audit work for such companies. The British Bankers' Association said that such clauses are rare.[34] Current discussions in the UK consider outlawing such clauses.

In February 2011, the Irish Director of Corporate Enforcement Paul Appleby said that auditors "report surprisingly few types of company law offences to us", with the so-called "big four" auditing firms reporting the least often to his office, at just 5% of all reports.[35]

In 2011, the House of Lords of United Kingdom completed an inquiry into the financial crisis, and called for an Office of Fair Trading investigation into the dominance of the Big Four.[36] In September 2019, Bloomberg News reported that The Big Four controlled 95% of the FTSE 250 audit market by client numbers and 96% by market capitalization in August 2019, according to Adviser Rankings.[37]

In 2018, an Australian parliamentary committee was told that the heads of the Big Four firms have met regularly for dinner. The revelation was among issues which led to an inquiry by the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission into possible collusion in the selling of audit and other services. However, Ernst & Young told the inquiry that the dinners, which were held once or twice a year, were to discuss industry trends and issues of corporate culture such as inclusion and diversity.[38]

The January 2018 collapse of the UK construction and services company Carillion raised further questions about the Big Four, all of which had advised the company before its liquidation. On 13 February 2018, the Big Four were described by Member of Parliament (MP) and chair of the Work and Pensions Select Committee Frank Field as "feasting on what was soon to become a carcass" after collecting fees of £72m for Carillion work during the years leading up to its collapse.[39] The final report of a Parliamentary inquiry into the collapse of Carillion, published on 16 May 2018,[24] accused the Big Four accounting firms of being a "cosy club", with KPMG singled out for its "complicity" in signing off on Carillion's "increasingly fantastical figures" and internal auditor Deloitte accused of failing to identify, or ignoring, "terminal failings". The report recommended the Government refer the statutory audit market to the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), urging consideration of breaking up the Big Four.[24] In September 2018, Business Secretary Greg Clark announced he had asked the CMA to conduct an inquiry into competition in the audit sector,[40] and on 9 October 2018, the CMA announced it had launched a detailed study.[41] In July 2020, the UK Financial Reporting Council told the Big Four that they must submit plans by October 2020 to separate their audit and consultancy operations by 2024.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Christodoulou, Mario (2011-03-30). "U.K. Auditors Criticized on Bank Crisis". The Wall Street Journal.
  2. ^ a b "Accountancy giants face revamp amid criticism". BBC News. BBC. 6 July 2020. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Governance – KPMG Global". KPMG. 2019-12-12. Retrieved 2019-12-12.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 March 2007. (Registration Number CH-020.6.900.276-5)
  5. ^ "About Deloitte | Our global network of member firms". Deloitte United States. Retrieved 2019-12-12.
  6. ^ "How we are structured". PwC. Retrieved 2019-12-12.
  7. ^ "Newsroom". www.ey.com. Retrieved 2019-12-12.
  8. ^ . Ernst & Young. Archived from the original on 2018-06-27. Retrieved 2016-10-11.
  9. ^ Lomas, Ulrika (26 June 2007). . Tax-News. Wolters Kluwer. Archived from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  10. ^ "What's in a name: Firms' simplified family trees on the web". icaew.com.
  11. ^ "Big 4 Consulting Firms: A Guide for 2020". thecambridgeconsultant.com. 29 March 2021.
  12. ^ "missing".
  13. ^ Cowan, Alison Leigh (1989-12-05). "Deloitte, Touche Merger Done". The New York Times.
  14. ^ "Big 5 Accounting Firms * (Deloitte, EY, KPMG, Pricewaterhouse...)".
  15. ^ "Deloitte announces record revenue of US$36.8 billion". Deloitte. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  16. ^ "FY16 global revenues rise to record US$35.9 billion as PwC looks to future". PwC. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  17. ^ Fleming, Sam (12 Feb 2014). "Accountants PwC, Deloitte, KPMG and EY face taming moves". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  18. ^ "2022 Global Impact Report". Deloitte. September 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  19. ^ "PwC announces record global revenues of US$50 billion". PwC. 4 October 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  20. ^ "EY achieves highest growth in nearly two decades, reports record global revenue of US$45.4b". EY. 9 September 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  21. ^ "KPMG delivers strong global revenues, reporting 14% growth in FY22". KPMG. 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  22. ^ Haldevang, Max de. "Big Four accounting firms bungle a third of US audits but are rarely fined". Quartz. Retrieved 2019-09-19.
  23. ^ "21 Scandals, Settlements and Corporate Crimes of Big 4 Accounting Firms in 2019". www.facelesscompliance.com. 9 July 2020. Retrieved July 9, 2020.
  24. ^ a b c Davies, Rob (16 May 2018). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on 21 December 2020. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  25. ^ Garside, Juliette; Inman, Phillip (23 January 2020). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on 21 December 2020. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  26. ^ Cohn, Michael (17 September 2020). . Accounting Today. Archived from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  27. ^ Storbeck, Olaf; Dombey, Daniel (16 November 2020). "Santander buys Wirecard's core European business for €100m". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  28. ^ "EY chairman admits 'regret' over Wirecard failure". Australian Financial Review. 2020-09-16. Retrieved 2020-12-18.
  29. ^ Seidenstuecker, Jörn Poltz, Hans (2020-12-04). "German prosecutors probe EY auditors over Wirecard collapse". Reuters. Retrieved 2020-12-18.
  30. ^ "Wirecard Woes Mount for Ernst & Young as Clients Cut Auditor". Bloomberg.com. 2020-09-22. Retrieved 2020-12-18.
  31. ^ "'Tax avoidance' masters revealed". The NEWDAILY. 2016-07-11.
  32. ^ "'Big Four' audit firms never examined over illegal tax plans". The Independent. 2016-01-18. Regulators fail to act as they are dominated by the companies they are supposed to police, say critics
  33. ^ "Too Big to Fail: Moral Hazard in Auditing and the Need to Restructure the Industry Before it Unravels". SSRN 928482.
  34. ^ . accountancyage.com. Archived from the original on 2010-06-21.
  35. ^ Oliver, Emmet, ed. (11 February 2011). . Independent.ie. Archived from the original on 26 October 2020. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  36. ^ "Auditors criticised for role in financial crisis". Financial Times. 30 March 2011. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.
  37. ^ Kapoor, Michael (September 1, 2019). "Big Four Still Dominate U.K. Large-Company Audits, Survey Shows". Bloomberg Tax. Bloomberg.
  38. ^ Tadros, Edmund; McIlroy, Tom (15 February 2019). "Big four left guessing over dinner guests". Australian Financial Review. p. 10.
  39. ^ Davies, Rob (13 February 2018). "Carillion: accountants accused of 'feasting' on company". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  40. ^ Busby, Mattha (29 September 2018). "Audit sector faces inquiry as minister points to deficiencies". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  41. ^ "CMA launches immediate review of audit sector". Gov.uk. Retrieved 9 October 2018.

External links

four, accounting, firms, four, four, largest, professional, services, networks, world, global, accounting, networks, deloitte, ernst, young, kpmg, pricewaterhousecoopers, four, often, grouped, because, they, comparable, size, relative, rest, market, both, term. The Big Four are the four largest professional services networks in the world the global accounting networks Deloitte Ernst amp Young EY KPMG and PricewaterhouseCoopers PwC The four are often grouped because they are comparable in size relative to the rest of the market both in terms of revenue and workforce they are considered equal in their ability to provide a wide scope of professional services to their clients and among those looking to start a career in professional services particularly accounting they are considered equally attractive networks to work in because of the frequency with which these firms engage with Fortune 500 companies The Big Four each offer audit assurance taxation management consulting actuarial corporate finance and legal services to their clients A significant majority of the audits of public companies as well as many audits of private companies are conducted by these four networks Until the late 20th century the market for professional services was actually dominated by eight networks which were nicknamed the Big Eight The Big Eight consisted of Arthur Andersen Arthur Young Coopers amp Lybrand Deloitte Haskins and Sells Ernst amp Whinney Peat Marwick Mitchell Price Waterhouse and Touche Ross The Big Eight gradually reduced due to mergers between these firms as well as the 2002 collapse of Arthur Andersen leaving four networks dominating the market at the turn of the 21st century In the United Kingdom in 2011 it was reported that the Big Four account for the audits of 99 of the companies in the FTSE 100 Index and 96 of the companies in the FTSE 250 Index an index of the leading mid cap listing companies 1 Such a high level of industry concentration has caused concern and a desire among some in the investment community for the UK s Competition amp Markets Authority CMA to consider breaking up the Big Four In October 2018 the CMA announced it would launch a detailed study of the Big Four s dominance of the audit sector In July 2020 the UK Financial Reporting Council told the Big Four that they must submit plans by October 2020 to separate their audit and consultancy operations by 2024 2 Contents 1 Legal structure 2 History of mergers 2 1 Big Eight 2 2 Big Six 2 3 Big Five 2 4 Big Four 2 5 Big Four merger history 3 Revenue comparison 3 1 Revenue comparison charts 4 Criticism 4 1 Audit quality and ethics 4 2 Tax avoidance 4 3 Market concentration and alleged collusion amongst the Big Four 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLegal structure EditNone of the firms within the Big Four is actually a single firm rather they are professional services networks Each is a network of firms owned and managed independently which have entered into agreements with the other member firms in the network to share a common name brand intellectual property and quality standards Each network has established a global entity to co ordinate the activities of the network Until 2020 KPMG 3 was the only Big Four firm not registered as a UK private company but rather the co ordinating entity was a Swiss association verein However KPMG International changed its legal structure from a verein to a co operative under Swiss law in 2003 4 then to a UK limited company in 2020 3 For Deloitte 5 PricewaterhouseCoopers 6 and Ernst amp Young 7 the co ordinating entity is a UK limited company Those entities do not themselves perform external professional services nor do they own or control the member firms Nevertheless these networks colloquially are referred to as firms for the sake of simplicity and to reduce confusion with lay people These accounting and professional services networks are similar in nature to how law firm networks in the legal profession work In many cases each member firm practices in a single country and is structured to comply with the regulatory environment in that country Ernst amp Young also includes separate legal entities which manage three of its four geographic areas the Americas Asia Pacific and EMEIA Europe the Middle East India and Africa groups the fourth area being Japan which has no larger co ordination branch These entities coordinate services performed by local firms within their respective areas but do not perform services or hold ownership in the local entities 8 There are rare exceptions to this convention in 2007 KPMG announced a merger of four internationally distinct member firms in the United Kingdom Germany Switzerland and Liechtenstein to form a single firm KPMG Europe LLP 9 History of mergers EditSince the 1980s numerous mergers and one major scandal involving Arthur Andersen have reduced the number of major professional services firms from eight to four Big Eight Edit The firms were referred to as the Big Eight for most of the 20th century reflecting the international dominance of the eight largest firms Arthur Andersen Arthur Young Coopers amp Lybrand Deloitte Haskins amp Sells Ernst amp Whinney Peat Marwick Mitchell Price Waterhouse Touche RossMost of the Big Eight originated in an alliance formed between UK and US audit firms in the 19th or early 20th centuries The firms initial international expansion were driven by the needs of British and American based multinationals for worldwide service They expanded by forming local partnerships or by forming alliances with local firms Arthur Andersen was the exception the firm originated in the United States and then expanded internationally by establishing its own offices in other markets including the United Kingdom Price Waterhouse was a UK firm which opened a US office in 1890 and later established a separate US partnership The UK and US Peat Marwick Mitchell firms adopted a common name in 1925 Other firms used separate names for domestic business and did not adopt common names until much later For instance Touche Ross was named such in 1960 Arthur Young McLelland Moores amp Co in 1968 Coopers amp Lybrand in 1973 Deloitte Haskins amp Sells in 1978 and Ernst amp Whinney in 1979 10 Even now Deloitte s legal name is Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited which reflects its history of mergers 11 In the 1980s the Big Eight each with global branding adopted modern marketing and grew rapidly They merged with many smaller firms KPMG was the result of one of the largest of these mergers In 1987 Peat Marwick merged with the Klynveld Main Goerdeler group to become KPMG Peat Marwick later known simply as KPMG Note that this was not the result of a merger between any of the Big Eight Big Six Edit Competition among these firms intensified and the Big Eight became the Big Six in 1989 In that year Ernst amp Whinney merged with Arthur Young to form Ernst amp Young in June and Deloitte Haskins amp Sells merged with Touche Ross to form Deloitte amp Touche in August The Big Six after both mergers occurred were Arthur Andersen Coopers amp Lybrand Deloitte amp Touche Ernst amp Young KPMG Price WaterhouseThere has been some merging of ancestor firms in some localities which would aggregate brands belonging to the Big Four today but in different combinations than the present day names would otherwise suggest For example the United Kingdom local firm of Deloitte Haskins amp Sells merged instead with the United Kingdom firm of Coopers amp Lybrand The resulting firm was called Coopers amp Lybrand Deloitte and the local firm of Touche Ross kept its original name It wasn t until the mid 1990s that both UK firms changed their names to match those of their respective international organizations Meanwhile in Australia the local firm of Touche Ross merged instead with KPMG 12 13 It is for these reasons that the Deloitte amp Touche international organization was known as DRT International later DTT International to avoid use of names which would have been ambiguous as well as contested in certain markets citation needed Big Five Edit In July 1998 the Big Six became the Big Five when Price Waterhouse merged with Coopers amp Lybrand to form PricewaterhouseCoopers The Big Five at this point in time were 14 Arthur Andersen Deloitte amp Touche Ernst amp Young KPMG PricewaterhouseCoopersBig Four Edit Finally the insolvency of Arthur Andersen stemming from their involvement in the 2001 Enron Scandal produced the Big Four Deloitte amp Touche now known as Deloitte Ernst amp Young now known as EY KPMG PricewaterhouseCoopers now known as PwC The Enron collapse and ensuing investigation prompted scrutiny of the company s financial reporting and its long time auditor Arthur Andersen The company was indicted for obstruction of justice for shredding documents related to the audit of Enron The resulting conviction although later overturned doomed Arthur Andersen because most clients dropped the firm and the company was not allowed to take on new clients while they were under investigation Most of Arthur Andersen s international practices were sold to members of what is now the Big Four notably EY globally Deloitte in the United Kingdom Canada Spain and Brazil and PwC in China and Hong Kong Big Four merger history Edit The Big Four were all derived from a series of global mergers the charts show year of formation through merger or adoption of single brand name DeloitteDeloitte Touche Tohmatsu 1989 Deloitte amp Touche until 1993 Deloitte Haskins amp Sells 1978 Touche Ross 1975 Deloitte amp Co UK 1845 Haskins amp Sells US 1895 Touche Ross 1960 Touche Ross Bailey amp Smart until 1969 Tohmatsu amp Co Japan 1968 Ross Canada George A Touche UK Touche Niven Bailey amp Smart US 1947 Touche Niven 1900 Bailey amp Smart 1947 EYErnst amp Young EY 1989 Ernst amp Young until 2013 Arthur Young 1985 Ernst amp Whinney EY 1979 Arthur Young McLelland Moores amp Co 1968 Arthur Young BroadsPaterson amp Co 1923 Stuart amp Young 1894 Ernst amp Ernst US 1903 Whinney Smith amp Whinney UK 1849 KPMGKPMG 1987 KPMG Peat Marwickbefore 1995 Peat Marwick 1925 originallyPeat Marwick Mitchell KMG 1979 officiallyKlynveld Main Goerdeler Armitage amp Norton 1869 1987 William BarclayPeat UK 1870 Marwick Mitchell US 1897 Edwin Gurthie 1875 1955 Beevers amp Adgie 1849 1967 Klynveld Kraayenhof Netherlands 1917 McLintock MainLafrentz 1964 Deutsche Treuhand Gesellschaft Germany 1890 Thomson McLintock UK 1877 Main Lafrentz US c 1880 Martin Farlow 1882 1968 Grace Ryland 1967 1969 Grace Darbyshire amp Todd 1818 CJ Ryland 1910 PwCPricewaterhouseCoopers PwC 1998 PricewaterhouseCoopers until 2010 Coopers amp Lybrand 1973 Price Waterhouse US 1849 Cooper Brothers UK 1854 Lybrand Ross Bros Montgomery US 1898 Revenue comparison EditIn 2010 Deloitte with its 1 8 growth was able to outpace PricewaterhouseCoopers 1 5 growth gaining first place in revenue size and became the largest firm in the professional services industry In 2011 PwC re gained first place with 10 revenue growth In 2013 these two firms claimed the top two spots with only a 200 million revenue difference that is within half a percent However Deloitte saw faster growth than PwC over the next few years largely due to acquisitions and reclaimed the title of largest of the Big Four in Fiscal Year 2016 15 16 See also Accounting network Global ranking It was estimated that the Big Four had about a 67 share of the global accountancy market in 2012 while most of the rest was divided among so called mid tier players such as BDO Crowe Global and Grant Thornton 17 Rank Firm Fiscal yearending Revenues US revenue gapto next largest Employees Revenueper employee Audit amp Assurance Tax amp Legal Consulting amp Advisory Note Source1st Deloitte 2022 05 31 59 3 bn 9 1 bn 18 1 N A 411 951 66 577 19 3 143 949 1 401 1 0 11 4 bn 0 9 bn 8 6 9 9 bn 1 0 bn 11 2 38 1 bn 7 1 bn 22 9 F2022 18 2nd PwC 2022 06 30 50 3 bn 5 2 bn 11 5 15 vs Deloitte 10 vs Deloitte in PY 328 000 33 000 11 2 153 354 472 0 3 18 0 bn 0 9 bn 5 3 11 6 bn 0 6 bn 5 5 20 7 bn 3 7 bn 21 8 F2022 19 3rd EY 2022 06 30 45 4 bn 5 4 bn 13 5 10 vs PwC 11 vs PwC in PY 365 399 53 149 17 124 248 3 855 3 0 14 4 bn 0 8 bn 5 9 11 3 bn 0 8 bn 7 6 19 7 bn 3 8 bn 23 9 F2022 20 4th KPMG 2022 09 30 34 6 bn 2 5 bn 7 8 24 vs EY 20 vs EY in PY 265 000 29 000 12 3 130 566 5 451 4 0 11 9 bn 0 4 bn 3 5 7 4 bn 0 4 bn 5 7 15 4 bn 1 7 bn 12 4 F2022 21 Total 189 6 bn 22 2 bn 13 3 N A 1 370 350 181 726 15 3 138 359 2 476 1 8 55 7 bn 3 0 bn 5 7 40 2 bn 2 8 bn 7 5 93 9 bn 16 3 bn 21 0 N ANote Consulting amp Advisory includes the following service lines reported by each firm Further columns may not cross add due to rounding in numbers reported by each firm Deloitte Consulting Financial Advisory Risk Advisory F2022 financial statement categories PwC Advisory F2022 financial statement categories EY Consulting Strategy and Transactions F2022 financial statement categories KPMG Advisory F2022 financial statement categories Revenue comparison charts Edit Big Four Accounting Firm Revenues US bn Revenue gap to largest firm Revenue gap to largest firm US bn Audit amp Assurance Revenue US bn Tax Revenue US bn Consulting amp Advisory Revenue US bn Criticism EditSee also Accounting scandals Audit quality and ethics Edit A 2019 analysis by Public Company Accounting Oversight Board PCAOB in the United States observed that the big four accounting firms bungled almost 31 of their audits since 2009 In another project study on government oversight it was seen that while the auditors colluded to present audit reports that pleased their clients the times they didn t resulted in a loss of business Despite this large scale collusion in audits the PCAOB in its 16 year history has only made 18 enforcement cases against the big four Although these auditors have failed audits in 31 of cases 808 cases in total they have only faced action by PCAOB in 6 6 of the cases KPMG at that point had never been fined despite having the worst audit failure rate of 36 6 22 As per the Financial Reporting Council FRC none of the Big Four Deloitte EY KPMG and PwC managed to surpass the 90 target of its audits The inefficiency in audit was resulting in a loss of investors money people s pension plans stakeholders livelihoods and was putting a question mark on the credibility of audited financial statements At a time when the future of the audit sector is under the microscope the latest audit quality results are not acceptable said Stephen Haddrill the FRC s Chief executive Multiple ethics scandals and questionable practices across the globe led to multi million dollar fines and subsequent settlements by all the Big Four firms 23 Despite repeated sanctions from regulators the Big Four have seen continued challenges to audit quality and ethics as the 2020 decade comes to a close In May 2018 KPMG was accused of being complicit in signing off Carillion s increasingly fantastical figures before Carillion ultimately collapsed 24 In January 2020 PwC faces allegations of potential conflict of interest in its audit of Sonangol given its dual roles of both auditor and consultant 25 In September 2020 Deloitte was fined 15 million US 19 4 million by the FRC for failing to apply sufficient professional skepticism in its audits of Autonomy s 2009 to 2011 financial statements prior to Autonomy s acquisition by Hewlett Packard 26 In June 2020 EY was accused of poor auditing for failing to discover that 1 9 billion in cash was missing at Wirecard AG precipitating Wirecard s collapse and eventual sale to Santander Bank for 100 million in November 2020 27 28 29 30 Tax avoidance Edit According to Australian taxation expert George Rozvany the Big Four are the masterminds of multinational tax avoidance and the architects of tax schemes which cost governments and their taxpayers an estimated US 1 trillion a year At the same time they are advising governments on tax reforms they are advising their multinational clients on how to avoid taxes 31 32 Market concentration and alleged collusion amongst the Big Four Edit In the wake of industry concentration and the occasional firm failure the issue of a credible alternative industry structure has been raised 33 The limiting factor on the expansion of the Big Four to include additional firms is that although some of the firms in the next tier have become quite substantially large or have formed international networks effectively all large public companies insist on having an audit performed by a Big Four network This creates the complication that smaller firms have no way to compete well enough to make it into the top end of the market Documents published in June 2010 show that some UK companies banking covenants required them to use one of the Big Four This approach from the lender prevents firms in the next tier from competing for audit work for such companies The British Bankers Association said that such clauses are rare 34 Current discussions in the UK consider outlawing such clauses In February 2011 the Irish Director of Corporate Enforcement Paul Appleby said that auditors report surprisingly few types of company law offences to us with the so called big four auditing firms reporting the least often to his office at just 5 of all reports 35 In 2011 the House of Lords of United Kingdom completed an inquiry into the financial crisis and called for an Office of Fair Trading investigation into the dominance of the Big Four 36 In September 2019 Bloomberg News reported that The Big Four controlled 95 of the FTSE 250 audit market by client numbers and 96 by market capitalization in August 2019 according to Adviser Rankings 37 In 2018 an Australian parliamentary committee was told that the heads of the Big Four firms have met regularly for dinner The revelation was among issues which led to an inquiry by the Australian Competition amp Consumer Commission into possible collusion in the selling of audit and other services However Ernst amp Young told the inquiry that the dinners which were held once or twice a year were to discuss industry trends and issues of corporate culture such as inclusion and diversity 38 The January 2018 collapse of the UK construction and services company Carillion raised further questions about the Big Four all of which had advised the company before its liquidation On 13 February 2018 the Big Four were described by Member of Parliament MP and chair of the Work and Pensions Select Committee Frank Field as feasting on what was soon to become a carcass after collecting fees of 72m for Carillion work during the years leading up to its collapse 39 The final report of a Parliamentary inquiry into the collapse of Carillion published on 16 May 2018 24 accused the Big Four accounting firms of being a cosy club with KPMG singled out for its complicity in signing off on Carillion s increasingly fantastical figures and internal auditor Deloitte accused of failing to identify or ignoring terminal failings The report recommended the Government refer the statutory audit market to the Competition and Markets Authority CMA urging consideration of breaking up the Big Four 24 In September 2018 Business Secretary Greg Clark announced he had asked the CMA to conduct an inquiry into competition in the audit sector 40 and on 9 October 2018 the CMA announced it had launched a detailed study 41 In July 2020 the UK Financial Reporting Council told the Big Four that they must submit plans by October 2020 to separate their audit and consultancy operations by 2024 2 See also EditAccounting network Other Big industries Big Oil Big Soda Big Tech Big Three automobile manufacturers Big Three management consultancies Big Tobacco LuxLeaks Panama Papers Professional services networkReferences Edit Christodoulou Mario 2011 03 30 U K Auditors Criticized on Bank Crisis The Wall Street Journal a b Accountancy giants face revamp amid criticism BBC News BBC 6 July 2020 Retrieved 6 July 2020 a b Governance KPMG Global KPMG 2019 12 12 Retrieved 2019 12 12 Handelsregister des Kantons Zug Archived from the original on 29 March 2007 Registration Number CH 020 6 900 276 5 About Deloitte Our global network of member firms Deloitte United States Retrieved 2019 12 12 How we are structured PwC Retrieved 2019 12 12 Newsroom www ey com Retrieved 2019 12 12 Legal Disclaimer Ernst amp Young Archived from the original on 2018 06 27 Retrieved 2016 10 11 Lomas Ulrika 26 June 2007 KPMG Swiss Merger To Create Europe s Largest Accountancy Firm Tax News Wolters Kluwer Archived from the original on 8 May 2021 Retrieved 7 May 2021 What s in a name Firms simplified family trees on the web icaew com Big 4 Consulting Firms A Guide for 2020 thecambridgeconsultant com 29 March 2021 missing Cowan Alison Leigh 1989 12 05 Deloitte Touche Merger Done The New York Times Big 5 Accounting Firms Deloitte EY KPMG Pricewaterhouse Deloitte announces record revenue of US 36 8 billion Deloitte Retrieved 13 September 2020 FY16 global revenues rise to record US 35 9 billion as PwC looks to future PwC Retrieved 13 September 2020 Fleming Sam 12 Feb 2014 Accountants PwC Deloitte KPMG and EY face taming moves Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 6 May 2017 2022 Global Impact Report Deloitte September 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 PwC announces record global revenues of US 50 billion PwC 4 October 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2022 EY achieves highest growth in nearly two decades reports record global revenue of US 45 4b EY 9 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2022 KPMG delivers strong global revenues reporting 14 growth in FY22 KPMG 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 Haldevang Max de Big Four accounting firms bungle a third of US audits but are rarely fined Quartz Retrieved 2019 09 19 21 Scandals Settlements and Corporate Crimes of Big 4 Accounting Firms in 2019 www facelesscompliance com 9 July 2020 Retrieved July 9 2020 a b c Davies Rob 16 May 2018 Recklessness hubris and greed Carillion slammed by MPs The Guardian Archived from the original on 21 December 2020 Retrieved 16 May 2018 Garside Juliette Inman Phillip 23 January 2020 PwC under growing scrutiny as scandal engulfs Isabel dos Santos The Guardian Archived from the original on 21 December 2020 Retrieved 21 December 2020 Cohn Michael 17 September 2020 Deloitte fined 15M in U K for Autonomy audits Accounting Today Archived from the original on 29 October 2020 Retrieved 21 December 2020 Storbeck Olaf Dombey Daniel 16 November 2020 Santander buys Wirecard s core European business for 100m Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 17 November 2020 EY chairman admits regret over Wirecard failure Australian Financial Review 2020 09 16 Retrieved 2020 12 18 Seidenstuecker Jorn Poltz Hans 2020 12 04 German prosecutors probe EY auditors over Wirecard collapse Reuters Retrieved 2020 12 18 Wirecard Woes Mount for Ernst amp Young as Clients Cut Auditor Bloomberg com 2020 09 22 Retrieved 2020 12 18 Tax avoidance masters revealed The NEWDAILY 2016 07 11 Big Four audit firms never examined over illegal tax plans The Independent 2016 01 18 Regulators fail to act as they are dominated by the companies they are supposed to police say critics Too Big to Fail Moral Hazard in Auditing and the Need to Restructure the Industry Before it Unravels SSRN 928482 Big Four only clauses are rare BBA accountancyage com Archived from the original on 2010 06 21 Oliver Emmet ed 11 February 2011 Appleby and Revenue query work of auditors Independent ie Archived from the original on 26 October 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2020 Auditors criticised for role in financial crisis Financial Times 30 March 2011 Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Kapoor Michael September 1 2019 Big Four Still Dominate U K Large Company Audits Survey Shows Bloomberg Tax Bloomberg Tadros Edmund McIlroy Tom 15 February 2019 Big four left guessing over dinner guests Australian Financial Review p 10 Davies Rob 13 February 2018 Carillion accountants accused of feasting on company The Guardian Retrieved 13 February 2018 Busby Mattha 29 September 2018 Audit sector faces inquiry as minister points to deficiencies The Guardian Retrieved 29 September 2018 CMA launches immediate review of audit sector Gov uk Retrieved 9 October 2018 External links EditOfficial website Deloitte Official website Ernst amp Young EY Official website KPMG Official website PricewaterhouseCoopers PwC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Big Four accounting firms amp oldid 1133339904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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