Cambrian Mining forced to restate accounts

Action by Financial Reporting Review Panel sees Cambrian restate £40m operating profit as a £4.6m loss

Written by Nicholas Neveling

Cambrian Mining has been forced to make an embarrassing reissue of its accounts after the Financial Reporting Review Panel told the company to restate a £40m operating profit as a £4.6m loss.

The restatement, for the Cambrian's accounts for the year ended June 2006, was made because the original accounts did not comply with the Companies Act, made a number of errors and failed to comply with IFRS, the FRRP said.

The problems related to the accounting for acquisitions, interests in associates, investments in convertible notes and foreign exchange gains.

Shares in the company have been suspended on AIM since mid-December when the business said it would be unable to report on the 12-months to June 2007.

The company has now replaced former auditors Chapman Davis with Deloitte, and new finance director Vivian Silverman has been appointed to keep the company on track to report financials for 2006/2007 soon and announce the outcome of a strategic review.

Cambrian's former finance director, Jo Malins, resigned in January 2006. He was fined £25,000 by the FSA a month earlier for buying up Cambrian shares ahead of company announcements:

Further reading:

Read the FRRP's report on Cambrian Mining

FSA fines Cambrian FD over shares

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Profile: Ian Powell, chairman of PwC

Being number one isn't enough for PwC chairman Ian Powell....

Credit crunch special: guiding business through the storm

The downturn is hurting and recession looms. Will accountants be...

Beat the credit crunch with Young Professional

Latest issue features a guide to advancement during economic uncertainty,...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Would rumoured Treasury moves to abolish stamp duty do anything to help the housing market?
Yes, scrapping stamp duty has been a long time coming
No, any move is far too little, too late

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job