Audit competition depends on how you look at it
Big Four and mid-tier views over what constitutes competition are so distant it is questionable whether Competition Commission findings will settle argument
Big Four and mid-tier views over what constitutes competition are so distant it is questionable whether Competition Commission findings will settle argument
THE FINAL FINDINGS from the Competition Commission’s investigation into the audit market are expected in the next couple of months.
Yet I wonder whether its conclusion, whatever that may be, will actually settle the dispute over whether the market for FTSE 350 audit work is competitive. What one set of firms views as competitive is entirely different from what the other sees as uncompetitive.
A recent working paper from the CC found that there was no evidence that the Big Four ‘tacitly’ collude to restrict competition. It appeared to back up their claim that the market for large-listed audits is ‘fiercely competitive’.
Indeed, a recent infographic published on behalf of PwC by its lawyers Norton Rose found there were more than 130 instances of FTSE 350 companies switching auditor between 2001 and 2011.
PwC said the evidence-based data, which represents a rate of about one switch a month, dispels the widely held view that the audit market is static and uncompetitive.
Fair enough, you might say. But show the exact same data to the mid-tier firms that want to get their own piece of the action, and you get an entirely different reading. The opposing argument is that, while the Big Four look terribly competitive when dealing with each other, it hardly constitutes competition if that business is just handed among the usual suspects.
The market waits in anticipation for the CC to deliver its decree. But it is unlikely that the side that loses out will feel satisfied with the results. Perhaps a fudge is most likely. At least that way the argument can rage on. It probably will anyway, whatever the outcome.