Law, disrupted

US/China Audit Access Agreement - What’s Next?

Sep 2, 2022
Sarah Heaton Concannon, Co-Chair of SEC Enforcement Defense, and Xiao Liu, Co-Managing Partner in Shanghai, delve into the new agreement allowing U.S. auditors limited access to Chinese firms' audit work papers. They discuss the challenges posed by Chinese privacy laws that historically restricted such audits, the implications for the PCAOB's inspection powers, and the expected uptick in SEC investigations. With 200 Chinese companies listed in the U.S., the stakes are high, and this agreement marks a crucial turning point in U.S.-China regulatory relations.
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INSIGHT

PCAOB Gains Hong Kong Inspection Access

  • The PCAOB will be allowed to conduct on-the-ground inspections in Hong Kong of audit working papers for U.S.-listed Chinese issuers.
  • The agreement reportedly gives the PCAOB unfettered choice of audits to inspect and access to unredacted working papers, with limited view-only access for personal data.
ANECDOTE

Longtop Case Sparked A Decade-Long Standoff

  • The dispute traces back to a 2011 SEC probe of Longtop where Deloitte refused to hand over working papers citing Chinese law.
  • The refusal triggered years of legal fights and SEC actions against Big Four affiliates over turning over audit files.
INSIGHT

Inspections Will Be Hong Kong-Based, Not Mainland

  • The inspections will be logistically different: PCAOB inspectors go to Hong Kong and review China-based auditors' files there rather than entering mainland China.
  • That limitation may constrain the PCAOB compared with its usual inspections in other jurisdictions.
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