Barclays replaces its auditor PwC, ending 119-year relationship

British bank hires KPMG amid regulatory investigation into reporting of its accounts

British bank Barclays has named KPMG as its new auditor, ending a 119-year relationship with PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) amid a British regulatory investigation into the reporting of the bank's accounts.

KPMG will take over in 2017 after winning a bidding process started in March last year, according to a statement from the London-based bank said.

In December, the UK's Financial Reporting Council started a probe into PwC's role in reporting on Barclays's compliance with regulators' client asset rules.

Auditors have been criticised by MPs for not spotting practices that led to the financial crisis of 2008, which resulted in £1 trillion of taxpayer money being used to prop up the nation’s banks.

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New chairman John McFarlane has vowed to speed up the overhaul of Barclays and is reviewing the bank’s performance.

He has already replaced one of its corporate brokers.

Barclays, the second-largest British lender by assets, was fined £38 million in September for failing to maintain proper records on £16.5 billion of client money its investment bank placed with outside parties.

In contrast to Barclays, HSBC Holdings hired PwC as its auditor in August 2013, replacing KPMG after more than 20 years. Barclays paid £44 million in total compensation to PwC and its associates in 2014, according to its annual report.

PwC and its predecessors have audited Barclays since 1896 and new European Union and UK rules make it compulsory for FTSE 350-traded companies to review their external auditor at least every 10 years and change the firm at least every 20 years.

Barclays conducted "a very thorough, open and transparent audit tender process," Tim Breedon, the board member in charge of picking the new firm, said in the statement. "We thank PwC for their significant contribution as Barclays' auditors. We look forward to working with KPMG in the future."

JPMorgan Chase replaced Credit Suisse as Barclays's corporate broker last month after 25 years with the Swiss firm. Deutsche Bank AG retained its advisory role, held since 2011.

Bloomberg

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times