Research
One quarter of FTSE 350 audit committee reports are inadequate
Some 23% of FTSE 350 companies are not adequately reporting to shareholders on the activities of their audit committees, producing in effect little more than a summary of the committees’ terms of reference, research by the Local Authority Pension Fund Forum (LAPFF) has found.
The LAPFF also found that the standard of audit committee reporting
decreases as companies become smaller: 11% of FTSE 100 companies did not
produce adequate reports, compared to 30% of Midcaps and 40% of SmallCaps.
The LAPFF released its research in response to the Financial Reporting
Council’s consultation on the Combined Code. The Forum argues that many
companies are not acting in the spirit of the Smith guidance, which provides
a proposed outline for audit committee reports, and that the Code should
therefore reinforce the need for an informative description of the work
covered during the year, rather than a general statement of
responsibilities.
Darrell Pulk, LAPFF chair, said: “Audit committee reports represent an area
of company reporting where we believe there is substantial room for
improvement. Simply disclosing terms of reference is not good enough. We
want to see meaningful reports to shareholders”.
September 2007