Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ernst & Young agrees to pay $8 million to settle with Ontario regulator

David Friend The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2014 12:00 PM

    TORONTO - Ernst & Young LLP has agreed to pay $8 million in two settlements with the Ontario Securities Commission, which accused the firm of mishandling the audits of two Chinese companies, including Sino-Forest Corp.

    Both settlements were entered into on a no-contest basis, but required approval by an independent panel. Ernst & Young didn't accept nor deny the allegations issued against it by the OSC's enforcement branch.

    "The terms of this settlement, I think, are unprecedented in Canada in these circumstances, and are consistent with the level of payments imposed by the SEC (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) in similar matters," OSC vice-chairman James Turner said Tuesday in granting approval of the settlements.

    In the case of Sino-Forest, Ernst & Young agreed to pay $6.5 million. The auditor had been accused of failing to meet industry standards through its accounting measures, and failing to verify the existence of some of the company's key assets.

    "Auditors are gatekeepers who are responsible to shareholders," OSC lawyer Yvonne Chisholm told the hearing.

    "This settlement achieves key regulatory goals that we submit will have a deterrent effect on Ernst & Young and on other auditing firms."

    The OSC staff did not allege, and found no evidence, that Ernst & Young employees were involved in dishonest conduct, she added.

    Within the settlement tied to Sino-Forest, $1.5 million will go towards paying for "most" of the expenses incurred by OSC staff during their investigation, while the remaining $5 million will be allocated to undetermined third parties at the discretion of the OSC, Chisholm said.

    Typically those funds go towards various causes, including an OSC investor education fund, said OSC spokeswoman Carolyn Shaw-Rimmington.

    Ernst & Young lawyer Linda Fuerst said the settlement will avoid lengthy and costly hearings for both cases that were scheduled to take place over 100 hearing days starting later this year.

    Sino-Forest was once the most valuable forestry company on the Toronto Stock Exchange with a market cap of more than $6 billion. But in 2011 it became embroiled in a scandal over its finances after investment firm Muddy Waters Research released a report that labelled the company as a complex Ponzi scheme.

    The report prompted investigations by the Ontario regulator and the RCMP.

    Sino-Forest filed for bankruptcy protection the following year, and is now controlled by its bondholders under a different entity called Emerald Plantation Holdings Ltd.

    In March 2013, Ernst & Young agreed to pay $117 million to settle a class action brought by shareholders of Sino-Forest.

    Meanwhile, the OSC is also involved in a separate hearing related to allegations that former Sino-Forest executives lied to investors and attempted to mislead investigators.

    Separately, in Ernst & Young's $1.5-million OSC settlement involving Zungui Haixi, the audit firm was accused of failing to respond to clear signs the company was at risk of fraud in two separate instances.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation
    British Columbia's securities regulator has found that five B.C. residents manipulated the stock price of a company that traded on the TSX Venture Exchange in a scheme that netted about $7 million and left investors holding worthless shares.

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation
    Nine unions have banded together in British Columbia to offer $8 million in interest-free loans to the province's striking teachers while the nurses' union is donating half a million dollars.

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail
    An Ottawa-area business says it's getting abusive emails from people who think it's the same company that Ontario's Human Rights Tribunal ruled discriminated against a foreign-born job applicant by telling him it "only hires white men.''

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement
    Labour leaders in British Columbia are expected to announce later today financial aid for the province's striking teachers, who will themselves take a vote on binding arbitration.

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban
    The Canadian Cancer Society says a new national survey points to the need to ban flavoured tobacco products.

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban

    Media groups warn of job losses, less Canadian content, under CRTC proposals

    Media groups warn of job losses, less Canadian content, under CRTC proposals
    A media marketing company warns that changes proposed by Canada's broadcast regulator will result in significant job losses.

    Media groups warn of job losses, less Canadian content, under CRTC proposals