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And then there were four: a study of UK audit market concentration – causes, consequences and the scope for market adjustment

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And then there were four: a study of UK audit market concentration – causes, consequences and the scope for market adjustment. / Beattie, Vivien; Goodacre, Alan; Fearnley, Stella.
In: Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance, Vol. 11, No. 3, 2003, p. 250-265.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Beattie V, Goodacre A, Fearnley S. And then there were four: a study of UK audit market concentration – causes, consequences and the scope for market adjustment. Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance. 2003;11(3):250-265. doi: 10.1108/13581980310810561

Author

Beattie, Vivien ; Goodacre, Alan ; Fearnley, Stella. / And then there were four : a study of UK audit market concentration – causes, consequences and the scope for market adjustment. In: Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance. 2003 ; Vol. 11, No. 3. pp. 250-265.

Bibtex

@article{dcb2360e1bdc4e47874de6d982f5a735,
title = "And then there were four: a study of UK audit market concentration – causes, consequences and the scope for market adjustment",
abstract = "While concentration measures are a good indicator of market structure, the link with competitiveness is more complex than often assumed. In particular, the modern theory of industrial organisation makes no clear statement regarding the impact of concentration on competition - the focus of this paper is concentration and no inferences are made about competitive aspects of the market. The extent and nature of concentration within the UK listed company audit market as at April, 2002 and, pro forma, after the collapse of Andersen is documented and analysed in detail (by firm, market segment and industry sector). The largest four firms held 90 per cent of the market (based on audit fees) in 2002, rising to 96 per cent with the demise of Andersen. A single firm, Pricewaterhouse-Coopers, held 70 per cent or more of the share of six out of 38 industry sectors, with a share of 50 per cent up to 70 per cent in a further seven sectors. The provision of non-audit services (NAS) by incumbent auditors is also considered. As at April 2002, the average ratio of non-audit fees (paid to auditor) to audit fees was 208 per cent, and exceeded 300 per cent in seven sectors. It is likely, however, that disposals by firms of their management consultancy and outsource firms, combined with the impact of the Smith Report on audit committees will serve to reduce these ratios. Another finding is that audit firms with expertise in a particular sector appeared to earn significantly higher nonaudit fees from their audit clients in that sector. The paper thus provides a solid empirical basis for debate. The subsequent discussion considers the implications for companies and audit firms of the high level of concentration in the current regulatory climate, where no direct regulatory intervention is planned.",
keywords = "Audit firm mergers, Auditor concentration, Concentration ratios",
author = "Vivien Beattie and Alan Goodacre and Stella Fearnley",
year = "2003",
doi = "10.1108/13581980310810561",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "250--265",
journal = "Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance",
issn = "1358-1988",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - And then there were four

T2 - a study of UK audit market concentration – causes, consequences and the scope for market adjustment

AU - Beattie, Vivien

AU - Goodacre, Alan

AU - Fearnley, Stella

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - While concentration measures are a good indicator of market structure, the link with competitiveness is more complex than often assumed. In particular, the modern theory of industrial organisation makes no clear statement regarding the impact of concentration on competition - the focus of this paper is concentration and no inferences are made about competitive aspects of the market. The extent and nature of concentration within the UK listed company audit market as at April, 2002 and, pro forma, after the collapse of Andersen is documented and analysed in detail (by firm, market segment and industry sector). The largest four firms held 90 per cent of the market (based on audit fees) in 2002, rising to 96 per cent with the demise of Andersen. A single firm, Pricewaterhouse-Coopers, held 70 per cent or more of the share of six out of 38 industry sectors, with a share of 50 per cent up to 70 per cent in a further seven sectors. The provision of non-audit services (NAS) by incumbent auditors is also considered. As at April 2002, the average ratio of non-audit fees (paid to auditor) to audit fees was 208 per cent, and exceeded 300 per cent in seven sectors. It is likely, however, that disposals by firms of their management consultancy and outsource firms, combined with the impact of the Smith Report on audit committees will serve to reduce these ratios. Another finding is that audit firms with expertise in a particular sector appeared to earn significantly higher nonaudit fees from their audit clients in that sector. The paper thus provides a solid empirical basis for debate. The subsequent discussion considers the implications for companies and audit firms of the high level of concentration in the current regulatory climate, where no direct regulatory intervention is planned.

AB - While concentration measures are a good indicator of market structure, the link with competitiveness is more complex than often assumed. In particular, the modern theory of industrial organisation makes no clear statement regarding the impact of concentration on competition - the focus of this paper is concentration and no inferences are made about competitive aspects of the market. The extent and nature of concentration within the UK listed company audit market as at April, 2002 and, pro forma, after the collapse of Andersen is documented and analysed in detail (by firm, market segment and industry sector). The largest four firms held 90 per cent of the market (based on audit fees) in 2002, rising to 96 per cent with the demise of Andersen. A single firm, Pricewaterhouse-Coopers, held 70 per cent or more of the share of six out of 38 industry sectors, with a share of 50 per cent up to 70 per cent in a further seven sectors. The provision of non-audit services (NAS) by incumbent auditors is also considered. As at April 2002, the average ratio of non-audit fees (paid to auditor) to audit fees was 208 per cent, and exceeded 300 per cent in seven sectors. It is likely, however, that disposals by firms of their management consultancy and outsource firms, combined with the impact of the Smith Report on audit committees will serve to reduce these ratios. Another finding is that audit firms with expertise in a particular sector appeared to earn significantly higher nonaudit fees from their audit clients in that sector. The paper thus provides a solid empirical basis for debate. The subsequent discussion considers the implications for companies and audit firms of the high level of concentration in the current regulatory climate, where no direct regulatory intervention is planned.

KW - Audit firm mergers

KW - Auditor concentration

KW - Concentration ratios

U2 - 10.1108/13581980310810561

DO - 10.1108/13581980310810561

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 250

EP - 265

JO - Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance

JF - Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance

SN - 1358-1988

IS - 3

ER -