KPMG loses more SA staff, clients from Gupta fallout

“KPMG South Africa has made a number of significant changes to its leadership, governance and audit quality controls and continues to work tirelessly to restore trust in the firm,” a KPMG spokesman said by email. The firm introduced a number of safeguards and is encouraged by the number of clients that continue to retain its services, the spokesman said.

KPMG was among a number of international companies to be embroiled in allegations of corruption during Zuma’s tenure. Bain & Co. has started an independent probe into its own work for South Africa’s tax service, while McKinsey & Co. and SAP SE have accepted responsibility for improper work done for state-owned companies.

The head of KPMG’s South African office and seven other senior executives quit in September 2017 after an internal investigation found work done for the Guptas fell “considerably short” of the firm’s standards. The Guptas and Zuma deny wrongdoing.

In June, KPMG’s South African unit said headcount slumped to 2,200 from 3,400 a year earlier, with consultations for further reductions under way. It’s lost clients this year including Barclays Africa Group Ltd. and South Africa’s Auditor-General.

Not all customers have left the firm. Old Mutual Ltd., the 173-year-old insurer, is waiting for the auditor to report back on an internal review before making a decision, Chief Executive Officer Peter Moyo said in June.

The work previously done by the US cross-border-transactions team will be carried out by partners from KPMG’s global US capital markets group based in New York or London, the KPMG spokesman said.

– Bloomberg 

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