Corporate News
By VICTOR JUMA, vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Audit fees for NSE blue chips rose 11.7 per cent last year to Sh375.8 million in 2014.
Audit fees for listed companies making up the Nairobi
Securities Exchange 20 Share Index rose 11.7 per cent last year to
Sh375.8 million, an analysis of the firms’ annual statements has shown.
The increased audit bill reflects business expansion for the NSE blue chips, and increased turnover for the accounting firms.
The amount paid to the “big four” external auditors
–PricewaterhouseCoopers, Ernst & Young, Deloitte and KPMG— stood at
Sh336.2 million the previous year.
The fees represent the total paid in the respective financial years for companies comprising the NSE-20 index, which include KCB, BAT Kenya, KenGen, Nation Media Group and Safaricom among others. The rise in audit fees is attributed to a combination of factors.
“The fees are negotiated by individual companies
but their increase is usually due to inflation and expansion of business
activities,” said Sammy Onyango, the CEO of Deloitte East Africa.
He added that auditors can also raise their charges
in the wake of acquisitions and mergers that increase business
complexity. Installation of new systems in a company can also trigger a
rise in the fees as auditors will be called in to ascertain if they
have strong built-in controls.
Companies with some of the most complex operations
and those executing multiple transactions including acquisitions
recorded the biggest jump in audit fees.
Insurance group Britam,
which was audited by PwC, led with doubling of the charges to Sh33.3
million in the year ended December compared to Sh16.6 million the
previous year.
The company’s operations expanded with the acquisition of Real Insurance, which expanded its presence to more African markets.
Agricultural firm Sasini, which is audited by KPMG,
followed with a 53.3 per cent increase in the charges to Sh7.7 million
in the year ended September 2014 compared to Sh5 million the year
before.
Among the notable activities in the company during
the period was the decision to sell 513.7 acres of its leasehold land
for about Sh1 billion.
Investment firm Centum recorded a 51.4 per cent jump in the fees to Sh7.8 million in the year ended March compared to Sh5.1 million a year earlier.
The company, which is audited by PwC, has been
involved in multiple transactions including disposals and buyouts
annually in line with its investment model.
Safaricom, which traditionally pays the largest
audit fees in absolute terms, saw its bill rise 12.5 per cent to Sh39.1
million. The telco runs a complex business spanning voice, data,
hardware sales, and financial services.
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