PCAOB Enforcement Activity Up Sharply in 2022
Los Angeles, February 27, 2023
Highest Monetary Penalties Imposed in the Board’s History
Nearly half of all PCAOB enforcement actions were disclosed in Q4
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) increased its enforcement activity sharply in 2022, disclosing the most enforcement actions in five years, and handing down the highest monetary penalties since its establishment in 2002, according to a new report released today by Cornerstone Research.
The report, PCAOB Enforcement Activity—2022 Year in Review, found that in 2022, the PCAOB disclosed 29 disciplinary actions involving the performance of an audit and/or a firm’s system of quality control, up 61% from 2021 and the most since 2017. Nearly half of those actions were disclosed in the fourth quarter. Monetary penalties in 2022 totaled close to $10.5 million, almost ten times more than in the previous year, with $8.8 million tied to Q4 actions.
“The sharp increase in the number of enforcement actions was primarily driven by 15 actions involving non-U.S. respondents,” said Elaine Harwood, a report coauthor, senior vice president, and head of the accounting practice at Cornerstone Research. “The non-U.S. actions involved 19 auditors and audit firms in seven countries outside the U.S.”
For the first time in PCAOB history, enforcement activity in 2022 involved more non-U.S. respondents than U.S. respondents. The percentage of actions involving non-U.S. respondents—52%—was double the 2017–2021 average. Since 2017, the PCAOB has brought actions involving respondents in 17 countries outside the United States.
“The record penalties were consistent with statements made by Chair Erica Williams that the PCAOB would not be limited to the levels of penalties in past years,” said Alison Forman, a Cornerstone Research principal and report coauthor. “Penalties totaling $7.9 million were imposed on the 10 actions disclosed in December alone.”
Of the PCAOB’s 29 disclosed actions in 2022, there were 26 individual and 17 firm respondents. More than 75% of the actions involving firm respondents contained allegations related to the firm’s system of quality control, up from approximately two-thirds in 2020 and 2021.
[National Law Review]