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Artificial Intelligence (AI) is going to be a game changer in the public audit space as it will help in quicker and more detailed analysis during both planning and execution stages, Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) G C Murmu said on Tuesday. The potential benefits of applying AI techniques to the audit processes are substantial/ and have already been identified through several use cases, he said in his closing remarks at the SCO SAI Leaders meeting here. High-level delegations from eight Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) member countries participated in the 6th meeting of Supreme Audit Institutions (SAI) to deliberate on issues related to cyber security and artificial intelligence, and the role of auditors of the SCO nations. "Our intent is to use AI not as a one-time solution for a specific audit, but to build an evolving AI model that will allow for quicker and more detailed analysis during both the planning and execution stages through risk assessment straddli
The National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) will carry out audit quality inspections of five audit firms, including the network entities of the Big 4, and the onsite inspections are expected to be done next month, according to a top official. "Audit quality inspections will be mutually beneficial for the audit firms as well as NFRA. It will help an independent regulator like NFRA to get feedback and also help in overall improvement of the audit profession," the watchdog's Chairperson Ajay Bhushan Prasad Pandey told PTI in an interview. To begin with, he said the regulator "will carry out inspections of five audit firms, the Big 4 network firms -- Deloitte, Haskins & Sells LLP, BSR & Co LLP, SRBC & Co LLP and Price Waterhouse Chartered Accountants LLP -- and Walker Chandiok & Co LLP". BSR & Co LLP and SRBC & Co LLP are the network firms of KPMG and EY, respectively. PwC, Deloitte, EY and KPMG are the four major global entities in the auditing space and ...
The US and China have reached a tentative agreement to allow US regulators to inspect the audits of Chinese companies whose stocks are traded on US exchanges. In a long-festering dispute, US regulators have threatened to boot a number of Chinese companies off the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq if China didn't permit inspections. The deal announced Friday by market regulators in the US and China is preliminary, and Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler said, The proof will be in the pudding. While important, this framework is merely a step in the process, Gensler said in a prepared statement. This agreement will be meaningful only if (US regulators) actually can inspect and investigate completely audit firms in China. If (they) cannot, roughly 200 China-based issuers will face prohibitions on trading of their securities in the US if they continue to use those audit firms. An agreement would mean that US investors will maintain access to shares of important