KPMG fined £13m for role in Silentnight sale

The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has levied a £13m fine and further sanctions against KPMG following a referral from The Pensions Regulator (TPR).

These sanctions were the result of a disciplinary tribunal, which found that KPMG and its former partner and head of Manchester restructuring, David Costley-Wood, acted with a "lack of integrity" in their dealings with the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) and TPR in an attempt to assist private equity company HIG’s acquisition of bed retailer Silentnight between August 2010 and January 2011.

Additionally, Costley-Wood was determined to have assisted with a strategy designed to drive Silentnight into an insolvency process, or to the brink of such a process, with a view to passing the company’s pension scheme to the PPF at the expense of scheme members and PPF levy payers.

This was done to help HIG acquire the business without having to deal with the burden of pension liabilities.

FRC said KMPG and Costley-Wood had failed “to consider the self-interest and familiarity threats which arose from their relationship with HIG and from their desire to nurture that party as a client and keep them ‘onside’”.

It added: “Costley-Wood dishonestly advanced and associated himself with untrue and misleading and/or materially incomplete statements to the PPF, TPR, Silentnight and the trustees of the Silentnight Pension Scheme as to the causes of Silentnight’s difficulties in order to assist HIG in its efforts to enable Silentnight to shed its liability under the pension scheme as cheaply as possible.”

As a result, KPMG has been hit with a £13m fine and ordered to appoint an independent reviewer to establish why threats objectivity were not appropriately identified and safeguarded in the period prior to the appointment of office holders in the Silentnight matter, and whether threats were appropriately identified and safeguarded in a sample of previous cases.

The independent reviewer will also conduct a review of various policies, procedures and training programmes relating to various of KPMG’s advisory services practices.

Meanwhile, FRC also announced that Costley-Wood has been fined £50,000, excluded from membership of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales for 13 years, and precluded from holding an insolvency licence for the same period.

Additionally, KPMG has been ordered to pay almost £2.5m towards executive counsel’s costs and the costs of the tribunal, amounting to a further £305,814.

FRC executive counsel, Elizabeth Barrett, commented: “The scale and range of the sanctions imposed by the Tribunal mark the gravity of the misconduct in this matter. The decision serves as an important reminder of the need for all Members of the profession to act with Integrity and Objectivity and of the serious consequences when they fail to do so.”

A KPMG spokesperson said: “We acknowledge the tribunal’s findings and regret that the professional standards we expect of our partners and colleagues were not met in this case. Mr David Costley-Wood has retired from the firm and whilst we no longer provide insolvency services, our broader controls and processes have evolved significantly since this work was performed over a decade ago.

“As a firm, we are committed to the highest standards and continually invest in our people and procedures to ensure potential conflicts of interest are identified and managed effectively. We welcome the additional review process outlined by the FRC and remain focused on building trust and delivering work of the highest quality.”

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