FCA and FRC remind companies of extended financial information timelines
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) have issued a joint statement reminding companies that extended financial information timelines continue to apply.
Public policy interventions made in 2020 provided more time for the work necessary to ensure that published financial information continues to be of the quality that preparers and users of financial information expect.
Along with these measures, the FCA, FRC and PRA made a joint statement that encouraged investors, lenders and other users of financial statements to take into account the unique set of circumstances arising from the coronavirus pandemic. The need to take the circumstances arising from the coronavirus pandemic into account remains relevant today.
The FCA and FRC would like to remind companies of the measures that remain valid today and which provide some flexibility. This includes allowing listed companies an additional two months to publish their audited annual financial reports. This is because the two regulators recognise that they are now in the busiest period of the year for preparing, auditing and publishing financial information. This has coincided with further restrictions imposed through the recent national lockdowns in the UK.
Recognising the heightened challenges and in line with previous statements issued by both bodies, the FCA and FRC would like to encourage all stakeholders including in particular boards of listed companies to re-familiarise themselves with the measures and use them in light of any resourcing constraints in finance and/or audit teams to ensure the quality of reporting is not compromised during this period.
The two organisations also wish to alert investors and other users of financial information, including lenders assessing covenant breaches arising solely because of changes in reporting timetables, that reporting timetables for companies might be extended for these reasons and to view these changes in the context of current events.
The FCA and FRC has said that during this period, it is as important as ever that the market is kept up to date with information. The Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) remains in force and companies are still required to fulfil their obligations concerning inside information as soon as possible unless they have a valid reason to delay disclosure under the regulation.
Companies must continue to assess carefully what information constitutes inside information at this time, recognising that the global pandemic and policy responses to it may alter the nature of information that is material to a business’s prospects.
The FRC has issued a series of guidance to support high-quality reporting and disclosure of the circumstances companies have faced as a result of the pandemic, and the mitigating actions they have taken to address risks. Further guidance was also included in the FRC’s year-end letter to CEOs, CFOs and Audit Committee Chairs.
Given the heightened risk, challenge and uncertainty, audit committees may consider it appropriate to set out in their annual report the work they have undertaken, and the measures they have agreed to ensure high-quality reporting and audit for the period affected. This might include how they have ensured they have allowed enough flexibility in the year-end timetable to complete all the necessary work to an appropriate standard that will meet investor and stakeholder expectations.
The FCA and FRC also wish to remind audit firms of their regulatory obligations to report, to the appropriate regulator, matters arising from their work on a timely basis.