
Hong Kong regulators impose fines, compensation and a temporary client ban after finding serious audit failures linked to Evergrande’s collapsed financial reporting
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) will pay a total of about US$166 million in fines and compensation in Hong Kong to resolve regulatory investigations into its audit work for China Evergrande Group, marking one of the most significant enforcement actions yet in the fallout from the property giant’s collapse.
The settlement, announced by Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission and the Accounting and Financial Reporting Council, concludes probes into PwC’s role in auditing Evergrande’s 2019 and 2020 financial statements, which regulators said materially overstated the company’s revenues.
What is confirmed by the authorities is that PwC agreed to the package without admitting liability, and that no further enforcement action will be taken if the terms are fulfilled.
Under the agreement, PwC Hong Kong will contribute about HK$1 billion (roughly US$127.7 million) into a fund intended to compensate eligible minority shareholders who were misled by the financial statements.
Separately, it will pay HK$300 million in regulatory fines to Hong Kong’s audit watchdog.
The total package, including penalties and compensation, amounts to roughly HK$1.3 billion.
Regulators also imposed additional sanctions, including a six-month restriction preventing PwC from taking on new listed-company audit clients in Hong Kong.
Two former PwC partners involved in the audits were publicly reprimanded and fined HK$5 million each.
Authorities described the audit failures as serious breaches of professional duty, citing insufficient skepticism and failures to properly verify supporting documentation during the audits.
The regulator’s findings indicate that these shortcomings contributed to the persistence of misleading financial reporting at Evergrande before its default.
What remains clear is that Evergrande, once one of China’s largest property developers, collapsed under more than US$300 billion in liabilities and defaulted in 2021, triggering a broader crisis in China’s real estate sector.
It has since been ordered into liquidation in Hong Kong, with its founder facing separate criminal proceedings in mainland China.
PwC has said the settlement resolves historical issues and does not affect its current clients, though the episode adds to sustained regulatory scrutiny of its China and Hong Kong audit practices.
The enforcement action also underscores rising pressure on major accounting firms in Hong Kong following one of the most high-profile corporate failures in recent years.
The settlement, announced by Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission and the Accounting and Financial Reporting Council, concludes probes into PwC’s role in auditing Evergrande’s 2019 and 2020 financial statements, which regulators said materially overstated the company’s revenues.
What is confirmed by the authorities is that PwC agreed to the package without admitting liability, and that no further enforcement action will be taken if the terms are fulfilled.
Under the agreement, PwC Hong Kong will contribute about HK$1 billion (roughly US$127.7 million) into a fund intended to compensate eligible minority shareholders who were misled by the financial statements.
Separately, it will pay HK$300 million in regulatory fines to Hong Kong’s audit watchdog.
The total package, including penalties and compensation, amounts to roughly HK$1.3 billion.
Regulators also imposed additional sanctions, including a six-month restriction preventing PwC from taking on new listed-company audit clients in Hong Kong.
Two former PwC partners involved in the audits were publicly reprimanded and fined HK$5 million each.
Authorities described the audit failures as serious breaches of professional duty, citing insufficient skepticism and failures to properly verify supporting documentation during the audits.
The regulator’s findings indicate that these shortcomings contributed to the persistence of misleading financial reporting at Evergrande before its default.
What remains clear is that Evergrande, once one of China’s largest property developers, collapsed under more than US$300 billion in liabilities and defaulted in 2021, triggering a broader crisis in China’s real estate sector.
It has since been ordered into liquidation in Hong Kong, with its founder facing separate criminal proceedings in mainland China.
PwC has said the settlement resolves historical issues and does not affect its current clients, though the episode adds to sustained regulatory scrutiny of its China and Hong Kong audit practices.
The enforcement action also underscores rising pressure on major accounting firms in Hong Kong following one of the most high-profile corporate failures in recent years.











































