Source : THE AGE NEWS

KPMG has accepted the resignations of its current chief executive Andrew Yates and another senior partner Julian McPherson, after confirming instances where confidential client data was allegedly shared and potentially used to win new business with other clients.

In a statement on Friday morning, KPMG said its treatment of the whistleblower complaint that triggered the scandal, and subsequent investigation into the allegations “fell short of the firm’s expectations, those of the whistleblower and the broader community.”

KPMG chief executive Andrew Yates during a parliamentary hearing in 2024.Alex Ellinghausen

Accessing and sharing confidential client data is a serious allegation for consulting groups which need access to their clients’ most sensitive data to complete lucrative audit work and consulting services.

KPMG recently won the Macquarie Group audit contract, which is worth around $75 million a year.

KMPG said an initial internal investigation, that did not substantiate the allegations raised by the whistleblower, was not conducted with the “necessary rigour required.”

KPMG chairman Martin Sheppard said he had accepted the resignations of Yates and McPherson with immediate effect as they had ultimate responsibility for managing the whistleblower complaint and the internal investigations.

“We apologise unreservedly to the whistleblower. We commit to learning from this process to ensure we create an environment where it is safe and easy to surface concerns that will be acted upon. KPMG apologises to the clients whose information was not handled with the care and respect they expect from us,” Sheppard said.

KPMG has previously confirmed the whistleblower has made dozens of allegations dating back to 2024 but said as recently as May 14 that “based on the evidence identified to date, the allegations have not been substantiated.”

KPMG did concede, at the time that it made this statement, two “related conduct matters”.

One concerned the inappropriate sharing of client documents between KPMG personnel, and the other was described as an “inappropriate informal remark”.

On Friday, KPMG said its “ongoing investigation recently revealed a separate incident where internal documents containing client information have also been inappropriately shared internally.”

Investigations into all three matters are ongoing, it said.

A letter from Lendlease chief executive Tony Lombardo in late April to a parliamentary joint committee chair by Labor senator Deborah O’Neill, confirmed the construction giant was the victim of the earlier data breach.

Lendlease said KPMG made it aware of whistleblower allegations in May last year – that sensitive board papers had been accessed by its audit partners to win work with other clients – but KPMG said it was satisfied there was “no issue”.

After O’Neill aired the whistleblower allegations in the senate in March this year, KPMG told Lendlease that one of its audit partners had actually accessed the board papers, but the consulting group deemed the documents to be of “low sensitivity” and gave it “zero competitive advantage”.

“Lendlease has advised KPMG that the actions of its employees are not acceptable and is in discussions with KPMG as to the action to be taken,” Lombardo said in the letter to a parliamentary committee.

KPMG says it has reported these matters to professional bodies, and regulators such as the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.

The alleged use of confidential information echoes the PwC tax leaks scandal where partners at the firm allegedly used confidential government tax plans to help multinational companies avoid the new scheme.

PwC is currently banned from government work and the scandal led to strict procurement rules governing acceptable behaviour by consultants.

This week during Senate estimates Department of Finance officials said they had told KPMG Australia it could be banned from bidding for contracts after the firm repeatedly failed to notify officials about wide-ranging allegations of client data misuse.

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Colin KrugerColin Kruger is a senior business reporter for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.Connect via email.