EY is shredding its plan to split its consulting and auditing businesses

Not an easy break up.
Not an easy break up.

EY is reversing its plan to break up its business.

One of the big four accounting giants in the US, EY was considering splitting up its audit and consulting units to avoid suggestions of a conflict of interest between the two practices. Following a split, EY would have been able to advise companies for which it also acted as auditor.

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But the plan has been scrapped as a result of months of internal disagreement and opposition from executives in the US, according to the Financial Times, which first broke the news yesterday (Apr. 11).

“We have been informed that the US executive committee has decided not to move forward with the design of Project Everest,” EY’s 18-person global leadership team, which approved the plan last September, wrote in the note seen by FT. “Given the strategic importance of the US member firm to Project Everest, we are stopping work on the project.”

Project Everest was the nickname given to the plan to split business back in 2021, when the idea had first spawned internally. It drew ire from US executives—including senior executives like John King and Frank Mahoney—as they wanted auditors to get a bigger bite of the lucrative tax practice pie. Not only were current partners worried about the money, those who had retired were also concerned about their promised payouts.

“This is the beginning of a real period of nastiness,” an EY US partner who favored the deal told the Wall Street Journal.

If it had gone through, the EY split would’ve been the biggest overhaul the industry has seen in over two decades.

EY’s Project Everest to break up the company, by the digits

More than a year: How much time EY spent on Project Everest

More than $100 million: How much money EY spent on the effort to split the business.

40%: EY’s revenues that the US accounts for, which is why the team can assert such sway on the decision

Person of interest: Carmine Di Sibio

This is a setback for Carmine Di Sibio, EY’s global chairman and chief executive, who championed the planned split. The executive, who was meant to retire in June, bagged a two-year extension to see the proposal through. Had the split happened, he would have led the consulting business, while US leader Julie Boland would have overseen the audit business.

Company of interest: Arthur Andersen

Two decades ago, the Big Four used to be the Big Five. But in December 2001, the last member of the cohort, Arthur Andersen, collapsed. It was equal parts culprit and casualty in the Enron scandal. The Chicago-based firm had been playing both auditor and advisor to the energy company that became the poster child of scandalous bankruptcies.

Today’s Big Four accounting firms, ranked by 2022 revenue

  • Deloitte: $59.3 billion

  • PwC: $50.3 billion

  • EY : $45.4 billion

  • KPMG: $34.64 billion

What’s next for EY?

Several countries won’t let firms do consulting work for companies they audit. And the rules are tightening. For instance, the Financial Reporting Council, the UK’s auditing and accounting regulator, established a June 2024 deadline in 2020 for the Big Four firms to separate auditing as a standalone business.

In the note seen by FT, EY’s global executive team added that it was still committed to “creating two world-class organizations that further advance audit quality, independence and client choice,” but it didn’t share how exactly it would do that with the physical breakup off the table now.

One more thing: EY is temporarily out of business in Germany

Earlier this month, Germany’s accounting watchdog APAS doled out a 500,000 euro ($541,650) fine and two-year ban from taking on new audits for companies of public interest for two years to the 2016-18 auditor of Wirecard.

Although APAS didn’t refer to EY by name, documents of the now insolvent German payments processor, whose executives were charged with forgery and fraud, show EY to be that auditor.

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