DutchNews, February 28,
2017
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| Photo: Depositphotos.com |
PwC has
approved the accounts of a subsidiary of SHV, Holland’s largest privately held
trading company, even though the accounting firm admitted internally that the
accounts were ‘misleading’, the NRC said on Tuesday.
The paper bases its claim
on its own investigation into the affair based on interviews and confidential
documents.
SHV is a trading company owned by the Fentener van Vlissingen family
which has interests in transport, retail, oil, food and financial services
worldwide. PwC, the paper says, has approved the accounts of SHV subsidiary
Econosto Mideast for years. The unit supplies industrial valves and pipeline
connections for oil companies in the Middle East.
The NRC says Econosto Mideast
has always paid buyers for its customers in cash, but has booked these payments
as personnel costs, as if they were their own sales staff.
Misleading
PwC was
aware of this and termed the practice ‘misleading’ in internal reports to SHV.
It warned the SHV board that these payments were ‘criminal’ and said it had
‘serious misgivings over the legality of the payments’. Nevertheless PwC
continued to approve the accounts for years.
PwC and the individual accountants
made no reaction to the NRC investigation. But last weekend, the paper said
Econosto Mideast was also involved in shadow accounting and possibly involved
in trade with Iran.
On Monday, Bart Koolstra, a member of the supervisory board
of Amsterdam financial markets watchdog AFM abruptly resigned. In his former
job as senior partner at PwC he had signed off on the 2009 accounts of the
company.
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