Oriental Group auditor disclaims opinion
PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS (PwC), the auditor for suspended Catalist-listed steel trader and manufacturer Oriental Group, has disclaimed its opinion for the company's 2015 financial statements.
In Oriental's delayed annual report, released on Thursday, PwC said that it was unable to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence to provide a basis for an audit opinion.
This was due to various reasons, such as the ongoing investigation of the company's server hacking on May 19, an ongoing independent review and special audit of possible irregularities, material uncertainties at the firm, the lack of compliance with financial reporting standards on asset impairments, and various other matters regarding the group's operations in Singapore and China.
For 2015, losses in the published financial statements amounted to 88.3 million yuan (S$18 million), double the 44.8 million yuan initially reported in unaudited statements. This was mainly due to an additional provision of 37.6 million yuan on the impairment of trade and other receivables, and property, plant and equipment.
In an announcement, lead independent director Chua Hung Meng said that the company has ceased its steel trading operations in South-east Asia since July. The company is exploring various options to keep it going, such as disposing lossmaking operations in China, negotiating payment and loan deadline extensions, and a share placement.
The company last traded at S$0.114. It has been suspended from trading since March.
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Companies & Markets
China’s top airlines improve balance sheet in Q1; outlook positive for May Day
Stablecoin issuer Tether invests US$200 million in brain-computer interface company
Yahoo to lay off staff in Singapore as it shifts to content curation
US: Wall St opens higher on megacap strength, Fed verdict awaited
IReit Global occupancy rate grows to 91.5% in Q1
Yen surges against US dollar on suspected intervention