Gate News message, April 20 — Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing issued updated guidance on April 17 requiring listed companies to obtain shareholder approval to appoint or remove auditors. The new rules mandate that such changes occur only at general meetings and require firms to disclose specific audit fees or ranges to prevent fee disputes from being used as grounds for dismissal.
The move targets "opinion shopping," a practice where companies pressure auditors to resign near year-end deadlines to appoint more compliant replacements. The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) flagged late-stage resignations as red flags for governance failures. In a recent review, the SFC found that auditors at 89 companies resigned within four months of annual results deadlines, with 66 citing fee disagreements. Under the new rules, any action triggering an auditor's resignation is treated as an active removal, requiring a formal shareholder vote.
The regulatory tightening follows heightened scrutiny of corporate quality following the collapse of China Evergrande Group. Founder Hui Ka Yan pleaded guilty last week to bribery, embezzlement, and fraud; Beijing accused the developer of inflating revenue by over 560 billion yuan. Evergrande's auditor, PricewaterhouseCoopers, was subsequently fined and suspended in China for six months. In 2026, 39 Hong Kong-listed firms halted trading after missing the end-of-March financial statement disclosure deadline, the lowest suspension rate since 2023.