Hong Kong High Court to hear Evergrande liquidators’ lawsuit against PwC on Monday

The Hong Kong High Court is set to hold a one-day public hearing on Monday regarding efforts by Evergrande’s liquidators to pursue claims against PwC International over auditing issues.

The hearing before Deputy Judge Patrick Fung Pak-tung concerns the liquidators’ attempts to seek claims from PwC related to the property developer’s audits. It comes after recent regulatory actions against the firm.

Last month, Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission reached an agreement with PwC Hong Kong to pay HK$1 billion in compensation to minority shareholders, citing serious breaches of auditors’ professional duties. The Accounting and Financial Reporting Council separately fined PwC HK$300 million and imposed a six-month practice restriction.

The AFRC also found numerous serious audit deficiencies in PwC’s work on Evergrande’s 2019 and 2020 accounts. Two former partners were each fined HK$5 million over the matter.

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Hong Kong residents navigate fire-damaged ruins of Wang Fuk Court to retrieve cherished family items before farewell.
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Wang Fuk Court residents climb ruins to retrieve family treasures, bid farewell

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Residents of Hong Kong's Wang Fuk Court have returned to the fire-ravaged ruins in recent days, climbing stairs to retrieve jewellery, cash, photo albums and keepsakes before bidding farewell to their homes. The fire services chief acknowledged at a hearing that departments need better communication while insisting on clear divisions of responsibility. The blaze killed 168 people.

Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission is pursuing compensation for victims of securities misconduct instead of focusing on fines. The regulator has secured HK$2.5 billion in settlements over recent months. This follows practices in the US, UK and Europe.

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Hong Kong's Law Society has ordered the immediate closure of Raymond Lam & Associates, a firm under investigation for its alleged role in crash-for-cash scams. The council appointed Robertsons as the intervention agent to protect clients and the public, citing prima facie evidence of dishonest acts and accounting violations by employees.

Hong Kong’s Court of Appeal dismissed appeals by 12 opposition activists on Monday, who sought to overturn their convictions or reduce sentences in the city’s largest national security trial to date. The court also upheld the acquittal of one of the 47 defendants, barrister Lawrence Lau, in the high-profile conspiracy to subvert state power case. The ruling came amid tight security at the West Kowloon Court.

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Hong Kong's independent committee inquiring into the deadly Wang Fuk Court fire—the city's worst since 1948—heard that government surveyors followed outdated guidelines during renovations, forgoing in-person checks and overlooking risks like illegal alterations to emergency passages in the HK$336 million project.

Victims of Hong Kong's deadly Wang Fuk Court fire will keep receiving HK$150,000 annual rental subsidies until rehoused—even if it takes 2½ years—Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong Wai-lun confirmed, as the HK$6.8 billion buyback plan faces concerns over flat allocation fairness.

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Three High Court judges in Hong Kong ruled Friday that former Tiananmen vigil leaders Lee Cheuk-yan and Chow Hang-tung have a case to answer on subversion charges, finding evidence they incited others to overthrow Communist Party leadership. This follows January pleas where co-defendant Albert Ho admitted guilt while the pair denied charges. The judges rejected a prosecution claim about unchanging party leadership as superficial.

 

 

 

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