But EY says denies the claim, saying it was NMC Health’s own senior personnel who perpetrated the fraud and hid it from EY
19 May 2025 - 15:44
bySam Tobin
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The logo of Ernst & Young is seen at a branch in Zurich, Switzerland. File photo: REUTERS/ARND WIEGMANN
London — EY failed to spot major fraud by the main shareholders of UAE hospital operator NMC Health, in what lawyers for the firm’s administrators described as disgraceful auditing, at the start of a roughly $3bn London trial on Monday.
The administrators of NMC — a FTSE 100 company when it collapsed in 2020 after disclosing more than $4bn in hidden debt — are suing over audits from 2012 to 2018, when EY gave an unqualified opinion that NMC’s accounts were accurate.
The company’s administrators, Alvarez & Marsal, say EY, one of the world’s “big four” auditors and formerly known as Ernst & Young, was negligent in failing to get proper access to NMC’s books, missing billions in unreported borrowing.
EY, however, denies the negligence allegation and argues that it was NMC’s own senior personnel who perpetrated the fraud and manipulated its accounts, hiding the fraud from EY.
The 12-week trial at the High Court, which began on Monday, is the latest lawsuit brought against a major auditor and comes after recent criticism of EY, specifically over work for travel firm Thomas Cook and German payments company Wirecard.
NMC Health Plc was listed in London in 2012 and joined the FTSE 100 in 2017, before short-seller Muddy Waters questioned its financials in December 2019 sending NMC’s shares tumbling by almost a third in a day.
NMC’s administrators were seeking up to £2.7bn from EY in damages for losses largely relating to undisclosed guarantees, but court filings for the trial put the figure at about £2bn plus interest.
Their lawyer, Simon Salzedo, said EY’s audits over seven years were among the “most fundamentally flawed examples of big-firm auditing that have disgraced a courtroom in this jurisdiction”.
Salzedo accepted that auditors giving a wrong opinion did not amount to negligence, but said: “Two wrong opinions looks very much like carelessness and to give seven in a row is rather harder to explain away.”
But EY’s lawyers argued in court filings the auditing firm was “itself a principal target and victim of the fraud” committed by NMC staff for the benefit of its principal shareholders.
NMC’s case was based on expecting an auditor “to do the impossible by uncovering a pervasive and collusive fraud being practised and covered up in effect by the directors and management”, EY’s lawyers said.
NMC has separately brought litigation against its founder, BR Shetty, who denies any wrongdoing, and others in London, the UAE and the US.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
EY’s negligence missed huge fraud at UAE hospital firm, court hears
But EY says denies the claim, saying it was NMC Health’s own senior personnel who perpetrated the fraud and hid it from EY
London — EY failed to spot major fraud by the main shareholders of UAE hospital operator NMC Health, in what lawyers for the firm’s administrators described as disgraceful auditing, at the start of a roughly $3bn London trial on Monday.
The administrators of NMC — a FTSE 100 company when it collapsed in 2020 after disclosing more than $4bn in hidden debt — are suing over audits from 2012 to 2018, when EY gave an unqualified opinion that NMC’s accounts were accurate.
The company’s administrators, Alvarez & Marsal, say EY, one of the world’s “big four” auditors and formerly known as Ernst & Young, was negligent in failing to get proper access to NMC’s books, missing billions in unreported borrowing.
EY, however, denies the negligence allegation and argues that it was NMC’s own senior personnel who perpetrated the fraud and manipulated its accounts, hiding the fraud from EY.
The 12-week trial at the High Court, which began on Monday, is the latest lawsuit brought against a major auditor and comes after recent criticism of EY, specifically over work for travel firm Thomas Cook and German payments company Wirecard.
NMC Health Plc was listed in London in 2012 and joined the FTSE 100 in 2017, before short-seller Muddy Waters questioned its financials in December 2019 sending NMC’s shares tumbling by almost a third in a day.
NMC’s administrators were seeking up to £2.7bn from EY in damages for losses largely relating to undisclosed guarantees, but court filings for the trial put the figure at about £2bn plus interest.
Their lawyer, Simon Salzedo, said EY’s audits over seven years were among the “most fundamentally flawed examples of big-firm auditing that have disgraced a courtroom in this jurisdiction”.
Salzedo accepted that auditors giving a wrong opinion did not amount to negligence, but said: “Two wrong opinions looks very much like carelessness and to give seven in a row is rather harder to explain away.”
But EY’s lawyers argued in court filings the auditing firm was “itself a principal target and victim of the fraud” committed by NMC staff for the benefit of its principal shareholders.
NMC’s case was based on expecting an auditor “to do the impossible by uncovering a pervasive and collusive fraud being practised and covered up in effect by the directors and management”, EY’s lawyers said.
NMC has separately brought litigation against its founder, BR Shetty, who denies any wrongdoing, and others in London, the UAE and the US.
Reuters
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