Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu"


7 mentions found


Hong Kong CNN —Bao Fan, a star Chinese tech banker who disappeared a year ago amid Beijing’s anti-corruption crackdown, has formally resigned from the firm he founded, the company said. CNN has contacted China Renaissance for comment. China Renaissance announced a management reshuffle to replace its chairman and CEO, along with other top positions. He founded China Renaissance in 2005 in Beijing and made it one of the top dealmakers for Chinese tech firms. Shares in China Renaissance were suspended from trading last April because of issues related to Bao’s status.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN — Bao Fan, Bao, , Xie Yi Jing, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, China Renaissance, Company, CNN, Economic Observer, Communist Party, Deloitte Locations: China, Hong Kong, Bao, Beijing, Dianping
Inclusive, global trade is the keyFree trade can help lower the cost of energy transition. Deloitte's outlook showcases a steady hydrogen market growth, from $642 billion in annual revenue in 2030 to $1.4 trillion per year in 2050, in which green hydrogen comprises some 85% of the hydrogen market. Global trade between major regions can represent almost one-fifth of total clean hydrogen volume. The opportunity for developing economiesRegions with high renewable endowment and ample land availability could likely produce cost-competitive green hydrogen in quantities that exceed domestic needs. To find out more, read Deloitte's Green hydrogen: Energizing the path to net zero report.
Organizations: Government, Global, North, Deloitte Global, SAF, Deloitte Investments, Deloitte, Insider Studios, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Locations: North Africa, Australia, North America, East, South America, Africa, Japan, Korea, Europe, China, India, Middle East
The authorities believe the plan will help in faster recognition of dubious transactions involving shell companies and money laundering. The plan is to implement recent recommendations of the FATF which require lawyers, notaries, other independent legal professionals and accountants to report suspicious transactions, and maintain a record of transactions undertaken for clients, said the first source. "If lawyers are brought under the money laundering law, it will breach the trust between client and attorney and impact privilege communications," said senior lawyer Hiten Venegaonkar. Other countries such as the United Kingdom and Australia have anti-money laundering requirements for law firms and lawyers, said K.V. India is currently compliant with FATF regulations but even within the compliant category, FATF assigns scores to various countries based on strength of regulations and implementation of these.
Persons: Hiten Venegaonkar, Venegaonkar, K.V, Karthik, Nikunj Ohri, Kim Coghill Organizations: Reuters, Money, Bar, Deloitte Touche, Thomson Locations: DELHI, New Delhi, United Kingdom, Australia, India
Tim Smith, Deloitte Consulting's US leader for technology strategy & business transformationWhat digital actions drive the most market value? Digital Strategy adds value: Businesses that are making digital bets in line with enterprise strategy see market value gains, according to Deloitte's Unleashing Digital Transformation value analysis of over 4,500 publicly listed companies. Compared with digital strategy value gains, this action drove double the market value, according to our analysis. "While challenges may be ample across digital initiatives, our research revealed two risks to market value — both relate to digital change capability in unexpected ways." Digital strategy and strategy-aligned tech investments together — without a digital change capability — destroy the most value: Our analysis made it clear that digital change capability is a wild card.
BENGALURU, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Shares of India's Amrutanjan Health Care Ltd (AJAN.NS) plunged as much as nearly 10% on Wednesday, a day after it said an anonymous whistleblower complaint alleged some senior management of "undue enrichment" and "conflict of interest." Amrutanjan's shares closed 1.4% lower on Tuesday after the company disclosed the allegations, and were down 8.7% as of 12.14 p.m. IST on Wednesday. The complaint alleged "lapses by certain senior management employees including undue enrichment through marketing, advertising and procurement activities, ethical concerns and conflict of interest etc," Amrutanjan said on Tuesday. Amrutanjan did not immediately respond to a Reuters' email seeking further details on the complaint, including if the company has conducted its own probe or if the managers were still employed with the company. ($1 = 82.8600 Indian rupees)Reporting by Hritam Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Janane VenkatramanOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
The PCAOB, which began inspections of China-based audits in September, will decide by year-end whether China is complying with the agreement. “We do not know if these firms, especially in the U.S., have been adequately supervising the Macau firms,” she said. The Macau firms’ work isn’t immune from PCAOB inspection. PwC Macau is a separate legal entity, but it is run as part of the firm’s China operations, a spokesman said. “The China firm is taking responsibility, treating it as a branch office,” Ms. McKenna said.
A partner at accounting firm Spielman Koenigsberg & Parker LLP was fined $150,000 for allegedly misleading investigators, the largest monetary penalty imposed on an individual in a case settled by the U.S. auditing watchdog. The regulator also permanently barred Mr. Taylor from associating with a PCAOB-registered accounting firm. Mr. Taylor became a partner at the firm in 1999, according to the firm’s website. Neither Mr. Taylor nor the firm immediately responded to a request for comment. “The quality control systems at audit firms are fundamental to audit quality and regulatory compliance,” Mark Adler, the acting director of the PCAOB’s division of enforcement and investigations, said in a statement.
Total: 7