Nine Years and Still Running: Reflections on the State of the PCAOB’s Interim Broker-Dealer Inspection Program

After the 2008 global financial crisis, to protect public markets, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (“Dodd-Frank Act”). As a result of the legislation, the PCAOB’s scope was expanded to include audits of broker-dealers and thus in 2011, the PCAOB began its interim inspection program. 


The interim program was designed to assist the Board in developing a permanent program and in June 2011, the Board proposed the following:

“If the Commission approves Rule 4020T, the Board anticipates carrying out procedures under the interim program until rules for a permanent program take effect. The Board anticipates being in a position to propose rules for a permanent program by 2013.” 


- PCAOB's Temporary Rule For An Interim Program Of Inspection Related To Audits Of Brokers And Dealers

As of the date of this article, there is no clear indication from the PCAOB when a permanent program can be expected.


Back in 2011, there were approximately 800 registered firms auditing approximately 4,400 broker-dealers that filed with the SEC. In the first inspection season, the PCAOB reviewed 23 audits across ten firms. Deficiencies were identified in audits from all ten firms. At the engagement level, the report provides detailed deficiency counts for each major focus area; one focus area had deficiencies in 21 out of 23 audits. In other words, approximately 91% of engagements reviewed were deficient in at least one area.


Nine years later, still under the same interim inspection program, the PCAOB published the 2019 Annual Report on the Interim Inspection Program Related to Audits of Brokers and Dealers1. In its ninth inspection season, the PCAOB inspected 66 firms and reviewed a total of 106 audit engagements. The report from 2019 shows improvement from 2018, but still shows an alarming number of deficiencies; 89% of the firms inspected contained at least one deficient audit and 71% of the audits inspected had at least one audit deficiency. 


To put the broker-dealer figures in context, in the PCAOB’s  last report from 2013 on firms that audit 100 issuers or less (the non-broker-dealer inspection program), the regulator reported that approximately 44% of audit firms inspected from 2007 to 2010 had at least one significant audit performance deficiency. At the engagement level, the PCAOB found that 28% of audits inspected from 2007 to 2010 had at least one significant audit performance deficiency. Based on JGA’s analysis of 2018 inspection reports issued, approximately 55% of all firms inspected had at least one significant audit performance deficiency and approximately 32% of engagements had at least one significant audit performance deficiency.


While issuer audit deficiency rates are still quite high, there is a marked difference between the two inspection programs. Why is the audit deficiency rate so much higher within the broker-dealer inspection program? 


From our experience working with and supporting firms that audit issuers as well as firms that audit broker-dealers, we have found there are a few factors that could explain the discrepancy in quality:


Lack of PCAOB Knowledge and Experience

Until the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, broker-dealer audits were not subject to PCAOB oversight and the audits were performed in accordance with AICPA auditing standards. In fact, AICPA standards were used for audits up until mid-2014. Yes, there are some large public broker-dealers (often affiliated with the large investment banks). However, considering there were over 4,400 broker-dealers at the start of the interim program, most of these brokers-dealers are smaller private companies that are often audited by smaller audit firms, many of which have no public company clients. That means, many of these audit firms have little to no experience with PCAOB standards. 


In the 2019 broker-dealer report, the PCAOB indicated that of the 66 firms inspected, 29 of the firms had no issuer audits, or the equivalent of 44%. That’s a large percentage of audit firms that are required to comply with PCAOB standards, but aside from small broker-dealer audits, have no other exposure. When the interim inspection program began, there were over 800 registered audit firms that performed audits of broker-dealers. That number has since decreased to 411 firms, likely due to the cost of compliance and regulation. 


Consolidation of the industry means fewer audit firms are auditing more broker-dealers which means they are getting increasing exposure to the PCAOB. More exposure to the PCAOB means more opportunities to master knowledge of PCAOB standards and hone those skills in practice. For example, in its 2013 report on firms that audit 100 issuers or less, the PCAOB noted that“ or the 455 firms that had a second inspection in the 2007- 2010 period, 36 percent had at least one significant audit performance deficiency in their second inspection, compared with a rate of 55 percent in their first inspection." 1 This correlation would seem to support that continued exposure to PCAOB audits and inspections would help improve audit quality over time. While we have seen remarkable consolidation take place, should firms that audit broker-dealers consolidate even more? The cost of regulation is certainly a factor for small firms to consider, but the quality of the audits and exposure for the public is another concern that should be taken into account.


Complexity of the Broker-Dealer Industry and Focus on Compliance

In my experience auditing broker-dealers and advising PCAOB-registered firms and their engagement teams, I have come to understand the complexity of the broker-dealer industry. When I previously worked in public accounting, I specialized in the asset management industry. As a result, the firm assigned me to a broker-dealer audit. I realize everyone must start somewhere, but was I the right person to manage the audit? I quickly learned about the industry and some of the nuances, but I didn’t know what I didn’t know. 


The broker-dealer industry is complex and full of various legislation and has a significant focus on compliance. Considering I was at a Big 4 firm and they assigned someone with no experience, I can imagine smaller firms with fewer resources may struggle to have adequate knowledge or expertise of the industry. I have learned over time more about the industry and similarly, partners and managers may get experience over time, but there is certainly a learning curve until that expertise develops. 


In addition, when the industry is so focused on compliance with technical rules and legislation, does that change the auditor’s perceived role? Does the focus become a compliance monitor as opposed to performing a standalone audit? A typical broker-dealer engagement includes the audit of the financial statements, but then also attestations over compliance and exemption rules as well as agreed upon procedures for required SIPC filings. On more than one occasion, when performing reviews of broker-dealer audits, I’ve heard clients respond, “well, it didn’t impact the net capital calc” or “they’re still in compliance, so it doesn’t matter.” That may be, but the opinion on the financial statements is still based on PCAOB audit standards and those standards are not secondary to compliance, but rather provide standalone audit requirements. 


What is the role of the auditor in the broker-dealer industry? Is it broader than the role of the auditor in the issuer realm?


Lack of Accountability

Because of the nature of the interim inspection program, firms currently lack accountability to affect change and improve audit quality. There is no separate firm reporting and thus no mandatory firm remediation of quality control criticisms. Essentially, the inspection process stops with the comment form. Now, in 2020, even with an entirely new board, there is still no permanent program and I cannot seem to find any mention of creating one or prioritizing the creation of permanent program. In fact, the Board’s 2019 to 2013 strategic plan is silent to any movement toward the creation of a permanent program. In it’s 2019 interim inspection report, the PCAOB said: "We expect firms to take meaningful actions to address these recurring deficiencies." Sometimes "meaningful action" requires "meaningful action" on the part of the oversight authority. If the PCAOB can’t finalize and implement a permanent program, more than nine years after it started, what kind of “tone at the top” is that setting? How serious is the inspection program?


While we can debate the role of the auditor in the broker-dealer industry or debate the scope of the PCAOB’s inspection program or whether there is actually any public risk exposure for certain private broker-dealers, the fact of the matter is that under current regulations, all broker-dealer audits must be performed in accordance with PCAOB standards. And we, as an industry, must step up our efforts and to ensure quality audits. The high deficiency rates found by the PCAOB, despite being nine years into the interim inspection program, are much too high and show that there is room for growth and improvement. 


So where do we go from here? For firms who audit broker-dealers, and as I think about how our collaboration with firms have been most effective, here are some suggestions:

  1. Review the 2019 interim report which highlights the most prevalent findings from the PCAOB. 
  2. Consider whether the themes in the report apply to your own audits and your practice. Are there any risk factors in your system of QC or other monitoring information to corroborate this?
  3. If you’ve been inspected, while there are no firm-specific remediation requirements, review any comment forms you received and consider any remedial actions to prevent recurrence of the issue(s). 
  4. Attend the annual Forum on Auditing in the Small Business Environment and for Auditors of Broker-Dealers. This PCAOB-hosted forum is free to attend and provides more insight into PCAOB findings and can help direct firms’ quality initiatives. 2  
  5. Consider responses to identified risks based on the above procedures. Whether that includes in-flight or look-back reviews or having additional support during your next PCAOB inspection.


Hopefully, in nine more years, the interim program will be replaced by a risk-based permanent program. Until then, our mission as auditors is to provide quality audits to protect the public interest.


1 https://pcaobus.org/Inspections/Documents/02252013_Release_2013_001.pdf

2 On September 9, 2020, the PCAOB announced that the 2020 forum would be pre-recorded and available for viewing by the general public beginning October 19, 2020.


About Johnson Global Advisory 

Johnson Global partners with leadership of public accounting firms, driving change to achieve the highest level of audit quality. Led by former PCAOB and SEC staff, JGA professionals are passionate and practical in their support to firms in their audit quality journey. We accelerate the opportunities to improve quality through policies, practices, and controls throughout the firm. This innovative approach harnesses technology to transform audit quality. Our team is designed to maintain a close pulse on regulatory environments around the world and incorporate solutions which navigate those standards. JGA is committed to helping the profession in amplifying quality worldwide. 


Visit www.johnson-global.com to learn more about Johnson Global. 

June 8, 2026
Johnson Global Advisory is pleased to announce that Jackson Johnson, CPA, President, has been appointed to serve on the AICPA & NASBA International Qualifications Appraisal Board (IQAB). The IQAB is responsible for evaluating international accounting qualifications and facilitating mutual recognition agreements between the United States and other countries, helping to support global mobility and consistency in professional standards. “It’s an honor to serve on the IQAB and contribute to efforts that strengthen the global accounting profession,” said Johnson. “As the profession continues to evolve, collaboration across jurisdictions is critical to maintaining high standards and enabling greater mobility for accounting professionals worldwide.”
May 20, 2026
Few technologies have generated as much excitement—and as much promise—for accounting firms as artificial intelligence (“AI”). The potential to streamline audit execution, reduce hours, and enhance firm profitability is real and already being realized. However, AI does not simply change how audits are performed; it fundamentally alters how firms must think about oversight, responsibility, and quality management. As regulators sharpen their focus on AI‑enabled audits, firm leadership must move beyond adoption and address a more complex challenge: establishing clear and scalable AI governance. This article outlines why AI governance is now a strategic imperative for accounting firm leadership. As discussed in JGA’s article What Regulators Expect to See When AI is Used , inspectors do not evaluate AI tools in isolation. They evaluate whether the engagement team obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence, exercised professional skepticism, and applied appropriate supervision and review when AI was used. Those expectations are grounded in existing auditing standards and apply regardless of whether AI was used for risk assessment, testing, or documentation support. Against that backdrop, AI governance is not simply about approving tools or managing technology risk. It is about ensuring the firm’s system of quality management supports consistent, supervised, and well-documented use of AI that aligns with audit objectives and withstands inspection scrutiny. When firms treat AI as an IT matter, governance discussions tend to center on 1) Data security, 2) System access, 3) Vendor due diligence, and 4) Infrastructure controls. Those topics matter—but they are only the baseline. Inspectors do not evaluate whether AI systems are well engineered; they evaluate whether AI enabled audit work complies with standards, supports professional judgment, and is governed within the firm’s system of quality management. In short, AI governance is a firmwide audit quality issue, not a back office technology function. Using AI does not change the auditor’s responsibilities. Requirements still apply when AI is used for 1) Audit evidence, 2) Professional skepticism, 3) Supervision and review, 4) Engagement partner accountability and 5) Firm level quality controls. From an inspection standpoint, AI introduces new audit quality risks, including: Over reliance on automated outputs Reduced professional skepticism (automation bias) Inconsistent application across engagements Insufficient documentation of judgment Lack of transparency around how conclusions were reached These are not IT risks—they are audit quality risks. AI Touches Nearly Every Component of a QC System Under modern quality management frameworks (including PCAOB QC 1000 , AICPA SQMS No. 1, IAASB ISQM 1), AI affects nearly every component of a firm’s QC system, not just technology or data governance. 
May 20, 2026
Johnson Global Advisory ("JGA") is proud to announce that Joe Lynch, Shareholder, will be speaking on a panel at the 41st Midyear SEC Reporting & FASB Forum . Joe will deliver the PCAOB update on June 5, with attendance available both in person and virtually. This panel will summarize the activities of the PCAOB including: Recite new requirements for the lead auditor’s use of other auditors Anticipate the new standard, “The Auditor’s Use of Confirmation” Enumerate the new requirements of QC 1000, “A Firm’s System of Quality Control” Recall the guidance of the new auditing standard “General Responsibilities of the Auditor in Conducting an Audit” Understand the amendments addressing aspects of audit procedures that involve technology-assisted analysis of information in electronic form Learn about the proposal to replace existing auditing standards related to an auditor’s use of substantive analytical procedures Anticipate other Standard-Setting and Research Projects Summarize PCAOB inspection findings and enforcement activities Understand recent PCAOB publications, including: Spotlight Publications Audit Focus Publications Data Points Publications Click here to register and learn more. Johnson Global partners with leadership of public accounting firms, driving change to achieve the highest level of audit quality. Led by former PCAOB staff, JGA professionals are passionate and practical in their support to firms in their audit quality journey. We accelerate the opportunities to improve quality through policies, practices, and controls throughout the firm. This innovative approach harnesses technology to transform audit quality. Our team is designed to maintain a close pulse on regulatory environments around the world and incorporates solutions which navigates those standards. JGA is committed to helping the profession in amplifying quality worldwide. 
May 15, 2026
Johnson Global Advisory (JGA) has submitted its response to the PCAOB’s request for input on its 2026–2030 strategic priorities. Drawing on extensive experience supporting firms subject to PCAOB oversight, JGA’s comments emphasize a more modern, risk-based approach to regulation focused on audit quality, scalability, and transparency. View JGA's comments here. Johnson Global partners with leadership of public accounting firms, driving change to achieve the highest level of audit quality. Led by former PCAOB staff, JGA professionals are passionate and practical in their support to firms in their audit quality journey. We accelerate the opportunities to improve quality through policies, practices, and controls throughout the firm. This innovative approach harnesses technology to transform audit quality. Our team is designed to maintain a close pulse on regulatory environments around the world and incorporates solutions which navigates those standards. JGA is committed to helping the profession in amplifying quality worldwide.
April 28, 2026
In our work with firms, we have seen a clear shift in how monitoring and remediation are viewed under modern quality management frameworks. They are no longer treated as retrospective compliance exercises. Instead, engagement deficiencies are increasingly used as meaningful inputs into an ongoing, risk-based system designed to identify issues early, address them thoughtfully, and reduce the likelihood of recurrence. Regulatory messaging reinforces this evolution. Oversight bodies are signaling a shift in focus from isolated engagement outcomes and more on whether firms have a system of quality management that consistently detects quality risks, responds appropriately, and demonstrates that remediation is working in practice. Based on our experience, while individual engagement deficiencies remain important, the more critical question is becoming how firms analyze, respond to, and learn from those issues over time. Engagement Deficiencies Are Signals, Not Endpoints Engagement deficiencies can surface through many channels, including pre-issuance reviews, internal inspections, post-issuance reviews, peer reviews, and regulatory inspections. Regardless of source, firms benefit most when these findings are evaluated through a consistent quality management lens. In practice, we encourage firms to look beyond whether a single engagement fell short . The more meaningful consideration is whether the deficiency points to potential weaknesses in governance, methodology, training, supervision, resourcing, or monitoring activities. We often observe that when issues are quickly labeled as engagement-specific, without assessing whether they reflect broader quality risks, valuable insight is lost. Modern quality management frameworks are designed to use these signals to strengthen the system, not simply close individual findings. What Effective Monitoring and Remediation Looks Like in Practice Firms that navigate this environment effectively tend to apply a disciplined and repeatable approach when deficiencies are identified. Based on our experience supporting firms across a range of practice areas, several elements consistently make a difference: Assess whether the issue may be systemic Recurring observations across engagements, service lines, or time periods often indicate system-level risk. Similar documentation gaps, inconsistent application of methodology, or supervision challenges rarely arise in isolation. Perform meaningful root cause analysis Effective root cause analysis typically moves beyond surface explanations. Firms benefit from evaluating whether policies and procedures were designed appropriately, implemented as intended, and supported by sufficient training, time, and resources. Design remediation that directly responds to the quality risk Remediation is most effective when it is clearly linked to the underlying risk. Depending on the circumstances, this may include enhancements to methodology, targeted training, revised review requirements, or changes to engagement acceptance, staffing, or oversight processes. Validate remediation through timely monitoring Implementing corrective actions is only part of the process. In our experience, firms are most successful when they also confirm that remediation operates as intended. Follow-up monitoring performed early enough to prevent recurrence is a critical component of this step. Failure to validate remediation remains one of the most common and consequential weaknesses we observe across firms. Case Study: When Remediation Is Not Validated In one situation we encountered, a firm identified engagement deficiencies through post-issuance reviews. The issues mirrored observations that had previously been noted during peer review and were communicated as having been addressed by the group responsible for report issuance. However, responsibility for validation was not clearly assigned, and no follow-up procedures were performed to evaluate whether the revised processes were effective. Subsequent post-issuance reviews, triggered by an organizational change, revealed that similar and additional deficiencies had re-emerged. From a quality management perspective, this was not an engagement execution failure. It reflected a breakdown in monitoring and remediation. The firm had information indicating quality risk but did not adjust its monitoring activities to confirm that remediation was working. Viewed through a system lens, this represents a system-level deficiency rather than an isolated engagement issue. Quality Management Applies Across All Engagement Types Modern quality management frameworks apply across a firm’s assurance and attestation practice, including private company audits, public company audits, SOC engagements, nonprofit audits, and other services. Deficiencies identified in any practice area may signal broader weaknesses in: Governance and leadership Methodology and training Monitoring activities Remediation processes In our experience, firms struggle to maintain an effective system of quality management when certain practices are treated as exempt from system-level evaluation. Key Takeaways Engagement deficiencies are inputs into the system, not endpoints. Recurring issues often indicate systemic quality risk. Remediation should be validated, not assumed. Monitoring activities should evolve as risks emerge. Quality management applies across all engagement types. Firms that treat monitoring and remediation as a continuous feedback loop, rather than a periodic exercise, are typically better positioned to improve engagement quality and respond to evolving regulatory expectations. Looking for an independent perspective on whether engagement deficiencies have been fully addressed? Based on our experience working with firms across assurance and attestation practices, Johnson Global Advisory supports clients by performing independent reviews, validating remediation efforts, and strengthening monitoring processes. If you would like support refining policies, training, workflows, or documentation standards, or would benefit from an objective assessment ahead of regulatory, peer, or internal inspections, contact your JGA audit quality advisor to discuss your needs.
April 28, 2026
Artificial intelligence (“AI”) is no longer experimental in public company audits. From risk assessment and scoping decisions to population testing, anomaly detection, and documentation support, AI enabled tools are increasingly embedded in audit execution and workflow. As use expands, the auditor’s core obligations do not shift to the technology, they remain with the engagement team. If AI is used to inform judgments, influence the nature, timing, or extent of procedures, or summarize and interpret information, auditors must still demonstrate that they obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence and applied professional skepticism throughout. In practice, auditors must understand what the tool is doing, confirm that inputs are complete and accurate, and evaluate whether the outputs are reliable and fit for purpose in the specific audit context. While the auditing standard devoted solely to AI have not been issued, our experience is that inspectors have been increasingly direct—through staff publications, questions from inspectors in the field, and public remarks—about what they expect to see when AI is used. The expectations are grounded in existing standards and longstanding inspection focus areas: audit evidence, supervision and review, professional skepticism, and firm quality control (now quality management). In other words, AI does not create a “new” audit; it amplifies the need to show your work. Firms that treat AI as a “shortcut”, rely on outputs that cannot be explained or reproduced, or fail to govern and document how tools were selected, configured, and monitored are inviting new risks to support their audit conclusions. Conversely, firms that can clearly articulate the purpose of the tool, how it aligns to audit objectives, how inputs and outputs were validated, and how experienced personnel supervised and challenged the results will be far better positioned during inspection. The table below summarizes what inspectors typically expect to see documented when AI is used in a public company audit. Firms can use these themes to evaluate whether their engagement documentation tells a complete story that an experienced auditor (and an inspector) can follow from objective, to procedure, to results, to conclusion. 
March 30, 2026
In a previous article, Back to Basics: Audit Documentation Failures Have Become Dangerous Low Hanging Fruit , we highlighted how audit documentation had quietly re-emerged as a source of regulatory risk after years of relative deprioritization. While PCAOB Auditing Standard 1215, Audit Documentation (AS 1215), has historically been cited less frequently than other standards, our direct experience from recent inspection activity, enforcement actions, and internal inspection results, demonstrate that documentation failures are increasingly treated as indicators of deeper execution, supervision, and quality management breakdowns. In today’s environment, audit documentation is no longer merely a record of work performed. It is the primary evidence inspectors rely on to evaluate whether an engagement was properly planned, executed, and supported at the time the auditor’s report was issued. What has been low-hanging fruit now requires firms to close these gaps and transform them into a load-bearing foundation for audit quality. From Rare Enforcement to Systemic Inspection Risk AS 1215 establishes clear requirements regarding what must be documented, when documentation must be completed, and how engagement files must be assembled and retained. As discussed in our prior article, failures to comply with these requirements were historically viewed as technical or secondary issues, often resulting in inspection comments rather than enforcement action. That distinction is no longer meaningful. Recent enforcement actions involving backdating, improper (both intentionally, and inadvertent) modification of workpapers, and failure to timely assemble a complete audit file reflect an evolving regulatory view. Documentation failures do not simply violate procedural requirements; they call into question the credibility of the audit opinion itself. More importantly, beyond enforcement, documentation deficiencies are increasingly cited as core inspection findings. Inspectors are challenging situations where engagement teams assert that work was performed but cannot demonstrate that work within the archived file. In these cases, the absence of timely, complete, and clear documentation is no longer treated as a formality. It is treated as evidence that the engagement may not have been properly executed, supervised, or supported in accordance with PCAOB standards. This represents a fundamental shift. Documentation is no longer “low-hanging fruit.” It is a systemic inspection risk that cuts across execution, supervision, and firm-level quality management. From Misconduct to Execution Failures Pervasive documentation failures that do not involve intentional misconduct but still result in non-compliance are increasingly observed. For example, reviewer signoffs occurring near the documentation completion date, rather than contemporaneously with the performance of audit procedures, raise questions about whether effective supervision occurred during the audit or was deferred to meeting archiving deadlines. Similarly, engagement teams may assert that key judgments can be explained verbally, even when those judgments are not clearly documented in the audit file. In today’s environment, the distinction between “we can explain it” and “it is clearly documented” is critical. If procedures, judgments, and conclusions are not evident in the documentation itself, inspectors increasingly conclude that the work was not performed in accordance with PCAOB standards. The issue is not whether the engagement team can explain what they did after the fact. The issue is whether the archived documentation allows an experienced auditor, with no prior connection to the engagement, to understand the procedures performed, evidence obtained, and conclusions reached at the time of the auditor’s report. When documentation fails to reach that standard, inspectors are increasingly concluding that the audit itself was not properly executed, regardless of intent. This reflects an important shift. Documentation failures are no longer viewed primarily as misconduct. They are viewed as symptoms of execution breakdowns, including delayed supervision, compressed review cycles, and audit workflows that defer documentation until the end of the engagement. As a result, AS 1215 has become a direct proxy for how audits are actually performed in practice. How the 14-Day Documentation Completion Requirement Changes the Risk Profile The execution risks are further amplified by the PCAOB’s shortened documentation completion timeline. Recent amendments to AS 1215 reduce the timeframe to assemble a complete and final audit file from 45 days to 14 days after the report release date. While this change may appear procedural, its implications are operational. Under this accelerated timeline, engagement teams no longer have a meaningful post-issuance window to resolve review notes, complete documentation, or finalize supervisory evidence. What were once viewed as “clean-up” activities are now more likely to result in timing violations and non-compliance. This shift places increased emphasis on: Contemporaneous documentation Real-time supervision Realistic workload and staffing models Audit Documentation as a Cornerstone of Audit Quality Audit documentation has long been described as low-hanging fruit in the inspection process. That characterization no longer reflects its role in today’s regulatory environment. Documentation now serves as the primary lens through which regulators assess whether an engagement was properly executed, supervised, and supported. With shortened timelines, expanded quality management expectations, and increased regulatory scrutiny, firms can no longer treat documentation as a downstream activity. It must be embedded into how engagements are planned, staffed, reviewed, and completed. In an environment where inspection conclusions are driven by what is, and what is not, in the audit file, strong documentation is not merely defensive. It is foundational to audit quality. At Johnson Global Advisory , we support firms in selecting, implementing, and optimizing these tools to meet their unique needs. For more insights, visit our blog or contact us to learn how we can help your firm AmplifyQuality®. For more information, please contact your JGA audit quality expert .
March 30, 2026
Mergers and acquisitions within the accounting firm industry continue to accelerate, driven by succession planning needs, technology investment, talent constraints, geographic expansion, and the pursuit of new service lines. The pace and volume of transactions is being fueled, in large part, by private equity investment in the accounting firm space. Yet as deal activity accelerates, so does a critical reality: the long term success of an acquisition is determined well before the transaction closes—and long after the announcement is made. Experience across the profession shows that insufficient due diligence and poorly executed post acquisition integration are the most common sources of value erosion in accounting firm transactions. What the Regulator is saying and How JGA sees it At the AICPA December 2025 conference on Current SEC and PCAOB Developments, common topics were the presence of private equity in the accounting firm space and the opportunities and challenges that come with this investment. As it relates to private equity, then-acting PCAOB Chair George Botic noted that while these investments have the potential to enhance audit quality by increasing firm capacity and modernizing audit tools with advanced technologies, the presence of private equity presents a risk that firms shift incentives to prioritize profitability over audit quality. Mr. Botic stated, “Both AI and private equity investments in accounting firms carry the potential to truly reshape the profession. Yet these opportunities come with clear challenges to ensure that overreliance on AI and the pressures of private equity do not jeopardize audit quality.” At JGA, we expect the PCAOB to increase its inspection focus on a firm’s system of quality management. To the extent that acquisitions present quality risks to a firm, we expect increased attention from the PCAOB in terms of how firms are managing these risks. Due Diligence: Looking Beyond the Numbers Financial performance, partner buy ins, and deal structure naturally receive significant attention during an acquisition. However, professional services firms—particularly those providing audit and assurance services—certain of the greatest risks often reside outside the financial statements. Effective accounting firm due diligence must assess not only what the target firm has earned, but how it has earned it—and whether that performance is sustainable. This includes gaining a deep understanding of: Audit quality history, including inspection and peer review results, Independence, ethics, and regulatory compliance practices, Industries served, industry concentration and related expertise, Client concentration, retention trends, and engagement risk profiles, Partner governance, compensation alignment, and succession readiness, Technology platforms, data security, and scalability, and Firm culture, leadership dynamics, and decision making processes. When these areas are not rigorously evaluated, issues frequently surface after the transaction closing—when remediation is more disruptive, more expensive, and far more visible to regulators, clients, and staff. The Risks of Inadequate Due Diligence Inadequate diligence often leads to unanticipated post transaction challenges, including: Regulatory findings related to legacy engagements, Independence violations requiring retroactive remediation, Client attrition driven by service disruption or cultural misalignment, Talent loss stemming from unclear expectations or compensation inequities, and Technology incompatibilities that impair efficiency and data integrity. Deficiencies inherited through acquisition can affect inspection outcomes, firm reputation, and overall audit quality long after the transaction closes. Integration: Where Value Is Created—or Lost Even when due diligence is performed thoughtfully, post acquisition integration remains the most common point of failure. Integration is often underestimated, treated as an operational exercise rather than a strategic initiative requiring sustained leadership attention. Successful integration goes far beyond combining systems or standardizing branding. It requires deliberate alignment across how the firm operates, governs itself, and delivers quality—particularly in areas such as: Audit methodology and documentation standards Quality management systems and monitoring processes Partner roles, authority, and accountability Talent development, evaluation, and retention Communication with clients, regulators, and staff Absent a structured integration plan, firms risk operating as a collection of semi independent practices rather than a cohesive organization. This fragmentation can undermine consistency, weaken accountability, and complicate regulatory compliance. A Strategic Imperative in a Changing Profession As consolidation continues and regulatory scrutiny intensifies, rigorous due diligence and disciplined integration are no longer optional. They are essential to managing risk, sustaining quality, and realizing the full value of a transaction. For accounting firm leaders, the message is clear: growth through acquisition can be a powerful strategy—but only when supported by a comprehensive understanding of what is being acquired and a deliberate plan for how the combined firm will operate as one. Firms that treat diligence and integration as leadership imperatives—rather than transactional steps—are better positioned to protect audit quality, retain talent, and preserve client trust while achieving growth objectives. JGA’s Role Guiding Firms through these Opportunities For firms seeking to grow through acquisition without sacrificing quality, control, or visibility, JGA is a solution. JGA is uniquely qualified with deep experience working with accounting firms on quality management, governance, and operational transformation. We have proven due-diligence tools built that are designed to be practical, adaptable, and immediately usable—while also supporting long term consistency as firms pursue multiple acquisitions over time. Ready to get started or need help refining your acquisition activities? Contact your JGA audit quality expert today to schedule a consultation and ensure acquisition activities are tailored to your firm’s needs.
By Jackson Johnson February 24, 2026
WASHINGTON, D.C.: — Johnson Global Advisory (JGA) is proud to sponsor the ALI’s Accountants’ Liability 2026 conference hosted by the American Law Institute (ALI). The two‑day program will take place May 14–15, 2026, in Washington, D.C., with a live webcast option available for remote attendees. This annual conference is a premier forum for accounting firm leaders, in‑house counsel, litigators, and regulators to examine the evolving landscape of accountants’ liability, enforcement priorities, and risk management. The 2026 program will explore how recent regulatory, litigation, and technological developments are reshaping the profession and what firms can do to proactively respond. “We are pleased to once again sponsor the ALI Accountants’ Liability Conference,” said Jackson Johnson, President of Johnson Global Advisory. “This event consistently brings together leading regulators, practitioners, and risk professionals to discuss the most pressing liability and oversight issues facing accounting firms today. We value the opportunity to engage with participants and contribute to these important conversations.” The program will feature nationally recognized panels of practitioners, general counsel, industry professionals, and government officials. Planned discussions will address current and emerging challenges facing accounting firms, including: Regulatory and enforcement priorities impacting the accounting profession Recent trends in accounting‑related litigation PCAOB and SEC perspectives on audits, inspections, and gatekeeper liability The impact of AI, cryptocurrency, and emerging technologies on audit quality and firm risk Best practices for navigating an evolving and uncertain regulatory environment Register by April 13, 2026, to attend in-person and use the code “ JGA2026 ” to save $250 off . OR, for webcast attendance, use the code " JOHNSON " to save $125 off the tuition. Click here to register. To learn more about how Johnson Global partners with in-house and outside counsel to support public accounting firms, we invite you to explore our latest brochure. This resource outlines our approach to independent monitoring and consulting, including how we assist firms in navigating PCAOB and SEC investigations, implementing quality control improvements, and responding to regulatory findings. Download the brochure below to see how our experienced team can help your firm meet today’s compliance challenges and build a stronger foundation for the future. Get a copy of our brochure here . About Johnson Global Advisory Johnson Global partners with leadership of public accounting firms, driving change to achieve the highest level of audit quality. Led by former PCAOB and SEC staff, JGA professionals are passionate and practical in their support to firms in their audit quality journey. We accelerate the opportunities to improve quality through policies, practices, and controls throughout the firm. This innovative approach harnesses technology to transform audit quality. Our team is designed to maintain a close pulse on regulatory environments around the world and incorporates solutions which navigates those standards. JGA is committed to helping the profession in amplifying quality worldwide. Visit www.johnson-global.com to learn more about Johnson Global.
By Jackson Johnson February 24, 2026
We’re pleased to share that Joe Lynch , JGA Shareholder, will be presenting in a series of AICPA & CIMA webcasts focused on practical considerations for Quality Management. These sessions are designed to provide guidance in your QM journey. They support key elements such as engagement quality reviews, root cause analysis, and ongoing monitoring and remediation. Register for Upcoming Sessions Session 1 — Quality Management: Engagement Quality Reviews What you’ll learn: Practical considerations for your firm's responsibilities for engagement quality reviews and the reviewers requirements when executing engagement quality reviews under the updated quality management standards, including how to make EQRs scalable and effective. Register for this session here . Session 2 — Quality Management: Performing a Root Cause Analysis What you’ll learn: How root cause analysis supports remediation by identifying underlying drivers of the findings and deficiencies; supporting the design of corrective actions that prevent recurrence. Register for this session here . Session 3 — Quality Management: My System is Set Up — Now What? What you’ll learn: Post-implementation requirements of SQMS No. 1, which include monitoring activities, evaluating findings and deficiencies, remediation, and the annual evaluation process—so your system stays responsive and effective. Register for this session here . These sessions are included with a current Webcast Pass. At Johnson Global Advisory , we support firms in selecting, implementing, and optimizing these tools to meet their unique needs. For more insights, visit our blog or contact us to learn how we can help your firm AmplifyQuality®.