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FMA Highlights Importance of High Quality Financial Reporting Amid Global Uncertainty

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Summary

The Financial Markets Authority (FMA) released its Financial Statements Monitoring Insights 2022–2025 report summarising findings from reviews of 60 sets of audited financial statements and reporting timeliness of all FMC-reporting entities over three years. The FMA urged directors, preparers, and auditors to reinforce governance and strengthen financial reporting processes amid global economic uncertainty. The report identified recurring weaknesses in disclosures around key judgements, assumptions, and risks, as well as inconsistencies between financial and climate-related reporting.

What changed

The FMA released its Financial Statements Monitoring Insights 2022–2025 report covering reviews of 60 sets of audited financial statements and analysis of reporting timeliness across all FMC-reporting entities. The report identified recurring weaknesses including insufficient transparency around key judgements, assumptions and risks, inconsistencies in explaining significant balance measurements, and challenges with newer or judgement-heavy standards. Climate-related reporting inconsistencies with financial reporting were also noted. While late filings declined over the period, the FMA warns that delays signal governance concerns and deprive investors of critical information. The FMA reminds directors they are ultimately responsible for financial statement accuracy and completeness.

Directors, management teams, and auditors of FMC-reporting entities should review their financial reporting processes in light of the FMA's findings. Entities with weaknesses in judgement disclosures or climate-related reporting consistency should proactively address these gaps. The FMA has indicated it will continue using the full range of regulatory responses from feedback letters to civil proceedings for significant or repeated non-compliance.

What to do next

  1. Directors and management to reinforce governance and strengthen financial reporting processes
  2. Preparers and auditors to improve transparency in key judgements, assumptions, and risk disclosures
  3. Public companies and FMC-reporting entities to ensure consistency between financial and climate-related reporting

Archived snapshot

Apr 9, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Back 09 April 2026

FMA highlights importance of high quality financial reporting amid global uncertainty

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MR No. 2026 – 13

The Financial Markets Authority – Te Mana Tātai Hokohoko (FMA) is urging directors, preparers and auditors to maintain focus on the quality, accuracy and timeliness of financial reporting, as global volatility creates ongoing uncertainty for businesses and investors.

The call comes as the FMA releases its Financial Statements Monitoring Insights 2022–2025 report which summarises findings from reviews of 60 sets of audited financial statements as well as the reporting timeliness of all FMC-reporting entities over the past three years.

Jacco Moison, Head of Audit, Financial Reporting & Climate Related Disclosures, says high‑quality financial reporting is critical for investor trust during periods of heightened risk.

“Investors need to be able to understand how relevant market conditions were considered at the time the financial statements were prepared. This becomes even more important when economic instability, global tensions and rapid market shifts are creating greater uncertainty.

“High quality reporting enables investors to assess resilience, understand emerging risks and make well informed decisions with confidence,” he says.

“We found that while many entities are meeting expectations, weaknesses in disclosures and delays in reporting can undermine trust in the market. Now is the time for directors and management to reinforce robust governance, strengthen financial reporting processes and ensure transparency in areas requiring significant judgement.”

While overall standards are high, several recurring themes continue to affect the quality and clarity of financial reporting. These include disclosures that lack sufficient transparency around key judgements, assumptions and risks; inconsistencies or gaps in explaining how significant balances are measured; and areas where entities could better communicate the basis for complex estimates.

The review also noted ongoing challenges in newer or more judgement‑heavy standards, as well as inconsistencies between financial and climate‑related reporting that may undermine user confidence.

A positive indicator of stronger processes and awareness of reporting obligations was that late filings declined over the period reviewed. Delays in filing may signal deeper governance concerns and can deprive investors of critical information.

The review also outlines the regulatory responses taken by the FMA over the review period, which ranged from feedback letters to infringement notices, licence cancellation and civil proceedings for significant or repeated non‑compliance.

The FMA emphasises that directors are ultimately responsible for ensuring the accuracy and completeness of financial statements.

“High‑quality financial reporting is a fundamental accountability to investors,” says Mr Moison. “We encourage all reporting entities to reflect on these insights, strengthen their internal controls, and maintain the transparency needed to support confidence in New Zealand’s financial markets.”

Find the full report on our website here

Ends

Media contact: [email protected] **** Non-media queries: [email protected]

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Classification

Agency
FMA NZ
Published
April 9th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
MR No. 2026 – 13

Who this affects

Applies to
Public companies Investors Legal professionals
Industry sector
5231 Securities & Investments
Activity scope
Financial statement monitoring Audit oversight Financial reporting
Geographic scope
New Zealand NZ

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Corporate Governance Securities Public Health

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