Douglas Trood Auditor Registration Cancelled Over Independence Concerns
Summary
ASIC accepted Douglas Trood's voluntary application for cancellation of his company auditor registration after ASIC raised concerns about his alleged failures to comply with auditor independence and conflict of interest requirements. The concerns arose from Mr Trood's 34-year involvement as lead auditor and engagement partner in a large proprietary company's audit, while concurrently serving as non-executive director (1991–2004), secretary (1989–2004), and non-beneficial shareholder (1990–2016). ASIC identified significant self-interest and familiarity threats that were not appropriately addressed, drawing on its data-driven proactive surveillance and Report 817. No admissions were made by Mr Trood regarding ASIC's concerns.
“Auditor independence is fundamental to trust in Australia's financial reporting system.”
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What changed
ASIC accepted Douglas Trood's voluntary cancellation of his company auditor registration following concerns that his 34-year association with a single audit client, combined with concurrent non-executive director, secretary, and shareholder roles between 1989 and 2016, created significant self-interest and familiarity threats to auditor independence under the Corporations Act 2001 and APES 110 Code of Ethics. The action was identified through ASIC's proactive data-driven surveillance of auditor independence and conflicts of interest.
Professional accounting firms and individual auditors should review their own audit client relationships and rotation practices. Extended engagements, particularly where auditors hold management or ownership positions at audit clients, create independence risks that must be formally assessed and addressed under the Corporations Act framework. Audit committees should scrutinise familiarity threats in long-standing auditor relationships.
Archived snapshot
Apr 24, 2026GovPing 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.
Print Share ASIC has accepted Douglas Trood’s application for the cancellation of his registration as a company auditor following ASIC raising concerns with Mr Trood’s alleged failure to comply with auditor independence and conflict of interest requirements under the Corporations Act 2001 and the APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (including Independence Standards).
ASIC’s concerns arose from Mr Trood’s involvement in the audit of a large proprietary company (including as lead auditor and engagement partner) while:
- maintaining a long association with that audit client over 34 years, and
- having concurrently held various positions as non-executive director (between 1991 and 2004) and secretary (between 1989 and 2004) and non-beneficial shareholder (between and 1990 and 2016). ASIC was concerned that these matters created significant self-interest and familiarity threats to auditor independence that were not appropriately addressed.
ASIC identified the alleged independence failures through its proactive surveillance of auditor independence and conflicts of interest, which focused on auditors’ compliance with independence obligations and used data-driven analysis to detect a range of possible independence issues: Report 817 Building trust: Auditors’ compliance with independence and conflict of interest obligations (REP 817).
ASIC Commissioner Kate O’Rourke said, ‘Auditor independence is fundamental to trust in Australia’s financial reporting system. Auditors must avoid situations where their objectivity is compromised, or could reasonably be seen to be compromised.’
No admissions were made by Mr Trood with respect to ASIC’s concerns regarding his auditor independence.
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