According to accountancyage.com, the UK accounting sector is confronting intensified regulatory enforcement and structural consolidation as the 2026/27 tax year begins — developments with direct implications for global supply chain professionals who rely on accurate financial reporting, audit integrity, and compliant tax operations across cross-border entities.
FRC Opens Formal Investigation into PwC’s Audit of Digital 9 Infrastructure
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has formally opened an investigation into PwC’s audit of Digital 9 Infrastructure (DGI9) for the 2023 financial year. This follows DGI9’s entry into managed wind-down after severe performance issues and governance criticism. PwC has served as DGI9’s auditor since its listing in 2021. The probe proceeds under the FRC’s Audit Enforcement Procedure — a signal that scrutiny of Public Interest Entity (PIE) audits, especially those involving high-growth infrastructure assets that later deteriorated, remains acute.
ICAS Accelerates UK Audit Qualification for International Talent
To address the UK’s chronic auditor shortage, ICAS has launched an accelerated route for overseas auditors to obtain the UK Audit Qualification (AQ). Senior members of internationally recognised bodies — such as those in Australia or South Africa — can now bypass redundant assessments and focus only on UK-specific competencies. ICAS estimates this could cut qualification time to two or three years, enabling faster transition into UK ‘Responsible Individual’ (RI) roles. For multinational supply chain organisations with UK subsidiaries, this may ease delays in audit readiness and statutory reporting cycles.
M&A Consolidation Heats Up Across Regional Firms
Consolidation continues across the UK accounting landscape: Sedulo entered the Scottish market with its first acquisition and a new Glasgow hub; DJH (formerly DJH Mitten Clarke) acquired SBP Accountants in Bootle; and Haines Watts Leicester expanded into Nottingham and Derby. These moves reflect private equity–backed ‘hub and spoke’ growth strategies — pressuring smaller independent firms to scale or sell. For supply chain teams managing vendor audits, finance controls, or third-party compliance across multiple UK regions, consolidated firms may offer more integrated service delivery but also introduce new vendor risk assessment considerations.
RICS 2026 Standards Reinforce Documentation Rigor
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) updated its professional standards in 2026, introducing a reinforced ‘Safe Pair of Hands’ standard. It mandates more rigorous documentation of professional skepticism — a requirement that directly affects accountants involved in valuations and property-heavy audits. Supply chain professionals overseeing real estate–intensive logistics assets (e.g., warehouses, distribution centres) must ensure their valuation partners align with these heightened documentation expectations.
MTD for ITSA Goes Live for High-Earners
On 6 April 2026, Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD for ITSA) became mandatory for taxpayers earning over £50,000. This marks the first full working week where affected individuals must maintain digital records. Firms are now focused on transitioning ‘laggards’ — those who waited until the deadline to select compliant software. Meanwhile, preparation has begun for the next cohort: those earning £30,000–£50,000, who have less than 12 months before their 2027 mandate.
HMRC’s Automated Tax Code Adjustments Underway
HMRC has begun removing employment expenses and higher-rate Gift Aid relief from PAYE codes where data is deemed outdated. A new £120 threshold applies for automated expense removals — triggering potential client queries about ‘incorrect’ tax codes. Supply chain finance teams supporting UK-based contractors, consultants, or gig-economy logistics partners should proactively brief payroll units on this change to avoid processing delays or compliance exposure.
Source: accountancyage.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










