Andersen RI
Andersen RI
unit to
merge with
Ernst & Young
Adianto P. Simamora
The Jakarta Post
Jakarta
The Indonesian unit of troubled accounting giant Arthur Andersen,
called Prasetio, Utomo & Co., is planning to merge its operation
with Ernst & Young (EY), according to a source.
The source said late last week that the merger was aimed at
providing certainty to clients.
He declined to provide details as the merger talks had yet to
be completed.
The managing partner of Prasetio, Utomo & Co., Soemarsono S.
Rahardjo, would not confirm the merger, but he did say that the
firm had held talks with a major accounting firm.
The largest accounting firms are PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC),
Klynveld Peat Marwick Goerdeler (KPMG), Deloitte Touche Totmatsu
(DTT) and Ernst & Young.
"Yes ... we are now in formal talks over a merger plan,"
Soemarsono told The Jakarta Post.
"The merger negotiations are going ahead and the day-to-day
developments have been very fast, but we are committed to
ensuring both companies benefit from the merger," Soemarsono
said.
Prasetio, Utomo & Co. said earlier that it was in no hurry to
join the merger frenzy of Arthur Andersen's other Asian units, as
its business was not effected by Andersen's dealings with
collapsed energy giant Enron.
Andersen's headquarters in Washington is reeling from the
Enron debacle. It faces criminal charges over document shredding,
billion-dollar lawsuits and an exodus of prestigious clients.
Soemarsono said Andersen's affiliate in Indonesia was not
losing clients despite the credibility blow from the Enron
scandal.
The Andersen affiliates in Singapore, New Zealand and
Australia have signed deals to merge their operations with Ernst
& Young.
In Thailand, the Andersen unit joined with KPMG, while the
affiliates in Hong Kong and China merged with
PricewaterhouseCoopers.