KPMG News and Analysis
Big4News coverage of KPMG focuses on the firm’s audit work, governance, regulatory scrutiny, litigation, partnership pressures and public-interest role across different markets.
So far, much of this coverage has been dominated by the unfolding KPMG Australia audit leak scandal, including whistleblower allegations, questions over confidential client information, audit independence and the firm’s response. But Big4News also covers KPMG beyond Australia, including developments in the United Kingdom and other regions where the firm’s conduct, culture or commercial pressures raise wider questions about the Big Four model.
This page brings together Big4News articles on KPMG, from major scandals and regulatory issues to analysis of what individual controversies reveal about the structure, incentives and accountability of one of the world’s largest professional services firms.
KPMG Global
Big Four AI Arms Race
Frontier AI like Claude is rapidly moving from experimental pilots to core business infrastructure, and the firms that can best weave it together with deep industry knowledge, regulatory expertise, and change-management muscle are positioning themselves for what looks like a massive wave of consulting and technology work ahead — the kind that will keep the next generation of Big Four partners very busy, and well compensated, indeed.
The Hallucination Trap
On June 12, GPTZero published an article revealing that one of KPMG International’s flagship reports, “Total Experience: Redefining Excellence in the Age of Agentic AI” (released in October 2025) included several case studies about reputable firms such as UBS, Swiss Federal Railways, and Transport for London that were figments of the AI’s imagination.
KPMG Australia
KPMG Australia Audit Leak Scandal
Big4News coverage of the KPMG Australia audit leak scandal examines allegations involving confidential client information, audit independence, whistleblower treatment, partner accountability and the financial pressure now facing the firm.
The Full KPMG Australia Scandal Timeline
The KPMG Australia scandal began with a whistleblower’s 2024 allegations that senior partners misused confidential Lendlease board documents to gain an unfair edge in winning major audit mandates, including Westpac.
KPMG Australia Audit Leak Scandal: Lendlease, Westpac, Dexus and Optus
On March 24, at 9:30pm, Senator Deborah O'Neill stood up in an almost empty parliament and read out a speech that set off tectonic shifts in KPMG world - with reverberations right through the professional services industry.
KPMG Australia Admits Serious Breach of Client Confidentiality in Westpac Audit Pitch
KPMG Australia admitted that a senior audit partner improperly accessed and displayed confidential Lendlease board documents while the firm was pitching to win the external audit engagement for Westpac.
Three Firms Under Fire: EY, Deloitte, KPMG Controversies
“On 6 November 2023, a meeting was held at KPMG’s Barangaroo office. During that meeting, and despite acknowledged independence sensitivities, an arrangement was proposed where [an internal audit partner] would leave his laptop open with Dexus internal audit documents visible while he went for lunch, allowing external audit personnel to view them.”
The Whistleblower
KPMG Whistleblower Hotline to Nowhere
The whistleblower first raised concerns internally in 2024. After the firm’s initial reviews found no evidence of wrongdoing, he escalated the matter to KPMG International in 2025, emailing Bill Thomas, the International Chair and Chief Executive of KPMG, and Anne Collins, the KPMG Global General Counsel, describing the unethical behaviour that he had witnessed in the Australia firm.
KPMG Australia's Ticking Debt Bomb
One of the key reasons KPMG Australia has borrowed $557 million from National Australia Bank (NAB) and DBS lies in how professional services partnerships traditionally operate. These firms typically distribute the vast majority of their profits to partners each year rather than retaining earnings to build a financial buffer or “war chest” for tougher times.
Associate Professor Andy Schmulow on the KPMG Australia Scandal
Associate Professor Andy Schmulow is an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Wollongong, specialising in banking and financial regulation, conduct risk, and corporate governance. He has emerged as one of the most consistent and outspoken critics of practices within KPMG Australia.
KPMG UK
KPMG UK Ends Summer Friday Perk Amid Redundancies and Record Partner Pay
KPMG UK has ended its popular summer “Jump Start” early Friday finish programme. The benefit, introduced in 2021 as a Covid-era wellbeing measure, allowed staff to finish 2.5 hours earlier on Fridays through the end of August — provided they logged a full 40-hour week by working more hours on other days.
KPMG India
The Big Four Are Booming in India. Can They Scale Sustainably?
Technology consulting accounts for nearly half of PwC India’s business and around 65% of Deloitte’s. KPMG does not disclose separate technology numbers, but consulting, which includes technology, constitutes 35–40% of its overall revenue.













