Even audited BRSRs contain errors.
We recently ran a large listed company’s “final” draft through our Compliance Checker
Here’s what happened:
This wasn’t fraud.
It was manual process risk.
Once filed, these numbers become public, searchable, and comparable.
Investors, analysts, regulators — everyone can see them.
The question becomes:
Which number is correct? And who is accountable?
have inconsistencies
Conversions and totals do not align
Public data that cannot be defended clearly
Numbers do not have a defensible trail
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Missing the deadline can trigger stock exchange notices and requires a formal explanation from the company.
Typical consequences include:
Public disclosure of delay
Follow-up queries from investors and analysts
Increased scrutiny in the next reporting cycle
Possible governance concerns raised by rating agencies
Most delays occur because inconsistencies are discovered late in the assurance process rather than during drafting.
Yes, estimates are allowed when primary data is unavailable. However, companies must document:
Source of estimation factors
Assumptions used
Reason estimates are necessary
Improvement plan for future data collection
Undocumented estimates are one of the most common reasons auditors raise findings.
They are usually prepared through different workflows.
The PDF is narrative-driven, while XBRL requires structured tagged data. When teams manually transfer numbers between formats, small rounding, unit conversion, or classification differences create mismatches — and auditors treat them as material inconsistencies.
External assurance is not mandatory for every company today, but it is increasingly expected by investors, lenders, and rating agencies. Many listed companies voluntarily obtain limited assurance because regulators and exchanges treat BRSR disclosures as decision-useful information.
If assurance is performed, auditors will verify calculation methods, data traceability, and consistency across disclosures. If issues are found, companies may need to restate and resubmit their filing, delaying results publication.
Yes. BRSR disclosures are used by ESG rating agencies and increasingly referenced in credit assessments.
When auditors identify material inconsistencies, it raises questions about internal controls and data governance. Even if the numbers themselves are not financially material, the reliability of disclosures becomes the concern.