PwC faces defections by Hong Kong, mainland China clients amid concerns about China Evergrande accusations
PwC declined to comment for this article.
On May 27, China Merchants Bank announced it was replacing PwC with EY’s mainland China and Hong Kong subsidiaries. China Railway Group said on May 25 it had replaced PwC with Deloitte, noting, however, that the reason for the change was its “business operation, development needs, and holistic auditing needs”.
Evergrande, the world’s most indebted developer with more than US$300 billion in total liabilities, inflated its sales by 564 billion yuan (US$79.3 billion) and its profits by 92 billion yuan in the years leading to its downfall in 2021, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said in March.

The China businesses of US-linked auditors have taken a hit since Beijing began tightening rules last year around cross-border auditing work that involved cybersecurity. Last January, the finance ministry and other government entities also urged state-owned firms to phase out their contracts with PwC, Deloitte, EY, and KPMG, known collectively as the “big four” accounting firms.
Additional reporting by Zhang Shidong