Finance
Questions raised over British Steel’s finances
British Steel’s financial footing has been thrown into question after auditors warned of “material uncertainty” over the struggling manufacturer’s ability to operate without a fresh cash injection from its Chinese owner.
The auditors at Moore Kingston Smith also unexpectedly resigned just days after the company released delayed its financial filings for 2021. The auditor had been appointed only a year earlier.
The problems at the UK’s second largest steelmaker could threaten a large number of the jobs of its 4,500-strong workforce, compounding the pain for Britain’s steel industry, which is already grappling with Tata Steel’s planned shutdown of two blast furnaces at Port Talbot. The decision by the Indian-owned firm will result in up to 2,800 job losses, and has been condemned as a “devastating blow” by the Community union.
In an earnings report released more than a year after they were due at Companies House, the auditor warned that British Steel “need further funding from its ultimate parent company”, Jingye, which rescued the firm from collapse in March 2020.
While the company’s directors said they were confident that they would have enough funding for the following 12 months – effectively to the end of 2022 – auditors said there was “material uncertainty” over its ability to continue operating without another cash injection.
The Scunthorpe-based company reported a loss of £51m for 2021, having reported a £268m profit a year earlier, due in part to a sudden surge in energy costs in October, which the company said had a “significantly adverse impact on product margins”.
Auditors also signalled that they were unable to “satisfy ourselves” over the existence of £45.8m worth of stock, despite trying to verify it through “alternative means”.
Filings at Companies House now indicate that Moore Kingston Smith has resigned from its role, just days after the release of the report, and a year after its predecessor, Mazars, quit due to disagreements over fees.
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British Steel did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Finance
Fayette County Public Schools Board of Education approves audit contract, new finance director position
LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – The Fayette County Public Schools Board of Education approved a one-year audit contract capped at $131,750 plus $225 per hour during a virtual meeting Monday, along with a new finance director job description.
The contract is with Mauldin & Jenkins Certified Public Accountants, an Atlanta-based firm, and covers the 2025-26 fiscal year and the restatement of the 2024-25 fiscal year and ancillary services through FY 2029-2030. The work is set to be completed by Nov. 15.
The board approved the contract in a 5-0 vote.
Audit contract details
Interim Chief Financial Officer Kyna Koch said the cost is already accounted for in the district’s budget.
“And is actually less than we expected given our current situation — we were thrilled with the bid,” Koch said.
Koch said she believes this is Mauldin & Jenkins’ first school district audit in Kentucky, but that the firm works with school districts of more than 100,000 students throughout the Southeast.
“Quite frankly when I spoke to the folks at KDE they were thrilled because we’re running kind of short of auditors who want to do school district audits — so all around I think this was a win-win for everyone,” Koch said.
New finance director position
The board also approved a new job description for the position of Director of Finance. Acting Superintendent Dr. Bill Bradford said the title will replace two associate director positions.
“Which will not only save the school district money but it’s also going to streamline our work and align internal controls to make room for a more efficient unit,” Bradford said.
Koch said the position will be posted as soon as possible following the board’s approval.
Closed session
The board went into closed session for more than an hour to discuss pending investigations that could lead to employee discipline. When the board returned, it took no action and adjourned the meeting.
Copyright 2026 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Finance
UK Watchdog Urged to Consider Broader Oversight of AI Financial Firms | PYMNTS.com
The UK’s financial regulator should consider expanding its oversight to cover advanced artificial intelligence models used in financial services, according to a review commissioned by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), as policymakers assess whether existing rules can keep pace with rapidly evolving AI technology.
Finance
MAS moves to rein in autonomous AI agents in finance
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the city state’s central bank and financial regulator, has joined forces with major financial institutions and FinTechs to release a white paper aimed at keeping AI agents in finance operating within safe limits.
The paper, called Safeguards for Agentic Finance at Runtime (SAFR), lays out an industry-built framework designed to let AI agents perform financial tasks in a manner that is safe, secure and dependable. It has been produced under BuildFin.ai, the MAS programme that backs the responsible creation and rollout of AI tools across the financial sector.
The push comes as AI agents take on more autonomous work at a pace that makes hands-on human oversight impractical. In response, firms require real-time controls that keep agent behaviour inside the mandates, policies and risk limits they have defined. SAFR answers this with a series of governance checkpoints that check and log each action an agent proposes before that task is carried out.
The framework extends the AI Risk Management toolkit created through MAS’ Project Mindforge, concentrating on how protections can be put into practice at the moment an agent acts. The white paper maps out how measures such as policy bound execution, real time validation, auditability and interoperability can be woven into system operations, giving institutions the confidence to deploy agents consistently.
Industry participants have already tested SAFR in several settings. These include agent-assisted payments and treasury work, where agents handle routine transactions inside set mandates to cut friction and lift efficiency; wealth management and advisory processes, where agents examine documents and produce structured assessments within tightly defined task limits to speed up compliance reviews; and client engagement, where agents create insights and draft materials within approved content boundaries so staff can serve clients more productively.
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