The shares had been halted for the announcement at 30 cents, having fallen 58 per cent this year, and tumbled to just 4 cents when they resumed trading today, valuing Intueri at $4m.
While it was too soon to predict an outcome of the audits, Intueri "believes cancellation of registration would be unwarranted".
"A number of the findings are capable of being disputed or remedied" although some are likely to be accepted, it said.
"Intueri is maintaining its normal operations, with continued bank support and no changes to its current access to the VET Fee-Help (VFH) scheme in Australia," it said.
A large percentage of students in Intueri's Australian online courses are funded through VET Fee-Help. The Australian government has imposed a cap on the scheme this year, holding all providers to their 2015 revenue levels. The Australian Federal Department of Education and Training is conducting a review of the scheme after a Senate inquiry found rampant abuse of the system and soaring costs, and legislation is expected to be introduced early next year.
The audits covered the period between April 2015 and July 2016, and were an assessment of compliance with the Standards for Registered Training Organisations 2015 and, additionally for Conwal, compliance with the VFH scheme where those requirements overlap or are relevant to the VET Quality Framework, Intueri said.
ASQA is Australia's national regulator for that country's vocational education and training sector, and regulates courses and training providers to ensure nationally approved quality standards are met.
The possibility of an Australian sanction adds to the list of setbacks Intueri has faced since listing in 2014, including New Zealand probes into student enrolments, a student death at its dive school, the sudden exit of its chief executive, and more recently amending its lending covenants that were at risk of being breached.