This is an excellent, excellent question. Clearly, "thereon" is modifying "reports": It is a meeting to discuss the annual accounts, and the auditor's reports *about those accounts*.
So, here we have a word that dictionaries (including the OED) describe as an adverb, which is modifying a *noun*.
At first, I thought that this might be because the noun "report" is the nominal form of the verb "to report", but nope--"thereon" works with completely standard nouns as well:
"she looked at the table and the books thereon"="she looked at the table, and at the books *on that table*."
Then, I thought of other places where adverbs can modify pronouns: "almost everyone" and "hardly anyone".
Here, though, the adverb isn't actually modifying the complete pronoun: it's modifying the determiner "every" or "any"--grammatically, "everyone" and "anyone" act like two-word phrases, and we just write them as single words because of historical precedent.
And a similar thing is happening here. "Thereon" clearly isn't a traditional adverb. And even though it is modifying a noun in this sentence, it isn't an adjective, since it comes after the noun instead of before it. Grammatically, it is acting like a one-word prepositional phrase: prepositional phrases like "on the mountain" come after the thing they modify, and can either modify a verb (he danced on the mountain) or a noun (the trees on the mountain were all very short.) "Thereon" works exactly the same way: "I wrote my report, and he commented thereon (=on my report)"; "I looked at the report and his comments thereon (=on it)." Most "there-" adverbs (like therefrom and therein) act similarly, as does the word throughout ("I looked at the book, and the highlighting throughout").
As far as I know, there's not a common grammatical category that specifically names one-word prepositional phrases. In general, when you encounter a word that doesn't fit any other category, it is common to just call it an adverb. In the words of Wikipe