ACC 330: Auditing - Chapter Nine Test Bank
An auditor reviews job cost sheets to test which transaction assertion? - occurrence - completeness - accuracy - classification
accuracy
An auditor most likely would analyze inventory turnover rates to obtain evidence concerning management's balance assertions about - existence - rights and obligations - completeness - accuracy and valuation
accuracy and valuation
From the auditors' point of view, inventory counts are more acceptable prior to the year end when - internal control is weak - accurate perpetual inventory records are maintained - inventory is slow moving - significant amounts of inventory are held on a consignment basis
accurate perpetual inventory records are maintained
When auditing inventories, an auditor would least likely verify that - all inventory owned by the client is on hand at the time of the count - the client has used proper inventory pricing - the financial statement presentation of inventories is appropriate - damaged goods and obsolete items have been properly accounted for
all inventory owned by the client is on hand at the time of the count
Which of the following is not an acceptable method of determining inventory cost under GAAP? - FIFO - LIFO - average cost - all of the choices are acceptable
all of the choices are acceptable
The production planner determines what inventory is need for future production using - finished goods inventory status report for the product being produced - bill of materials for the product being produced - standard costs for the product being produced - manpower availability report from human resources
bill of materials for the product being produced
To make a year-to-year comparison of inventory turnover most meaningful, the auditor will perform the analysis - for the company as a whole - by division - by product - all of the choices are correct
by product
Which of the following would be considered an analytical procedure? - testing purchasing, shipping, and receiving cutoff activities - comparing inventory balances to recent sales activities - projecting the deviation rate of a statistical sample to the population - reconciling physical counts to perpetual records and general ledger balances
comparing inventory balances to recent sales activities
An auditor selected a product maintained in the finished goods warehouse. The auditor counted the product and compared this amount with the amount in the finished goods perpetual inventory subsidiary account. Which ASB balance assertion is the auditor most likely testing? - existence - completeness - rights and obligations - valuation
completeness
An auditor selected an inventory item on the warehouse floor, test counted it, and traced the count to the final inventory compilation. The auditor most likely was testing the PCAOB assertion of - existence - valuation - completeness - rights and obligations
completeness
An auditor selected items for test counts while observing a client's physical inventory. The auditor then traced the test counts to the client's inventory listing. This procedure most likely obtained evidence concerning management's balance assertion of - rights and obligations - completeness - existence - accuracy and valuation
completeness
Counting inventory on the warehouse floor and tracing the count to the inventory compilation provides evidence to support which management (PCAOB) assertion? - existence or occurrence - completeness - rights and obligations - valuation or allocation
completeness
When evaluating inventory controls, an auditor would be least likely to - inspect documents - make inquiries - observe procedures - consider policy and procedure manuals
consider policy and procedure manuals
When testing a company's cost accounting system, the auditor uses procedures that are primarily designed to determine that - quantities on hand have been computed based on acceptable cost accounting techniques that reasonably approximate actual quantities on hand - physical inventories agree substantially with book inventories - the system is in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and is functioning as planned - costs have been properly assigned to finished goods, work-in-process, and cost of goods sold
costs have been properly assigned to finished goods, work-in-process, and cost of goods sold
A retailer's physical count of inventory was higher than that shown by the perpetual records. Which of the following could explain the difference? - inventory items had been counted but the tags placed on the items had not been taken off and added to the inventory accumulation sheets - credit memos for several items returned by customers had not been recorded - no journal entry had been made on the retailer's books for several items returned to its suppliers - an item purchased FOB shipping point had not arrived at the date of the inventory count and had not been reflected in the perpetual records
credit memos for several items returned by customers had not been recorded
Counting different parts of inventory at different times of the year is called - LIFO inventory - inventory cutoff - cycle counting - just-in-time inventory
cycle counting
Mary Monitor, CPA, noted that ABC Co. received goods prior to year-end that were included in physical inventory but had not been recorded. If the books have not been adjusted to the physical count, which of the following adjustments should be made? - debit purchases/credit cost of goods sold - debit cost of goods sold/credit accounts payable - debit inventory/credit accounts payable - none
debit inventory/credit accounts payable
An auditor's tests of controls over the issuance of raw materials to production would most likely include - reconciling raw materials and work-in-process perpetual inventory records to general ledger balances - inquiring of the custodian about the procedures followed when defective materials are received from vendors - observing that raw materials are stored in secure areas and that storeroom security is supervised by a responsible individual - examining material requisitions and reperforming client controls designed to process and record issuances
examining material requisitions and reperforming client controls designed to process and record issuances
An auditor selected a product recorded in the finished goods perpetual inventory subsidiary account. The auditor went to the warehouse and counted the product and compared this amount with the amount in the finished goods perpetual inventory subsidiary account. Which ASB balance assertion is the auditor most likely testing? - existence - completeness - rights and obligations - valuation
existence
Which of the following is the assertion with the highest inherent risk in auditing inventory? - completeness - rights - existence - properly classification on the balance sheet
existence
L. Martinez, CPA, was auditing a client, Marvelous Retail Company and selected a sample of inventory items from the perpetual records and vouched additions to receiving reports. This procedure was intended to satisfy which PCAOB assertion? - rights and obligations - completeness - existence or occurrence - valuation or allocation
existence or occurrence
Which cycle is not directly linked to the production cycle? - acquisition and expenditure cycle - payroll cycle - revenue and collection cycle - finance and investment cycle
finance and investment cycle
Which of the following procedures would best prevent or detect the theft of valuable items from an inventory that consists of hundreds of different items selling for $1 to $10 and a few items selling for hundreds of dollars? - maintain a perpetual inventory of only the more valuable items with frequent periodic verification of the accuracy of the perpetual inventory record - have an independent accounting firm prepare an internal control report on the effectiveness of the controls over inventory - have separate warehouse space for the more valuable items with frequent periodic physical counts and comparison to perpetual inventory records - require a manager's signature for the removal of any inventory item with a value above $50
have separate warehouse space for the more valuable items with frequent periodic physical counts and comparison to perpetual inventory records
An auditor will usually trace the details of the test counts made during the observation of physical inventory counts to a final inventory compilation. This audit procedure is undertaken to provide evidence that items physically present and observed by the auditor at the time of the physical inventory count are - owned by the client - not obsolete - physically present at the time of the preparation of the final inventory schedule - included in the final inventory schedule
included in the final inventory schedule
Which of the following auditing procedures probably would provide the most reliable evidence concerning the entity's assertion of rights and obligations related to inventories? - trace test counts noted during the entity's physical count to the entity's summarization of quantities - inspect agreements to determine whether any inventory is pledged as collateral or subject to any liens - select the last few shipping documents used before the physical count and determine whether the shipments were recorded as sales - inspect the open purchase order file for significant commitments that should be considered for disclosure
inspect agreements to determine whether any inventory is pledged as collateral or subject to any liens
If overhead is miscalculated so that it is under absorbed, the result if the error is not corrected will be that - inventory will be understated and net income will be overstated - inventory and net income will be overstated - inventory will be overstated and net income will be understated - inventory and net income will be understated
inventory and net income will be understated
The typical functions of the production and conversion includes - cash payments for raw materials purchased - inventory planning and control - purchase requisitioning and purchase ordering for inventory - receiving of inventory shipments from vendors
inventory planning and control
To gain assurance that all inventory items in a client's inventory listing schedule are valid, an auditor most likely would trace - inventory tags noted during the auditor's observation to items in the inventory listing schedule - inventory tags noted during the auditor's observation to items listed in receiving reports and vendors' invoices - items in the inventory listing schedule to inventory tags and the auditor's recorded count sheets - items in receiving reports and vendors' invoices to the inventory listing schedule
items in the inventory listing schedule to inventory tags and the auditor's recorded count sheets
Maple Company has an increase in purchases from specific vendors and an increase in raw materials inventory for the items purchased from these vendors. Sales for the company have not increased and are not forecast to increase. From this information an auditor might suspect - an increase in obsolete raw material inventory - theft of raw material inventory - kickbacks from vendors - poor security over raw material inventory
kickbacks from vendors
The auditor tests the quantity of materials charged to work-in-process by vouching these quantities to - cost ledgers - perpetual inventory records - receiving reports - material requisitions
material requisitions
Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) require that inventory be recorded at - the lower of cost or fair market value - the higher of cost or fair market value - the higher of cost or net realizable value less a normal profit (floor) - none of the choices are correct
none of the choices are correct
Your client plans to count inventory at several locations on the same day. No location is material in amount, but the total of inventory is quite material. How is an auditor likely to plan to observe? - observe all counts at all locations by using the required number of auditors - insist the inventory be counted on separate days so the auditor can be present at all locations - work with the client to determine which locations to observe - observe a sample of locations on a surprise basis
observe a sample of locations on a surprise basis
An auditor selected an invoice for a large inventory purchase and vouched the invoice to the receiving report. Which ASB transaction assertion is the auditor most likely testing? - occurrence - completeness - rights and obligations - valuation
occurrence
Vouching a sample of items from the perpetual inventory records to the receiving reports achieves the specific ASB balance assertion of - completeness - occurrence - presentation - valuation
occurrence
Which of the following procedures would be most appropriate for testing the completeness assertion as it applies to inventory? - scanning perpetual inventory, production, and purchasing records - examining paid vendor invoices - tracing inventory items from the tag listing back to the physical inventory quantities - performing cutoff procedures for shipping and receiving
performing cutoff procedures for shipping and receiving
Periodic or cycle counts of selected inventory items are made at various times during the year rather than during a single inventory count at year-end. Which of the following is necessary if the auditor plans to observe inventories at interim dates? - complete recounts by independent teams are performed - perpetual inventory records are maintained - unit cost records are integrated with production accounting records - inventory balances are rarely at low levels
perpetual inventory records are maintained
A company's cost accountant periodically reconciles job cost sheets to the work-in-process inventory accounts. This reconciliation is most likely performed to provide assurance that - recorded production transactions are valid and documented - valid production transactions are recorded and none omitted - production accounting and posting is complete - production transactions are recorded in the proper period
production accounting and posting is complete
To determine the client's planned amount and timing of production of a product, the auditor will review the - sales forecast - inventory reports - production plan - purchases journal
production plan
A client's physical count of inventories was higher than the inventory quantities shown in the perpetual records. This situation could be the result of the failure to record - sales - sales discounts - purchases - purchase discounts
purchases
Which of the following internal control activities most likely addresses the completeness assertion for inventory? - the work-in-process account is periodically reconciled with subsidiary inventory records - employees responsible for custody of finished goods do not perform the receiving function - receiving reports are prenumbered and the numbering sequence is checked periodically - there is a separation of duties between the payroll department and inventory accounting personnel
receiving reports are prenumbered and the numbering sequence is checked periodically
Your client counts inventory three months before the end of the fiscal year. Internal controls over inventory are excellent. Which procedure is not necessary for the inventory roll-forward? - check that shipping documents for the last three months agree with perpetual records - tracing receiving reports for the last three months to perpetual records - compare gross margin percentages for the last three months - request the client to recount inventory at the end of the year
request the client to recount inventory at the end of the year
A client maintains perpetual inventory records in quantities and in dollars. If the assessed control risk is high, an auditor would probably - apply gross profit tests to ascertain the reasonableness of the physical counts - increase the extent of tests of controls relevant to the inventory cycle - request the client to schedule the physical inventory count at the end of the year - insist that the client perform physical counts of inventory items several times during the year
request the client to schedule the physical inventory count at the end of the year
While observing a client's annual physical inventory, an auditor recorded test counts for several items and noticed that certain test counts were higher than the recorded quantities in the client's perpetual records. This situation could be the result of the client's failure to record - purchase discounts - purchase returns - sales - sales returns
sales returns
To test the control assertion of completeness in the area of work-in-process inventory, the auditor most likely would - select a sample of open and closed production cost reports and recalculate all costs entered - select a sample of issue slips from the raw materials stores file and trace materials-used reports to production cost reports - select a sample of open and closed production cost reports and vouch overhead charges to overhead analysis schedules - select a sample of production orders and determine whether the production orders were authorized
select a sample of issue slips from the raw materials stores file and trace materials-used reports to production cost reports
Which of the following methods for determining inventory cost is not allowed by GAAP? - average cost - FIFO - LIFO - standard cost
standard cost
The audit procedures used in an observation of the client's physical inventory taking are designed primarily to - test and observe the client's physical count of inventory - verify independently the physical counts obtained by the client - assist the client in taking test counts of year-end inventory - determine whether inventory contains obsolete goods
test and observe the client's physical count of inventory
Auditors record the last bill of lading used at the time of the inventory count to - search for unrecorded sales - test cutoff - verify ownership - all of the choices
test cutoff
At the beginning of the observation of the inventory count, the auditor records the last bill of lading used by the company to - test inventory cut-off - search for unrecorded sales - verify inventory ownership - record the inventory valuation of items received
test inventory cut-off
An auditor is examining a nonpublic company's inventory procurement system and has decided to perform tests of controls. Under which of the following conditions should the auditor perform tests of controls? - significant weaknesses were found in the company's internal control - the auditor hopes to reduce the amount of work to be done in assessing inherent risk - the auditor believes that testing the controls could lead to a reduction in overall audit time and cost - tests of controls are always performed when the auditor begins to assess control risk
the auditor believes that testing the controls could lead to a reduction in overall audit time and cost
Which of the following is an internal control weakness for a company whose inventory of supplies consists of a large number of individual items? - supplies of relatively little value are expensed when purchased - the cycle basis is used for physical counts - the warehouse manager is responsible for maintenance of perpetual inventory records - perpetual inventory records are maintained only for items of significant value
the warehouse manager is responsible for maintenance of perpetual inventory records
Inventory count tags are controlled - to prevent counting errors - to test cutoff - to prevent subsequent addition of goods to the inventory - for reasons specified in all of the choices
to prevent subsequent addition of goods to the inventory
An auditor would vouch inventory on the inventory status report to the vendor's invoice to obtain evidence concerning management's balance assertions about - existence - rights and obligations - completeness - valuation
valuation
Selecting a sample of cost accounting reports for labor and vouching it to time records is a procedure designed to test the ASB transaction assertion of - occurrence - valuation - completeness - presentation and disclosure
valuation
An auditor most likely would make inquiries of production and sales personnel concerning possible obsolete or slow-moving inventory to support management's financial statement (PCAOB) assertion of - valuation or allocation - rights and obligations - existence or occurrence - presentation and disclosure
valuation or allocation
An auditor who wished to test for the existence or occurrence of inventory would most likely select a sample of inventory items from the perpetual records and - trace additions to the general ledger - vouch additions to receiving reports - vouch additions to sales invoices - trace receipts to receiving reports
vouch additions to receiving reports
Which of the following steps would not normally be included in a program for a physical inventory observation? - vouch unit prices to vendors' invoices or other cost records - obtain the client's inventory counting instructions and review them for completeness - inspect the tags used and unused and record the tag numbers used - obtain the numbers of the last five receiving reports and last five shipping documents
vouch unit prices to vendors' invoices or other cost records
When a production plan is complete the production planner needs to determine - what raw materials need to be ordered - labor rates for the jobs are needed to produce the orders - which vendors need to supply raw materials - what equipment needs to be purchased to meet production quotas
what raw materials need to be ordered
An auditor's observation procedures for inventory may be performed during or after the end of the period under audit under which of the following conditions? - when the client maintains periodic inventory records - when the auditor finds minimal variations in client records and test counts in prior periods - when total inventory has not varied more than 5% in the last five years - when well-kept perpetual inventory records are checked by the client periodically by comparisons with physical counts
when well-kept perpetual inventory records are checked by the client periodically by comparisons with physical counts