Chapter 5
existence/occurence
assets, liabilities, and equity interests exist and the recorded transactions have occurred
the _________ typically contains the working papers of a company
audit file
expectations
auditors develop expectations using a number of different techniques, including trend analysis, ratio analysis, regression analysis, and reasonableness tests
audit risk
auditors must obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence to reduce audit risk to a low level in every audit
current
current year working papers and index and cross-refrencing
reliability
dependent on the circumstances in which it is obtained
specialist report
findings of an expert hired by the client or auditor to performa a highly technical valuation
analytical procedures and tests of detail of account balances, transactions, and disclosures are _______ procedures
substantive
further audit procedures
tests of controls, substantive procedures that are performed based on the results of the auditors risk assessments
test of class of transaction
tests of inventory purchases to determine if properly accounted for
rights and obligations
the company holds rights to the assets; liabilities are the obligations of the company
relevant audit evidence provides support for detecting misstatements in
the financial statement assertions being tested
ratio analysis
compare relationships between two or more financial statement accounts or comparisons of account balances to non-financial data 1. liquidity 2. leverage 3. profitability 4. activity
ratio analysis
comparisons of relationships between two or more financial statement accounts, or comparisons of account balances to non financial data
test of account balance
confirmation of accounts receivable balance
related party
individuals or entities that may have dealings with the client in which one party is significantly influenced by the other such that it may not pursue its separate interests
lawyers letter
the primary source of info about litigation that is pending against the client
observation
watching a process or procedure being performed by the entities personnel or the performance of control activities
high reliability
when something is prepared externally and sent directly to auditors. something has high reliability when it is done outside the company
to increase the reliability of evidence, the completed confirmations are sent directly to the ___________
auditor
representation letter
client provides to summarize important important assertions made by management during the audit
working papers need to be safeguarded because they contain
confidential client info
relevance
confirming a clients accounts receivable with customers may provide evidence on the existence of the receivables, but it provides very limited info relating to whether the client has completely recorded all receivable accounts
substantive procedures
detect material misstatements at relevant assertion level. including analytical procedures, and tests of details of account balances, transactions, and disclosures
something to remember:
detection risk varies inversely with the risk of material misstatement (the greater the risk of material misstatement, the less the detection risk that can be accepted by the auditors)
corroborating documents
documents that substantiate representations contained in the clients financial statements such as audit confirmations, minutes of directors meetings, and client representation letters
analytical procedure
evaluations of financial information through analysis of plausible relationships among both financial and non-financial data
accounts assertions
existence, rights/obligations, completeness, valuation and allocation
type 2 error
failing to modify opinion when there is material departure from GAAP
extent of procedures
holding other factors such as the nature and timing of procedures constant: 1. the greater the risk of material misstatement, the greater the needed extent of substantive procedures 2. the main way to increase the extent of audit procedures is to examine more items 3. sample sizes should reduce detection risk so as to restrict audit risk to a low level
detection risk has a _______ relationship with the risk of material misstatement
inverse
non-routine
involve activities that occur only periodically such as the taking of physical inventories. high inherent risk
analytical procedures
involve evaluations of financial statement info by a study of relationships among financial and non financial data
analytical procedures
involve the comparison of relationships among financial and non financial data. data interrelationships rely upon plausible relationships among both financial and non financial data. a plausible relationships may exist in an industry between annual square footage of sales space and retail space
cross-sectional analysis
involves comparisons with similar firms at a point in time, often comparing the clients ratios to industry averages
trend analysis
involves the review of changes in an account balance over time. example: a review of the clients sales for the past 3 years might reveal a consistent growth rate and this info would assist the auditors in developing an expectation about what sales should be for the current year
something to remember about the inherent risk of a company
it is not constant over time
permanent files
items of continuing audit interest
auditors obtain a variety of representation from a number of company personnel and outside parties
like client's customers, vendors, financial institutions, and attorneys. evidence may be obtained from specialists in some audits. inquiries that may be oral or written may result in either oral or written replies
type 1 audit error
modifying opinion when the financial statements are fairly stated in accordance with GAAP
factors that affect inherent risk
nature of clients environment, nature of the client, nature of the account
audit documentation should be
sufficient, to allow an experienced auditor to understand the audit work performed, the evidence obtained, and the significant conclusions reached. one who possesses the competencies and skills to perform an audit of the client, but has no previous experience with the client
primary
support the auditors' compliance with auditing standards support the auditors' opinion
test of disclosure
test of property, plant, and equipment footnotes
recalculation
testing the mathematical accuracy of documents or records
appropriateness
the measure of the quality of that audit evidence. both its relevance and reliability is considered. relevance relates to the assertion being addressed.
regression analysis
the most sophisticated expectation development technique that allows auditors to measure the reliability and precisions of the expectation
a _________ model, such as a discounted future cash flow model, can be used to determine fair value for assets that do not have active markets
valuation
audit documentation, which is the record of the audit procedures performed, relevant audit evidence obtained, and the conclusions the auditors reach are also known as:
work papers
much of the information gained in confidence by the auditors is recorded in their ________
working papers. the working papers are confidential in nature
audit evidence gathered from oral or written inquiries made by the auditor can include:
written representations from outside parties, written representations from company personnel, and oral representations from company personnel
inspection of records/documents
examining a record or document
inspection of tangible assets
physically examining an asset
AICPA requires that audit documentation provide:
1. evidence of the auditors basis for concluding on the achievement of the audits overall objectives 2. evidence that the audit was planned and performed in accordance with GAAS
2 basic approaches to ratio analysis
1. horizontal analysis 2. cross-sectional analysis
the representations usually fall into the following broad categories:
1. all accounting records, financial data, and minutes of directors meetings have been made available to the auditors 2. the financial statements are complete and were prepared in conformity with GAAP 3. management believes that the adjusting entries brought to its attention by the auditors and not recorded are not material 4. management acknowledges its responsibility to design and implement programs and controls to prevent and detect fraud and to design and implement programs and controls to prevent and detect fraud 5. all items requiring disclosure have been properly disclosed
substantive procedures
1. analytical procedures 2. test of details (test of accounts, test of transactions, test of disclosures)
three types of assertions
1. assertions about account balances (accounts) 2. assertions about classes of transactions and events (transactions) 3. assertions about presentation and disclosure (disclosure)
working papers
1. audit administrative working papers 2. working trial balance (the backbone) 3. lead schedules 4. adjusting journal entries and reclassification entries 5. reconciliations 6. supporting schedules 7. computational working papers 8. corroborating documents
general categories into which most working papers may be grouped
1. audit administrative working papers 2. working trial balance and lead schedules 3. adjusting journal entries and reclassification entries 4. supporting schedules, analyses, reconciliations, and computational working papers 5. corroborating documents
not all documents are created equal
1. created outside client firm, obtained by auditors - cash confirmations, cut-off bank statements 2. created outside client, held by client - vendor invoices 3. created within client - purchase orders, receiving reports
types of working files
1. current files 2. permanent files
there are two files of working papers for each client
1. current files for every completed audit. pertains solely to that year's audit 2. permanent file of relatively unchanging data - contains such things as copies of the articles of incorporation, which are of continuing audit interest
steps involved:
1. develop expectation of account balance 2. determine amount of difference that can be accepted without investigation 3. compare the company's account with the expectation 4. investigate and evaluate significant differences
high inherent risk:
1. difficult to audit transactions or balances 2. complex calculations 3. difficult accounting issues 4. significant judgment by management 5. valuations that vary significantly based on economic factors
related party transactions
1. disclosure requirements must be met 2. primary challenge is identifying undisclosed related party transactions
rank the inherent risk from the different type of transactions from highest to lowest
1. estimation 2. non routine 3. routine
appropriateness of evidence
SUFFICIENT APPROPRIATE EVIDENCE. to be appropriate audit evidence must be relevant and reliable. (relevance relates to the assertion being addressed - evidence to support existence, completeness)
inspection of records/documents
a procedure found everywhere throughout the audit
horizontal analysis
a review of client financial statement amounts and ratios over time
for each topic
a separate, properly identified working paper should be prepared for each topic. proper identification is accomplished by a heading.
presentation/disclosure
accounts are described and classified in accordance with GAAP, and financial disclosures are complete, appropriate and clear
estimation transactions
activities that create accounting estimates. higher inherent risk
completeness
all assets, liabilities, equity interests, and appropriate transactions have been recorded
audit evidence
all the info used by the auditors in arriving at the conclusions on which the audit opinion is based. includes the info contained in the accounting records underlying the financial statements and other info
valuation/allocation/accuracy
all transactions, assets, liabilities, and equity interests are included in the financial statements at proper amounts
accounting estimates example
allowances for loan losses and obsolete inventory and estimates of warranty liabilities
audit documentation should be sufficient to allow ________ to understand the audit performed, the evidence obtained and the significant conclusions reached
an experienced auditor
reperformance
an independent execution of proceures or controls that were originially performed by the client
nature and timing of procedures
holding the extent of procedures constant, one may increase the scope of procedures (make them more effective) by changing either: 1. nature - obtain more reliable evidence (externally generated) 2. timing - wait until year-end to obtain evidence from entire set of transactions as contrasted to performing interim testing
goal in auditing
in auditing their clients fair values, auditors should keep in mind that the goal is to achieve a fair value and to determine that valuation techniques are consistently applies, or if revisions are needed they are accounted for as a change in accounting estimate
audit file
includes the working papers for a particular engagement and is the principal record of the work performed during the audit.
existence assertion
inspections of tangible assets provide high quality evidence
inquires of specialists
the necessity for auditors to consult with experts, when appropriate as a means of gathering sufficient appropriate audit evidence. expertise in valuation of complex financial instruments and other assets, actuarial calculations, estimation, and valuation. the specialist may be hired by the client
audit risk
the possibility that the auditors may unknowingly fail to appropriately modify their opinion on financial statements that are materially misstated
fair value
the price that would be received to sell an asset or the amount that must be paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date
sufficient appropriate audit evidence?
the quantity needed is affected by the risk of misstatements (the greater the risk, the more audit evidence required) and also the reliability of the evidence
audit documentation (working papers)
the record of the audit procedures performed, relevant audit evidence obtained, and the conclusions the auditors reach. may be recorded on paper or on electronic or other media
audit risk
the risk that auditors will issue an unqualified opinion on financial statements that contain a material departure from GAAP
confirmation requests
these can be sent to third parties and can be used to address any of the assertions about a particular financial statement amount. they do not address all assertions equally well. they are effective at providing evidence about the assertion of existence of accounts, but they are less effective at addressing the completeness and the appropriate valuation.
cutoff
transactions and events have been recorded in the correct accounting period
scanning
use of professional judgment to review accounting data to identify significant unusual items that will be tested
regression analysis
use of stat models to quantify the auditors expectation about a financial statement amount or ratio
inquiry of specialists
1. may be hired by client or auditor 2. must evaluate qualifications and reputation 3. must review methods and assumptions 4. test the accuracy of source data used by specialists examples: actuarial determination of pension liabilities, valuation of specialized inventory
approaches to ratio analysis
1. horizontal analysis - review ratios over time 2. cross sectional analysis - analyze ratios of similar firms at a point in time 3. vertical analysis - analyze relationships within a period, common size statements prepared
inquiry of knowledgeable persons
1. important and relevant 2. less reliable - dont believe everything you hear 3. after SOX, illegal to mislead auditors 4. representation letter formalizes many of the important oral representations
business characteristics indicative of high inherent risk:
1. inconsistent profitability of client 2. operating results highly sensitive to economic factors 3. going concern problems 4. large known and likely misstatements detected in prior audits 5. substantial turnover, questionable reputation, inadequate accounting skills of management
the audit risk model is a function of:
1. inherent risk 2. control risk 3. detection risk
ratio analysis 4 categories:
1. liquidity ratios (current ratio, quick ratio) 2. leverage ratios (debt to equity ratio, long term debt ratio) 3. profitability ratio (gross profit percentage) 4. activity ratios (inventory turnover)
one may change the scope of the audit procedures by changing the:
1. nature (type and form) 2. timing (when performed) 3. extent (quantity of evidence obtained)
factors that affect inherent risk
1. nature of the client and its environment 2. nature of the particular financial statement element
disclosure of related party transactions should include
1. nature of the relationship 2. a description of the transactions 3. amounts due to and from related parties
risk assessment procedures
1. obtain understanding of client and environment 2. understand internal control, to assess the risks of material misstatement 3. understand the company, industry, regulators, competitive environment 4. understand internal business processes 5. evaluate management (experience, tenure, reputation) 6. consider prior audit adjustments and results
when is audit evidence more reliable?
1. obtained from independent sources outside the company 2. generated through a system of effective controls rather than ineffective 3. obtained directly by the auditor rather than indirectly or by inference 4. documentary in form rather than oral 5. original documents rather than copies ALWAYS KNOW THE SOURCE OF INFO
functions of audit documentation
1. primary functions 2. secondary functions
developing an expectation
1. prior period info 2. anticipated results 3. relationships among elements of financial information within a period 4. industry info 5. relationships between financial info and relevant non-financial data
approaches to auditing estimates
1. review and test managements process for developing the estimate 2. independently develop an estimate to compare 3. review subsequent events or transactions bearing on the estimate
timing of analytical procedures
1. risk assessment 2. substantive procedures 3. final review
auditors perform these types of procedures
1. risk assessment procedures - designed to obtain an understanding of the client and its environment, including its internal control, to assess the risks of material misstatement 2. test of controls - to test the operating effectiveness of controls in preventing or detecting material misstatements 3. substantive procedures - to detect material misstatements of relevant assertions (they include analytical procedures and tests of details of accounts, transactions, disclosures)
types of transactions:
1. routine 2. non-routine 3. estimation transactions
other audit procedures
1. test controls 2. substantive procedures
sufficiency of documentation
1. there needs to be working papers or just work papers 2. should include all significant findings and the actions taken to address them 3. should be sufficient to: enable an experienced auditor to understand the work performed and the significant conclusions reached, identify who performed and reviewed the work, show that the accounting agree or reconcile to the financial statements
analytical procedures (types of analyses)
1. trend analysis 2. ratio analysis
test of controls
1. understand and document controls 2. when appropriate, test the operating effectiveness of controls in preventing material misstatements
sufficient
quantity of evidence that the auditors should obtain. auditors perform audit procedures to obtain audit evidence that will allow them to draw reasonable conclusions as to whether the clients financial statements follow GAAP.
substantive procedures
analytical procedures and tests of details. these tests are part of the auditors further audit procedures because their nature, timing and extent are based on the results of the risk assessment procedures
trend analysis
analyze changes in accounts of a company over time
related party transaction
any transaction between the company and these parties
secondary
assist continuing and new audit team members in planning and performing the audit record of matter of continuing audit interest assists in supervision and review of the audit demonstrates accountability of team members assists internal reviewers, external peer reviewers, PCAOB inspectors, and successor auditors in performing their roles
representation letter
at the conclusion of the audit, the CPA's obtain from client officers a written representation letter summarizing the most important oral representations made by management during the engagement
external confirmation
obtaining a written response about a particular item from a third party
transaction assertions
occurence, completeness, accuracy, cutoff, classification
disclosure
occurence, rights/obligations,completeness, accuracy and valuation, classification and understandability
related parties
officers, directors, principal owners, members of their immediate families
inherent risk
possibility of material misstatement of an assertion before considering the clients internal control
auditing standards allow either a _________ or __________ approach
quantified, non quantitative
routine transactions
recurring financial statement activities recorded in the accounting records in the normal course of business. there is lower inherent risk
related party transaction
refers to individuals or entities who may have dealings with the client in which one party is significantly influenced by the other such that it may not pursue its separate interest
common methods for auditors to determine related parties include:
reviewing SEC filings inquiries of management conflict of interest statements
inherent risk
risk of a material misstatement occurring in an assertion assuming no related internal controls
audit risk = risk of material misstatement (x) risk auditors fail to detect material misstatement
risk of material misstatement = inherent risk (x) control risk risk auditors fail to detect material misstatement = detection risk
control risk
risk that a material misstatement in an assertion will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis by the company's internal control
detection risk
risk that the auditor's procedures will lead them to conclude that a material misstatement does not exist in an assertion when in fact such misstatement does exist
detection risk
risk that the auditors procedures will not detect a material misstatement that exists in a relevant assertion. does not exist when no audit it performed. auditors try to restrict it
turnover
sales/[(begin AR+ending AR)/2]
inquiry
seeking information of knowledgable persons within or outside the organization, inquiry may be written or oral