Chapter Six
Comparing a company's inventory turnover to industry standards rates is an example of:
Analysis Procedures
The risk that auditors may unknowingly fail to appropriately modify their opinion on financial statements that are materially misstated is called (Blank) risk
Audit
Many firms have developed a (Blank) (Blank) that uses a combination of financial and non-financial performance measures to assess the organization.
Balanced Scorecard
Achieving management's objectives is always subject to (Blank) risks.
Business
The risk of loss of injury to the auditors' reputation by association with a client that goes bankrupt or one whose management lacks integrity is called (Blank) risk
Engagement
Materially is the:
Idea that some matters are important to the fair presentation of financial statements while others are not
A component of fraud risk triangle:
Incentive or Pressure; Opportunity; Rationalization
The risk of material misstatement of an assertion without considering internal control is called:
Inherent Risk
The time travel from the beginning of audit work to the balance sheet date is called the (Blank) period.
Interim
The final step of the audit is to:
Issue the audit report
When considering fraud, auditors consider misstatement arising from fraudulent financial reporting which is (Blank) fraud, and misstatements arising from misappropriates of assets which is also called (Blank).
Management; Defalcations
Planning materially is commonly based on % of:
Net income; Total assets; Total revenue
Examples of risk assessment procedures include:
Observation and Inspection; Analytical procedures; Inquiries of management
When a new client has been accepted and no satisfactory recent audit has been performed the auditor must:
Perform an extensive analysis of prior years' transactions to establish opening balances
When materially is allocated to a particular account, it is referred to (Blank) materially.
Performance
The audit (Blank) is a description of nature, timing, and extent of the audit procedures to be performed.
Plan
Auditors rest the client's rights to assets to verify that:
Receivables belong to the client
At the planning stage of an audit, auditors consider materially to determine their:
Scope of the audit
A risk that has been identified and assessed that, in the auditor's opinion, requires special audit consideration is considered a (Blank) risk
Significant
Audit fees are composed of:
Staff salaries; Overhead; Payroll taxes; Profit
The (Blank) portion of the audit program includes procedures aimed directly at financial statement account balances.
Substantive
Further audit procedures include:
Tests of controls; Substantive procedures
The application of performance materially to a particular audit procedure is:
Tolerable misstatement
During the audit the client's staff may prepare a(n):
Trail balance; Analysis of accounts written off; Aging of accounts receivable
Following specific transactions from their source documents forward to their inclusion in the financial statement summary figures is a test of the:
Completeness Assertion
Identify the types of further audit procedures performed:
Confirmation; Inspection; Inquiry
Advantages of interim audit work include:
Increased assessment of internal control; More uniform workload for the CPA firm; Timely release of audited financial statements
The sequence of procedures applied by the company (client) in processing a particular type of recurring event is called a (Blank) cycle.
Transaction