Title: AUDITING: A RISK ANALYSIS APPROACH
1AUDITING A RISK ANALYSIS APPROACH
5th edition
Larry F. Konrath
Electronic Presentation
by Harold O. Wilson
2CHAPTER 1
ATTESTATION AND ASSURANCE
3KEY CONCEPTS OVERVIEW
- Audits add creditability to published financial
statements. - Opinions by independent CPAs, as to fairness of
financial statements are generally required by
securities laws. - Auditors evaluate evidence supporting financial
statements and assess fairness of
presentations.
4GENERAL TOPICS
- Perspectives of Auditing.
- Attestations and Assurances.
- Auditing defined in contrast to accounting.
- Independent Auditor and Internal Auditor
Training and Competencies. - Evidence Collection and Evaluation.
5LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Differentiate attestation and assurance.
- Identify various services by auditors.
- Define auditing and its assertions.
- Distinguish independent and internal audits.
- Understand audit evidence and its merits.
- Describe audit reports and their variations.
- Understand steps in the auditing process.
6ASSURANCE SERVICES, ATTESTATION AUDITING
- ASSURANCE SERVICES Independent professional
services designed to improve the quality of
information for decision making. A very broad
definition!
7ASSURANCE SERVICES, ATTESTATION AUDITING
- ATTESTATION An experts communication of a
conclusion about the reliability of
someone elses assertions. A broad
definition. - ASSERTATIONS in our context The
representations of management as to the fairness
of financial statements content.
8ASSURANCE SERVICES, ATTESTATION AUDITING
- AUDITING A systematic process of objectively
obtaining and evaluating evidence regarding
selected assertions about economic actions and
events to ascertain the degree of correspondence
between those assertions and
established criteria, and communicating the
results to interested
parties.
9ASSURANCE
ATTESTATION
AUDITING
10FINANCIAL STATEMENT ASSERTIONS by Management
- Existence or Occurrence
- Completeness
- Rights Obligations
- Valuations or Allocation
- Presentation Disclosure
Assertions are to be truthful, fair, and
just--not misleading!
11AUDITOR OBJECTIVES
Independent Auditors are to determine whether
management assertions are fair, and not
misleading, in light of established criteria
- GAAS
- FASB pronouncementsincluding GAAP
- Other respected authorities (e.g., SEC, GAO,
IRS, FCC)
12GENERALLY ACCEPTED AUDITING STANDARDS
The AICPAs Auditing Standards Board established
GAAS as the principles of independent auditing,
relative to competence, evidence and reporting.
- Internal Controls evaluated.
- Evidence (sample data) gathered.
- Presentations compared to GAAP.
- Audit Reports prepared.
13Process of Auditing
- Includes
- Evaluating Internal Controls
- Testing the Substance of Transactions Balances
14What are Internal Controls why are they so
important?
- Internal controls are policies procedures put
in place by management to ensure the integrity of
the accounting system. - Internal controls are tested because the more
effective the accounting system is, then the more
reliable the outputthe financial statements!
15EVIDENCE UNDER GAAS A very broad concept!
The stronger (more extensive) the clients
internal control system, the higher the
confidence in its output! Evidence must support
such conclusions by auditor.
- Evidence (e.g., samples) must be sufficient
- Evidence must be competent (valid relevant).
- Evidence must be unbiased, and objectively
gathered in light of practicality.
16AUDIT REPORTSCOMMUNICATION OF RESULTS!
- Scope of the audit work
- Financial statements identified
- Conclusions of the auditor
- Unqualified Opinion (typical)
- Qualified Opinion (unusual circumstances)
- Adverse Opinion (rare in practice)
- Disclaimer of Opinion (various causes)
17RISK-BASED AUDITS
- Risk-based audit An audit in which the auditor
carefully analyzes the entity and its existing
internal controls, identifies areas that pose a
higher risk probability of financial statement
errors, and therefore allocates a greater
proportion of audit resources to those areas.
Errors, irregularities, and/or fraud are
specific considerations as controls and test
results are analyzed objectively and subjectively.
18BASIC MOTIVES FOR FRAUDS
- Management of earnings data (to
mislead or defraud outsiders) - Internal embezzlement schemes
Auditors must think in terms of probabilities and
the internal controls designed to prevent and/or
detect potential misrepresentations. Evidence
should support reality or the detection of
defalcations!
19NECESSITY OF INDEPENDENT AUDITS
- Wide-spread recognition of the value provided by
audits of public companies - Conflict of interest between management
stockholders - Complex accounting issues require evaluation by
an expert
20INDEPENDENT AUDITORS VS. INTERNAL AUDITORS
- Independent Auditors
- Independent of management
- Serve third parties
- Concerned with financial auditing
- Internal Auditors
- Primary concerns are operational compliance
auditing - Not necessarily independent
- Work is broader in scope
- Report to audit committee
21Governmental Auditing Agencies
- General Accounting Office
- Reports to Congress
- Performs all types of audits of governmental
agencies, projects, functions - Defense Contract Audit Agency
- Performs compliance audits of entities with
government contracts - IRS
- Performs compliance audits with federal tax laws
22Primary Concerns of AUDITING vs. ACCOUNTING
- Auditing
- Verifying financial statement information and its
fairness, emphasizing evidence (and odds) - Accounting
- Collecting, sorting, summarizing, and reporting
financial measurements, plus interpreting
financial information.
The Link Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles
23AUDITOR COMPETENCE KNOWLEDGE
- Understanding of clients industry current
authoritative literature/pronouncements - GAAP Accounting systems, accounting theory,
financial reporting - Knowledgeable in the area of evidence gathering
and evaluation - Solid grasp of internal control concepts
24What is Internal Control?
- Policies procedures designed by management to
enhance the reliability of evidence provided by
the entity - Enhances the reliability of financial data
- Safeguards the entitys assets
25Sufficient Competent EVIDENCE
- Sufficient evidence provides reasonable not
absolute assurance of freedom from material
misstatement. - Competence concerns the degree of reliability
- Externally generated evidence is more convincing
than client generated evidence. - Generation under extensive controls is more
convincing than under weak control systems. - Competent evidence must also be valid relevant.
26AUDITORS REPORT
- Introductory paragraph
- Audit Work Managements role
- Scope paragraph
- Auditors followed GAAS
- Opinion paragraph (The findings!)
- Clean opinion, Qualifications, Adverse
Of course, a report may be a Disclaimer of an
Opinion.
27AUDIT REPORTS OPINIONS
- Clean Opinion. No exceptions to GAAP
conformity and no audit scope restrictions - Qualified Opinion. Fair, except for
Specific qualification(s) where auditor had
specific scope restrictions or not-too- severe
reservations (e.g., as to contingencies or
alternatives) - Adverse Opinion. Unfair or misleading
presentations severe qualifications
28AUDIT REPORTS DISCLAIMER OF OPINION
If there is a lack of independence, or there
were severe scope restrictions, OR a clients
financial statements have material uncertainties
(or strange-but-true inconsistencies to GAAP),
the reasons for precluding the formation of an
opinion must be clearly stated by the auditor.
29CAUTION!
A Disclaimer is NOT to be issued in lieu of an
Adverse Opinion in cases where the latter is
appropriate!
30AUDIT PLANNING 1PRELIMINARIES
- Client acceptance decision
- Are we independent?
- Gain a working knowledge of the entity
- Identify high-risk areas
- Client questionnaire
31AUDIT PLANNING 2ENGAGEMENT LETTER
- Provides written evidence of the audit
agreement - Clarifies the type of engagement
- Prevents possible misunderstandings
- Should be used for all types of assurance services
32AUDIT PLANNING 3RISK ANALYSIS
Audit Risk (AR) Probability of rendering an
unqualified opinion on financial statements that
are materially misstated. MM, in dollars MM,
in percentages
As a generalization, Audit Risk may be or should
be quantified as a Probability, P AR
P(MM) lt 5
33AUDIT PLANNING 4FIELD WORK PLANNING
- 1. Preliminary audit programs
- Collections of audit procedures to be applied to
meet audit objectives (opinion) - Based on the preliminaries, analysis of business
industry, assessment of internal controls - Refined during the audit, based on
- Interim tests of transactions, and
- Substantive testing
- 2. Time budgets
34INTERIM AUDIT WORK
- Testing the clients internal accounting controls
- Performing substantive tests of transactions
35A Note on Terminology
Tests of Transactions Examining (sampling) data
processing cycles, such as the creation of
shipping tickets, approvals of prices, sales
invoices, journalizing, postings of such to
general and subsidiary ledgers, and the like.
Substantive Testing Examining (sampling) the
components of an account balance, such as the
physical observation of inventories, confirmation
of accounts payable at fiscal year end,
calculations of prepaids, etc.
36A Note on Technology
Information processing systems have encouraged
continuous auditing throughout a clients
fiscal year. Computer systems and personnel (and
changes) tend to obscure (or destroy) audit
trails traditionally traced by auditors.
Auditor ingenuity
is continuously challenged!
Audit Trails refer to the documentary evidence
and related approvals occurring in the accounting
cycle (business transactions, documents,
journalizing, posting or sorting, and
summarizing).
37FINAL AUDIT WORK
- Substantive tests of transactions
- Substantive tests of balances
- End-of-year inventory observation
38FINAL PROCEDURES
- Concluding an Audit
- Discussion with client obtaining a Clients
Representation Letter - Considerations of Subsequent Events
- The Audit Report (an opinion or a disclaimer)
- Management Letters (post-audit advice as to
improving internal control)
39CPA FIRMS NON-AUDIT
SERVICES
- Tax planning and compliance services
- Management Consulting
- Accounting/Computer Systems advice
- Forensic Accounting Expert Witnessing
- Other assurance servicescompilations reviews
- Accounting payroll services
40End of Chapter 1