Title: Accounts Receivable, Notes Receivable and Revenue
1Accounts Receivable, Notes Receivable and Revenue
Chapter 11
2Sales Cycle and impacted accounts
- Balance sheet
- Cash
- Accounts receivable
- Allowances for
- Returns
- Doubtful accounts
- Rebates/discounts
- Inventory
- Accrued revenue
- Deferred revenue
- Warranty reserve
- Others?
- Income statement
- Sales
- Sales discounts
- Returns and allowances
- Cost of goods sold
- Bad debt expense
- Warranty expense
3Objectives for the Audit of Receivables and
Revenue
- Consider inherent risks of receivables and
revenue, including fraud risks. - Integrity of management
- Financial condition of organization
- Financial pressures faced
- Earnings expectations
- Debt covenant compliance
- Management incentives and compensation
- Consider control risk for receivables and revenue.
4Criteria for Recognition of Revenue
- Persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists
- Delivery has occurred or services have been
rendered - The sellers price to the buyer is fixed or
determinable - Collectibility is reasonably assured
-
- Source SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No.
101.
5Inherent risk revenue recognition issues
- Existence of unusual terms
- Has title really passed to the customer?
- What it the proper point in time when revenue
should be recognized? - Were all goods recorded as sales
- Actually shipped?
- Shipped when wanted by customers?
- New items? (not used or refurbished unless
explicitly marked) - Were there sales transactions made with recourse?
- Has there been an abnormal or unpredictable
amount of sales returns?
6Potential Revenue Recognition Problems
- Sales with unusual right to return
- Side agreements
- Franchise fees
- Bill and hold transactions
- Sales using notes with unusual interest rates
- Percentage-of-completion method of revenue
recognition - Multiple element agreements
7Control risk Managements assertions
- Existence and Occurrence
- Revenues are recorded only when the revenue
principle has been met. - Authorization is appropriate for the type of
transaction - There are specific control activities related to
sales returns and allowances - Each transaction is uniquely identified and
recorded timely - Completeness
- All valid transactions should be recorded
- Rights and obligations
- Controls should exist to ensure that the recorded
assets resulting from revenue transactions belong
to the client
8Control risk Managements assertions
- Valuation
- Sales are made from authorized price lists
- Unusual price or sales terms are properly
approved and recorded - Presentation and disclosure
- Comprehensive chart of accounts is used
- Employees are adequate trained
- Supervisory review made of complex or unusual
transactions - Policies and procedures manuals support standard,
complex and unusual transactions
9 Internal Control Over the
Revenue Cycle
- Controlling customers orders
- Credit approval
- Issuing merchandise
- Shipping
- Billing
- Adjustments to sales and receivables
10 Revenue Cycle Controls
- Segregation of duties--sales and collections
- Matching of sales invoices and shipping documents
- Clerical accuracy checks on invoices
- Credit approval for sales transactions
- Mailing of monthly statements
- Reconciliation of bank accounts
- Use of control listing of cash receipts
- Use of budgets and analysis of variances
- Control over shipping and billing documents
- Use of authorized credit memoranda
- Use of chart of accounts and review of account
codings
11Confirmation of Receivables
- Receivables should be confirmed, unless
- Accounts receivable are immaterial,
- The use of confirmations would be ineffective, or
- The auditors combined assessment of inherent and
control risk is low, and audit risk can be
reduced to acceptably low level with substantive
tests
12Flowchart of the Confirmation Process
A
Prepare and Mail the Requests
Send 2nd requests for positive confirmations
Perform alternative procedures for non-respondents
Resolve exceptions
Document the procedures and results
13Substantive Tests of Receivables and Revenue
- Obtain aged listing of receivables and reconcile
to ledgers - Obtain analyses of notes and related interest
- Inspect notes on hand and confirm those held by
others - Confirm receivables with debtors
- Review the cutoff of revenue transactions
- Perform analytical procedures
- Review significant year-end sales contracts
- Verify interest earned
- Evaluate the propriety of accounting for revenue
transactions - Evaluate accounting estimates related to revenues
- Determine the adequacy of the allowance for
uncollectible accounts - Ascertain the existence of pledged receivables
- Investigate receivables from related parties
- Evaluate the business purpose of significant and
unusual sales transactions - Evaluate financial presentation and disclosure
14Substantive testing audit objectives and
assertions
- Existence and occurrence
- Confirmations
- Examination of documents
- Completeness
- Client control procedures
- Analytic tests tests of cutoff
- Valuation
- Confirmations
- Examination of documents
- Rights and obligations
- Examination of documents
- Confirmations
- Presentation and disclosure
- Amounts pledged, discounted or assigned related
party transactions, concentrations of risk - Examination of documents
- Inquiries
15Substantive testing Sales
- Cut-off tests
- To test if sales are recorded in the right period
- Tendency is for sales to be overstated
- Greatest risk is at quarter/year end
- Select a sample of sales transactions before and
after year end - Examine shipping dates and terms to determine if
sales are recorded in the right period - Analytical procedures
- Signal for potential misstatements
- Corroborate other evidence obtained
- Check for reasonableness of income statement
amounts
16Substantive testing allowance for doubtful
accounts
- Highly judgmental
- Economic status of clients customers
- Current economic conditions
- Expectations about default on payments
- Recompute allowance using clients method
- Agree with assumptions?
- Consistency?
- Calculate allowance using independent model
developed by auditor - Review a sample of write-offs
- Are control procedures followed?
- What do write-offs tell you?