Title: Inventories and Cost of Goods Sold
1Inventories andCost of Goods Sold
2Periodic vs Perpetual Inventory
- Periodic
- Value only known by counting at periods end.
- Value of theft, shrinkage can only be estimated
- Perpetual
- Continual book value known
- Count may not determine B.S. amount if books are
not materially different. - Cycle counts frequently used to test for
accuracy during the period.
3The Special AuditSignificance of Inventories
- The valuation of goods on hand and in process
often presents complex and difficult issues. - Determining the quantities of inventories may
require specialized techniques. - Inventories often represent the largest current
asset of a company. - Misstatements of inventories directly affect cost
of goods sold and, therefore, net income. - Financial reporting fraud has often involved the
fraudulent overstatement of inventories.
4Common Internal Controls Over the Conversion Cycle
- Segregation of duties - purchases inventory
custody - Use of pre-numbered requisitions, purchase
orders, and receiving reports - Procedures for authorizing purchase transactions
and verifying them for payment - General ledger control A/C and reconciliation to
production records - Cost accounting controls
- Analysis of variances from standard costs
- Use of perpetual records for inventories
- Use of appropriate procedures for taking
inventory - Appropriate physical security controls over
inventories
5Most Likely Misstatements
- Inaccurate recording of purchases
- Theft of inventory
- Duplicate payment for purchases
- Fraudulent inflation of purchases cost
- Misstatement of inventory unit costs
- Misstatement of inventory quantities
- Failure to accrue receipts of material
- (before vendor invoices arrive)
6Objectives for the Audit of Inventories and Cost
of Goods Sold
- Determine the Existence of inventories and
occurrence of the elements of cost of goods sold. - Establish the Completeness of inventories
- Establish that the client has Rights to the
recorded inventories - Establish the clerical accuracy of records and
supporting schedules - Determine that the Valuation of inventories and
cost of goods sold is in accordance with GAAP
proper cutoff - Determine that the Presentation and disclosure of
inventories and cost of goods sold are appropriate
7Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers
8Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan auditors observation
9Planning a Physical Inventory Count
Observations Thereof
- Advising Client
- Selecting an appropriate date
- Suspending production or controlling movement
cutoff - Segregating obsolete and defective goods
- Adequate counting procedures, incl. recoding
medium - Auditor Observation Planning
- Locations to observe/staff requirements
- Extent of test counts
- How to confirm proper cutoff of sales and
purchases - Arranging for the services of specialists
- Not telling client where we will observe
- GOAL An Accurate Count Audit Evidence
10Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe(not supervise) taking of physical count
11Observation Audit Procedures
- Observe Practices Used
- Control Tags/Count Sheets
- (Whatever Recording Medium Used)
- Make Test Counts Record in W/Ps
- Take Note of
- Damaged, dusty items
- End product in receiving area
- Items moving during count
- Last tag/count sheet used (copy electronic file?)
12Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe the taking of physical count
- Confirm inventories in public warehouses and on
consignment
13Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe the taking of physical inventory
- Confirm inventories in public warehouses and on
consignment - Review the year-end cutoff of purchases and sales
transactions
14Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe the taking of physical inventory
- Confirm inventories in public warehouses and on
consignment - Review the year-end cutoff of purchases and sales
and transactions - Obtain a copy of completed physical inventory
test its accuracy - Test inventory pricing
15Auditing CompletedInventory Listing
- Test math accuracy
- Quantity
- Compare to W/P recorded test counts
- Last tag/count sheet or copy of file
- Unit cost
- Method (LIFO,FIFO) OK per GAAP?
- Consistent with prior year?
- Computed accurately?
- Lower of cost or market?
- Evaluate adjustments
16Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe the taking of physical inventory
- Confirm inventories in public warehouses and on
consignment - Review the year-end cutoff of purchases and sales
and transactions - Obtain a copy of completed physical inventory
test its accuracy - Test inventory pricing
- Perform analytical procedures
17Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe the taking of physical inventory
- Confirm inventories in public warehouses and on
consignment - Review the year-end cutoff of purchases and sales
and transactions - Obtain a copy of completed physical inventory
test its accuracy - Test inventory pricing
- Perform analytical procedures
- Identify pledged inventories Review commitments
18Substantive Tests for the Inventories and Cost of
Goods Sold
- Obtain listings of inventory and reconcile to
ledgers - Evaluate clients planning of physical count and
plan observation - Observe the taking of physical inventory
- Confirm inventories in public warehouses and on
consignment - Review the year-end cutoff of purchases and sales
and transactions - Obtain a copy of completed physical inventory
test its accuracy - Test inventory pricing
- Perform analytical procedures
- Identify pledged inventories Review commitments
- Evaluate financial statement presentation and
disclosure
19Recap-Inventory Observation
- Unless Inventory is Immaterial - We Must Observe
a Physical Count. - We Observe to Gain Evidence About the Count - We
Do Not Supervise. - Can We Observe Weeks/Months Before Or After B.S.
Date? - If so, What Must Exist?
- Good Perpetual Inventory Records Which We Must
Test During the Intervening Period
20Recap-Inventory Observation (Cont)
- Can We Accept a Stat Sample or is Wall-to-Wall
Necessary? - If We Can Live with the Added DR in the Form of
Sampling Risk. - Can We Observe Periodic Cycle Counts Rather Than
Count Near Yearend? - If They Regularly Confirm Reliability of the
Perpetual Inventory Records.
21Added Tests - First Year Clients
- Assess if beg. balance is material to F.S.
(income statement) - Verify beg. balance to prior client CPA W/Ps
and perform some tests. - or
- Review procedures, supporting data for physical
count and completed inventory listing to assess
potential reliability or - Use analytical procedures to assess
reasonableness of beginning balance. - Qualify audit opinion, if necessary.