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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-1 Chapter 5: Audit Responsibilities and Objectives
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-2 Chapter 5 Objectives Consider the objective of conducting an audit of financial statements Explain the difference between management and auditor responsibilities What is the nature and purpose of the cycle approach?
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-3 Chapter 5 Objectives (continued) Describe management assertions Relate management assertions to general transaction-related and balance-related audit objectives Discuss the audit process and its four phases
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-4 Objective of an Audit of Financial Statements Expression of an opinion Are financial statements fairly presented? Are financial statements in conformity with GAAP? The audit is conducted by an independent auditor
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-5 Management Responsibilities with Respect to financial statements Adoption of sound accounting policies Maintenance of adequate internal controls Providing fair representations in the financial statements
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-6 Hillsburg Hardware Illustrates Management Responsibilities Hillsburg Hardware Limited illustrates management responsibilities: – P. 144 Management’s Accountability report – P. 149 Management’s Discussion and Analysis – P. 143 report on internal control is optional in Canada
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-7 Auditor Responsibilities with Respect to Financial Statements Expression of an opinion Reasonable assurance that material misstatements are absent: – Includes errors, fraud and other irregularities Plan and perform the audit in accordance with GAAS
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-8 Types of Misstatements: Some are Difficult to Detect! Error: unintentional misstatement Fraud and other irregularities: intentional – Theft of assets, often employee fraud – Fraudulent financial reporting, often management fraud – Computer fraud – Illegal acts (direct-effect or indirect-effect)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-9 Provide some examples Can you think of any recent financial fiascos talked about in the newspaper? What type of errors were presented? Was fraud involved?
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-10 The Cycle Approach A convenient way to separate transactions for study and assessment during the audit Related types (or classes) of transactions are part of the same cycle
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-11 Cycles Used in This Text Sales and collection Acquisition and payment Payroll and personnel Inventory and warehousing Capital acquisition and repayment
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-12 What are Management Assertions? Implied or expressed representations by management about classes of transactions Are directly related to GAAP Part of criteria used by management to record and disclose information in the F/S
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-13 Management’s Assertions Existence Occurrence Completeness Valuation (realizable value) Accuracy, measurement or allocation Ownership; rights and obligations Presentation and disclosure
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-14 Management Assertions Relate to Audit Objectives Financial statements and financial statement cycles are used to develop management assertions about accounts Each assertion directly relates to an audit objective (either general or specific)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-15 Developing General and Specific Audit Objectives Each management objective is related to either a GENERAL transaction-related audit objective (for transactions) or a GENERAL balance-related audit objective (for general ledger ending balances) When applied to a specific transaction or account, it becomes a SPECIFIC audit objective
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-16 Management Assertion: Existence Do assets, obligations (liabilities) and equities exist? Are they REAL? General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Existence Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: All recorded inventories exist at the balance sheet date
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-17 Management Assertion: Occurrence Did included transactions actually happen? Are they REAL? General Transaction-Related Audit Objective: Occurrence Specific Transaction-Related Audit Objective for Sales: Recorded sales are for shipments made to nonfictitious customers
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-18 Management Assertion: Completeness All transactions and amounts that happened are included? Was anything MISSED or FORGOTTEN? General Transaction-Related Audit Objective: Completeness Specific Transaction-Related Audit Objective for Sales: Existing sales transactions are recorded General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Existence Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: All existing inventory has been counted and included in inventory
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-19 Management Assertion: Valuation Is the asset at lower of cost or net realizable value? Is the liability at cost? General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Valuation Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: Inventories have been written down where net realizable value is less than book value
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-20 Management Assertion: Accuracy (Measurement, Part 1) Were transactions and amounts recorded and processed properly? General Transaction-Related Audit Objective: Accuracy Specific Transaction-Related Audit Objective for Sales: Recorded sales are for the amount of goods shipped and are correctly billed and recorded General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Accuracy Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: Inventory quantities agree with items physically on hand (See also Table 5-2, p. 125)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-21 Management Assertion: Classification (Measurement, Part 2) Were transactions and amounts recorded in the correct account? General Transaction-Related Audit Objective: Classification Specific Transaction-Related Audit Objective for Sales: Sales transactions are classified in the correct account General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Classification Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: Inventory items are properly classified as raw materials, work in process, or finished goods
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-22 Management Assertion: Allocation (Measurement, Part 3) Were transactions and amounts recorded on the right dates in the correct period? General Transaction-Related Audit Objective: Timing Specific Transaction-Related Audit Objective for Sales: Sales are recorded on the correct dates General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Cutoff Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: Purchases at year end are recorded in the correct period (See also Table 5-2, p. 125)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-23 Management Assertion: Measurement (Measurement, Part 4) Were transactions and amounts updated and aggregated to the correct account? General Transaction-Related Audit Objective: Posting and Summarization Specific Transaction-Related Audit Objective for Sales: Sales transactions are updated correctly to the customer master file, and totals posted to the G. L. account correctly. General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Detail tie-in Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: Total of inventory items agrees with G. L.
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-24 Management Assertion: Rights and Obligations Rights: Do the assets on hand belong to the company? Obligations: Were the obligations incurred by the company (not by someone else)? General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Rights and obligations Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: The company has title to all inventory items listed. Inventories are not pledged as collateral.
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-25 Management Assertion: Presentation and Disclosure Do the statements include all relevant information in a way that financial statement users can understand? General Balance-Related Audit Objective: Presentation and Disclosure Specific Balance-Related Audit Objective for Inventory: Major categories of inventories and their bases of valuation are disclosed. (See also Table 5-2, p. 125)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-26 Practice problem 5-20 (p. 133) Practice matching the specific transaction- related audit objective to the management assertion and to the general transaction- related audit objective
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-27 Practice problem 5-22 (p. 134) This problem provides a series of audit procedures What objectives are these associated with? It is important to understand these objectives, as you may be asked to provide audit procedures for a particular objective
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-28 The Audit Process Prior to accepting or continuing the audit, assess independence Conduct four phases of an audit In planning phase, prepare client risk profile and assess corporate governance
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-29 Four Phases of an Audit Phase I - Assess risk and plan the audit Phase II - Perform tests of controls Phase III - Perform analytical procedures and test of details of balances Phase IV - Complete the audit and issue an auditor’s report
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-30 Audit Phase I: Risk Assessment and Audit Planning In the context of risks, balance the quantity and quality of evidence to be collected against costs of collection Obtain knowledge of business, industry, business environment. Prepare client risk profile. Understand internal control and assess control risk (governance, general controls, cycle controls)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-31 Practice problem 5-23 (p. 134) To understand risks, it is important to understand ‘what could go wrong’ Here, you are asked to think like a devious client – how could you overstate net income?
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-32 Audit Phase II: Perform Tests of Controls Where the auditor plans to rely upon high quality internal controls, these controls may need to be tested (certain controls only need to be tested every three years, S 5143.41) Tests are normally linked to audit objectives (also called audit assertions)
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-33 Audit Phase III: Perform Analytical Procedures and Tests of Details of Balances Analytical procedures are both a planning tool and an actual audit test Tests of details of balances are specific audit procedures designed to test for monetary misstatements
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-34 Audit Phase IV: Complete and Issue the Auditor’s Report Information collected during the audit needs to be combined and assessed to reach an overall conclusion with respect to the financial statements – are they fairly stated? This assessment requires experience and professional judgment
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Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 5-35 Practice problem 5-24 (p. 134) How do we pull this together? Identify problems that could affect the audit engagement of ABC Electronics Ltd., and provide some suggestions on how to deal with them.
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