Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
The Building Blocks
of Auditing
Audit reporting.
Risk and materiality.
Audit procedures.
Risk evaluation.
Tests of accounting information.
Audit Evidence.
Occurrence
Completeness
Accuracy
Cutoff
Classification
Auditor Responsibilities
Errors and unintentional misstatements.
Fraudulent misstatements:
Fraudulent financial reporting.
Misappropriation of assets.
Illegal acts.
Going concern.
Responses to Increase in
Fraud Risk
Professional skepticism.
Assignment of more senior personnel
and more intense supervision.
Questioning of accounting policy
choices.
Reduce predictability of audit
procedures:
Change nature, extent, and timing of tests
Auditors Report on
Internal Control
The auditor must also audit the company's financial
statements.
The auditors report on the internal control audit is
really two reports:
A report over managements assessment of the
effectiveness of internal controls over financial reporting.
A report about the operating effectiveness of the internal
control over financial reporting carried out by the auditor.
Insignificant Deficiency
Auditors Decisions
All decisions the auditor makes about his/her
two reports are conditioned on whether
managements report discloses material
weakness(es) and the resulting management
assessment.
Auditor may agree that management has reported all
material weaknesses (if any) in managements report
and reached the correct conclusion about control
effectiveness and hence issue an unqualified audit
opinion on managements assessment.
If a material weakness exists, the auditors only option
is an adverse opinion on internal control
effectiveness.
Address:
To the Shareholders of Ace Company:
Introductory paragraph:
We have audited the balance sheets of Ace Company as at
December 31, 200x and the statements of income, retained
earnings, and cash flows for the year then ended. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Companys
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on
these financial statements based on our audits.
Scope paragraph:
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally
accepted auditing standards. Those standards require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance
about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis,
evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the
financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial
statement presentation.
BUT
Opinion paragraph:
In our opinion, these financial statements present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of Ace
Company as at December 31, 200x and the results of its
operations and its cash flows for the year then ended in
accordance with COUNTRY name generally accepted
accounting principles.
Name of firm:
Taylor & Tower, CPAs
City:
Anywhere, any country
field work
completion
date
Reservations of Opinion
Qualified - Except for one or more
exceptions, statements present fairly.
Adverse - Statements do not present
fairly.
Denial/Disclaimer - No opinion.
Materiality
Risk
Evidence
REM
Risk: Deals with the reality that an auditor
can never be completely certain that the
assertions they are auditing are entirely
free of material omissions or
misstatements.
Audit Evidence: Any information that
gives the auditor an indication whether an
assertion is true or not.
Materiality: The significance of financial
statement information to decision makers.
Strategic Risk
Strategy is how a company creates value.
Environment and industry.
Competitive advantage.
How business risks arise from the environment or
competitive advantage.
How the client manages business risks.
Engagement Risk
Litigation: The extent to which a firm
may be subject to lawsuits arising from
their involvement with a client.
Regulatory penalties: Imposed by
government bodies (SEC, PCAOB).
Loss of reputation: Individually and for
firm.
Lack of profitability: The possibility that
fees will not yield an adequate profit
margin on the engagement.
Audit Risk
ISA 300 defines:
Audit Risk = f (risk of material misstatement,
detection risk)
Risk of material misstatement: the risk that the
financial statements are misstated prior to audit.
Detection risk: the risk that the auditor will not detect
a material misstatement that exists in an assertion.
Applies to both financial statements taken as a whole
and to classes of transactions, specific accounts,
and individual disclosures.
Inherent Risk
Control Risk
Risk of
Material
Misstatemen
t
Risk assessment and
results of knowledge
acquisition
Detectio
X
n Risk
Focus of
substantive
testing
What is
materiality?
The magnitude of an omission or misstatement
of accounting information that, in light of
surrounding circumstances, makes it probable
that the judgment of a reasonable person relying
on the information would have been changed or
influenced by the omission or misstatement.
Quantitative Judgments
about Materiality
Assessing Identified
Misstatements
Quantitative Materiality
The auditor should consider identified
misstatements individually and in the aggregate.
Aggregate misstatements should be considered in
relation to individual amounts, subtotals, or totals
in the financial statements, to determine if they
materially misstate the financial statements taken
as a whole.
Qualitative Materiality
The nature of the misstatement may be important.
Audit
Procedures
Audit
Conclusions
Audit
Evidence
of Different Quality
Management
Assertions
Material Effects on F/S?
Audit
Procedures
Evidence
Competence of evidence?