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AUDITING CHAPTER 6

AUDITING CHAPTER 6. Evidence By David N. Ricchiute. TOPICS. Acquisition & evaluation of evidence Financial statement assertions, audit objectives, & audit procedures Tests of controls, substantive tests, analytical procedures & nonfinancial measures Audit documentation. AUDIT EVIDENCE.

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AUDITING CHAPTER 6

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  1. AUDITINGCHAPTER 6 Evidence By David N. Ricchiute

  2. TOPICS • Acquisition & evaluation of evidence • Financial statement assertions, audit objectives, & audit procedures • Tests of controls, substantive tests, analytical procedures & nonfinancial measures • Audit documentation GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  3. AUDIT EVIDENCE Sufficient competent evidential matter is to be obtained through inspection, observation, inquiries, and confirmations to afford a reasonable basis for an opinion regarding financial statements under audit. SAS 31 & SAS 80, Amendment to SAS 31. GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  4. MEANING OF SUFFICIENT, COMPETENT EVIDENCE • Sufficient: quantity of evident necessary to test management’s assertions • Competent: relevant, valid, reliable • Kinds of evidence necessary to test management’s assertions • Link audit risk & audit evidence • Relevance • Amount of evidence GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  5. EVIDENTIAL MATTER • Underlying accounting data • Records of original entry (journals, ledgers, etc.) • Data files • Spreadsheets • Corroborating information • Documents (checks, invoices, contracts) • Written representations from 3rd parties (vendors, attorneys) • Inquiries of management GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  6. FINANCIAL STATEMENT ASSERTIONS • Existence or Occurrence • Completeness • Rights & Obligations • Valuation or Allocation • Presentation & Disclosure GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  7. ACCOUNTS & JOURNAL ENTRIES Purchase & sale of inventory Inventory Accounts payable Cost of Goods Sold Inventory GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  8. EXISTENCE OR OCCURRENCE ASSERTION • All assets, liabilities, equities exist • All transactions occurred • Example • Test whether inventory physically existed at balance sheet date GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  9. COMPLETENESS ASSERTION • All transactions that occurred during period are reported for the time period • All accounts complete as to data • Examples • Test whether all purchases goods, services are recorded • Test whether all obligations included as liabilities GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  10. RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS ASSERTION • Entity entitled to assets (rights) • Entity liable for obligations • Example • Test whether all inventory is owned, not on consignment GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  11. VALUATION OR ALLOCATION ASSERTION • Assets, liabilities, equities, revenues, expenses recorded at proper amounts • Example • Test whether inventory valued at lower cost/market • Revenues, costs, expenses allocated to proper accounting periods GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  12. PRESENTATION & DISCLOSURE ASSERTION • Financial statement components properly classified, described & disclosed • Example • Test to assure financial statements, notes reveal substance of recorded transactions GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  13. AUDIT PROCEDURES • Observation • Documentation • Confirmation • Mechanical tests • Analytical procedures (Comparisons) • Inquiries GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  14. RELATING OBJECTIVES TO OBSERVATION • Direct evidence about existence • Example: physically observing client’s assets GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  15. RELATING OBJECTIVES TO DOCUMENTATION • Internal evidence in documentary form to support existence, valuation • Example: vouch documents supporting selected cash disbursements or liabilities GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  16. RELATING OBJECTIVES TO CONFIRMATION • External evidence from third parties supporting existence, valuation of account balances • Example: request confirmation of accounts receivable GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  17. RELATING OBJECTIVES TO MECHANICAL TESTS • Direct evidence to support valuation • Example: recomputing (footing) cash receipts journal • Direct evidence to support presentation • Example: trace transactions through accounting system for proper recording, classification GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  18. RELATING OBJECTIVES TO COMPARISONS • Analytical procedures (Comparisons) • Direct evidence about completeness, presentation, disclosure • Example: examine trends for advertising expense to determine whether more procedures necessary • Example: compare disclosures with prior periods GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  19. RELATING OBJECTIVES TO INQUIRIES • Direct evidence although less persuasive, may help generate leads • Corroborated through other procedures GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  20. TESTS OF CONTROLS & SUBSTANTIVE TESTS • Tests of controls • Audit procedures to assess the ability of controls to prevent or detect material misstatements • Provide evidence about control risk • Substantive tests • Audit procedures that detect material misstatements • Provide evidence about detection risk GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  21. TESTS OF CONTROLS • Procedures address questions such as • How are controls applied? • Are controls applied consistently? • By whom are controls applied? GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  22. TESTS OF CONTROLS & CONTROL RISK • Tests of controls are procedures to assess control risk • Assessed level control risk helps determine acceptable level detection risk GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  23. CATEGORIES OF CONTROL ACTIVITIES • Controls that create documentation, i.e., leave an audit trail • Manager’s initials for credit approval • Prevention control • Controls that do not create documentation • Bank reconciliation provides no evidence of independence of preparer for cash function • Detection control GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  24. COMBINED SUBSTANTIVE & CONTROL TESTS Dual-purpose tests • Provide evidence about control risk & monetary error • Example: recomputing extensions on sales invoices GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  25. SUBSTANTIVE TESTS • Tests of details • Transactions • Balances • Analytical tests GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  26. ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES • Evaluations of financial information made by a study of plausible relationships among both financial and nonfinancial data SAS No. 56 GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  27. TESTS OF DETAILS v. ANALYTICAL TESTS • Comparisons • Tests of details tests all 5 assertions but analytical procedures do not support existence or rights & obligations • Analytical procedures are high level tests • Tests of details lead to conclusions about aggregated data but analytical procedures test aggregated data GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  28. USING ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES WhenPurpose GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  29. TYPES ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES • Trend analysis • Ratio analysis • Activity ratios • Profitability ratios • Liquidity ratios • Solvency ratios • Modeling • Statistical tests, i.e., regression GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  30. JUDGMENT ERRORS & ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES • Over reliance on unaudited numbers • Disregard for unchanging account balances • Overreliance on management’s explanations GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  31. CUSTOMER PERSPECTIVE & SKEPTICISM IssueProfessional skepticism GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  32. INTERNAL BUSINESS & SKEPTICISM IssueProfessional skepticism GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  33. INTERNAL LEARNING & SKEPTICISM IssueProfessional Skepticism GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  34. COGNITIVE BIASES IN EVALUATING EVIDENCE • Heuristics: simplifying rules of thumb that may bias decision making • Representativeness • Availability • Anchoring-and-adjustment GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  35. COGNITIVE BIASES:Representativeness Given an item, b, and a class of items, A, making a judgment based on how much b resembles other items from class A rather than making a judgment based on the probability that b came from class A. GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  36. COGNITIVE BIASES:Availability The decision maker evaluates the likelihood of a particular outcome based on infrequent but highly publicized outcomes rather than outcomes predicted by the profession’s collected experience. GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  37. COGNITIVE BIASES:Anchoring-and-Adjustment The decision maker assesses likelihood of an outcome with an initial, sometimes biased probability estimate (anchor) then adjusts the probability insufficiently when discovering new information. GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  38. AUDIT DOCUMENTATIONASB Standards • Auditor’s judgment about nature, extent of documentation depends on • Risk of misstatement • Judgment about audit work • Nature of procedures • Significance of evidence • Nature, extent of assertions tested GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  39. AUDIT DOCUMENTATIONPCAOB • Reviewability standard • Derived from governmental standards • Documents sufficient for experienced auditor to understand work performed, when, why • Rebuttable presumption • Absent documentation of audit work, presumption that work not performed GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  40. AUDIT DOCUMENTATION FILES • Correspondence (administrative) file • Permanent file • Information of continuing interest & relevance • Tax file • Past, present, future income & property tax obligations GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  41. ROLE OF AUDIT DOCUMENTATION • Work was adequately planned, supervised, and reviewed (1st standard fieldwork) • Internal control considered as basis for substantive tests (2nd standard fieldwork) • Sufficient competent evidential matter was obtained (3rd standard fieldwork) GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

  42. AUTOMATED DOCUMENTATION • Spreadsheet software • Analytical procedures, data import/export, graphing, sorting • Database management • Relational structuring: combining 2 or more files for single query • Text retrieval • Access & retrieve electronically stored text GBW 8th ed., Ch. 6

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