Book Summary - Auditing
Book Summary - Auditing
Book Summary - Auditing
Auditing is a process of examining and assure that the client’s financial statement is fairly
stated or the actual financial condition is already stated.
Audit Objectives
1. Transaction related audit objectives
2. Balance related audit objectives
3. Presentation and disclosure audit objectives
Management Assertion
Implied or expressed representations by management about classes of transactions and related
accounts and disclosures in the financial statements.
1. Assertions about classes of transaction and events
Occurrence – Transactions and events that have been recorded have occurred
and pertain to the entity
Completeness – All transactions and events that should have been recorded
have been recorded
Accuracy – Amounts and other data relating to recorded transactions and
events have been recorded appropriately
Classification – Transactions and events have been recorded in the proper
accounts
Cutoff – Transactions and events have been recorded in the correct accounting
period.
2. Assertions about account balances
Existence – Assets, liabilities, and equity interests exist.
Completeness – All assets, liabilities, and equity interests that should have
been recorded have been recorded.
Valuation and allocation – Assets, liabilities, and equity interests are included
in the financial statements at appropriate amounts and any resulting valuation
adjustments are appropriately recorded.
Rights and obligations – The entity holds or controls the rights to assets, and
liabilities are the obligation of the entity.
3. Assertions about presentation and disclosures
Occurrence and rights and obligations – Disclosed events and transactions
have occurred and pertain to the entity
Completeness – All disclosures that should have been included in the financial
statements have been included.
Accuracy and valuation – Financial and other information are disclosed
appropriately and at appropriate amounts.
Classification and understandability – Financial and other information is
appropriately presented and described and disclosures are clearly expressed.
Audit Evidence
There are four decisions about what evidence to gather and how much of it to accumulate:
1. Which audit procedures to use
2. What sample size to select for a given procedure
3. Which items to select from the population
4. When to perform the procedures
Types of evidence
a. Physical examination - is the inspection or count by the auditor of a tangible asset.
b. Confirmation - describes the receipt of a direct written response from a third party
verifying the accuracy of information that was requested by the auditor.
c. Documentation - auditor’s inspection of the client’s documents and records to sub -
stantiate the information that is, or should be, included in the financial statements.
d. Analytical procedure - use comparisons and relationships to assess whether account
balances or other data appear reasonable compared to the auditor’s expectations.
e. Inquiries of the client - the obtaining of written or oral information from the client in
response to questions from the auditor.
f. Recalculation - involves rechecking a sample of calculations made by the client.
g. Reperformance - the auditor’s independent tests of client accounting procedures or
controls that were originally done as part of the entity’s accounting and internal
control system.
h. Observation - the use of the senses to assess client activities.
Audit Process
1. Plan and design an audit approach
a. Accept client and perform initial planning
b. Understand the client’s business and industry
c. Assess client business risk
d. Perform preliminary analytical procedures
e. Set materiality and assess acceptable audit risk and inherent risk
f. Understand internal control and assess control risk
g. Gather information to assess fraud risks
h. Develop overall audit plan and audit program
2. Perform tests of controls and substantive tests of transactions
a. Plan to reduce assessed level of control risk?*
b. Perform tests of controls (if yes)
c. Perform substantive tests of transactions (if no)
d. Asses likelihood of misstatements in financial statement (Low; Medium,
High/Unknown)
3. Perform analytical procedures and tests of details of balances
a. Classified the likelihood of misstatements in financial statement (Low; Medium;
High/Unknown)
b. Perform analytical procedures
c. Perform additional tests of details of balances
4. Complete the audit and issue an audit report
a. Perform additional tests for presentation and disclosure
b. Accumulate final evidance
c. Evaluate results
d. Issue audit report
- The Standard Unqualified report is issued when the following condition
have been met:
1) All statements—balance sheet, income statement, statement of retained
earnings, and statement of cash flows—are included in the financial
statements.
2) The three general standards have been followed in all respects on the
engagement.
3) Sufficient appropriate evidence has been accumulated, and the auditor has
conducted the engagement in a manner that enables him or her to conclude
that the three standards of field work have been met.
4) The financial statements are presented in accordance with U.S. generally
accepted accounting principles/or PSAK. This also means that adequate
disclosures have been included in the footnotes and other parts of the
financial statements.
5) There are no circumstances requiring the addition of an explanatory
paragraph or modification of the wording of the report.
Management Assertion
IMPORTANT: Completeness, Existance, Accuracy, and Valuation
These 4 kind of assertion already cover up another assertion.
Another assertion: Disclosure, Classification, Cut-off date, Rights and Obligation.
Example: