ReSA - THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY CPA Review Batch 45 May 2023 CPALE 11 February 2023 11:45 AM - 02:45 PM AUDITING FIRST PRE-BOARD EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS: Select the correct answer for each of the questions. Mark only one answer for each item by shading the box corresponding to the letter of your choice on the answer sheet provided. STRICTLY NO ERASURES ALLOWED. Use pencil no. 2 only. 1. Evaluate the following statements: I. Auditors obtain and evaluate evidence regarding assertions about economic actions and events to verify the accuracy of those assertions. II. Management may have incentives to present biased financial information, but the various users of the statements are not likely to have conflicting interests in the financial information. a. b. c. d. Both Both Only Only statements are true. statements are false statement II is true statement I is true 2. The following statements are correct, except a. The overall objective of an audit is to obtain assurance whether the financial statements are free of misstatement. b. The foundation for the audit opinion formulation process relies on obtaining evidence to support the auditor’s opinion. c. Audit staff performing audit work must be appropriately supervised by partners and managers. d. Auditors should conduct their work with an attitude of professional skepticism. 3. After obtaining an understanding of internal control and arriving at a preliminary assessed level of control risk, an auditor decided to perform tests of controls. The auditor most likely decided that: a. Additional evidence to support a reduction in the assessed level of control risk is not available. b. An increase in the assessed level of control risk is justified for certain financial statement assertions. c. It would be efficient to perform tests of controls that would result in a reduction in planned substantive procedures. d. There were many internal control deficiencies that would allow misstatements to enter the accounting system. 4. The objective of the System of Quality management (SOQM) is/are I. To provide the firm with reasonable assurance that the firm and its personnel fulfill their responsibilities in accordance with professional standards and applicable legal and regulatory requirements, and conduct engagements in accordance with such standards and requirements; II. To provide the firm with absolute assurance that engagement reports issued by the firm or engagement partners are appropriate in the circumstances. a. b. c. d. Only Both Only Both statement 1 is statements are statement 2 is statements are correct. correct. correct. incorrect. 5. Based on the provisions of ISQM 1, which is the definition of quality risk? a. The risk has a reasonable possibility of occurring or has a reasonable possibility of individually, or in combination with other risks, adversely affecting the achievement of one or more quality objectives. b. The risk as probability of occurring and has a probability of individually, or in combination with other risks, adversely affecting the achievement of one or more quality objectives. c. The risk has a reasonable possibility of occurring and has a reasonable possibility of individually, or in combination with other risks, slightly affecting the achievement of one or more quality objectives. d. The risk has a reasonable possibility of occurring and has a reasonable possibility of individually, or in combination with other risks, adversely affecting the achievement of one or more quality objectives. Page 1 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam 6. Which of the following is not part of the systematic process called auditing? a. Communicating results of the audit to users. b. Procuring and evaluating evidence. c. Assisting management in designing internal controls. d. Comparing evidence regarding assertions to certain established criteria. 7. Which of the following is not a primary driver of audit quality? a. Skills and personal qualities of audit staff. b. Size of the audit firm. c. Effective audit processes. d. Audit firm culture. 8. When is the culture of an audit firm likely to provide a positive contribution to audit quality? a. When the leadership of the audit firm ensures partners and other staff have sufficient time and resources to deal with difficult issues as they arise. b. When the leadership of the audit firm ensures robust systems for client acceptance and continuation based on the likelihood of increased audit fees. c. When the leadership of the audit firm creates an environment where achieving efficiency is valued, invested in and rewarded. d. When the leadership of the audit firm ensures financial considerations drive actions. 9. The following relates to an entity’s internal control. Which statement is true? a. Internal control helps an organization eliminate the risk of failing to provide users with reliable financial information. b. Internal control is a process designed to guarantee the achievement of the objectives of reliable financial reporting, compliance with laws and regulations, and operating efficiency. c. A deficiency in design of internal controls exists when an existing control is not properly designed so that, even if the control operates as designed, the control objective would not be met. d. Effective internal control requires an organization to establish an appropriate structure and clearly defined lines of responsibility and authority where everyone in the organization has equal responsibility for the effective operation of internal control. 10. What is the primary benefit of effective internal control in an organization? a. Achieving certain organizational goals. b. Completing a successful audit for the entity. c. Maximizing value for shareholders. d. Obtaining profitability and financial strength. 11. Which of the following is not one of the underlying principles of an effective control environment? a. The organization demonstrates a commitment to integrity and ethical values. b. The board of directors demonstrates independence from management and exercises oversight for the development and performance of internal control. c. Management establishes, with board oversight, structures, reporting lines, and appropriate authorities and responsibilities in pursuit of objectives. d. The organization considers the potential for fraud in assessing risks to the achievement of objectives. 12. Which of the following assertions address whether accounts have been included in the financial statements at appropriate amounts? a. Completeness assertion. b. Valuation or allocation assertion. c. Rights and obligations assertion. d. None of the above. 13. Which of the following is a procedure which analyzes plausible relationships among financial and nonfinancial data? a. Analytical procedures. b. Scanning. c. Reviewing. d. Observation. Page 2 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam 14. Which of the following is a reason why an auditor needs an understanding of internal controls? a. To provide individual comments on internal control non-compliance. b. To assess the risk of possible misstatements in the financial statements. c. To become comfortable that the client will pay its audit bills. d. To assess materiality. 15. Which of the following is not a reason why an auditor obtains an understanding of internal controls? a. Understanding the entity's internal control is a requirement of professional auditing standards. b. The auditor must use the information to assess the risk of material misstatements arising from the lack of internal control. c. It is the primary basis for the audit report. d. It assists the auditor in designing the nature, timing, and extent of further audit procedures. 16. Evaluate the following statements: Statement 1: From among PRBOA members, the Chairman of the PRBOA is tasked to appoint a vice-chairman for a term of three (3) years. (False) Statement 2: The public practice of accountancy is confined to sole proprietorship and partnership only. (True) a. b. c. d. Only Both Only Both statement 1 is statements are statement 2 is statements are correct. correct. correct. incorrect. 17. Which statement is true concerning materiality? a. Misstatements are material if they could reasonably be expected to influence the decisions of users of the financial statements. b. Materiality guidelines are specifically prescribed by the law. c. Materiality is not a useful concept in assessing internal control effectiveness. d. Materiality is a concept applied to financial statement presentation but not to disclosures. 18. Which of the following statements is true regarding client acceptance or continuance decisions? a. An audit firm cannot discontinue providing audit services to a client without just cause. b. Potential audit fees are not a valid consideration in the acceptance or continuance decision. c. The client acceptance/continuance decision is one of the most important factors in audit quality. d. Audit firms are not permitted to conduct background checks on the management of a potential client. 19. What type of relationship exists between audit risk and detection risk? a. Direct. b. Inverse. c. Indirect. d. No relationship. 20. Which of the following statements best describes what is meant by setting control risk at 100%? a. Controls are effective. b. Controls are relevant. c. Controls are ineffective. d. Cannot be determined from the information given. 21. An increase in the risk of material misstatement would lead to which of the following responses? a. Increase in the extent of audit procedures. b. Decrease in the extent of audit procedures. c. Earlier performance of audit procedures. d. No change in the extent or timing of audit procedures. Page 3 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam 22. An audit program provides an effective means for which of the following? a. Reviewing the completeness and persuasiveness of procedures performed. b. Recording the audit work performed and those responsible for performing the work. c. Organizing and distributing the work. d. All the above. 23. What is the first phase in an audit? a. Client acceptance or client continuance. b. Understanding the client. c. Understanding internal controls. d. Testing of account balances. 24. The extent of procedures is affected mostly by which of the following factors? a. The sheer volume of procedures to be applied by the auditor. b. The time of year in which the client takes a physical inventory in the warehouse. c. The auditor's judgment that misstatements are probable in certain balances. d. The availability of the client's staff at or near the balance sheet date. 25. Which components of the SOQM comprise quality objectives the firm is required to establish, that form the basis for identifying and assessing quality risks and designing and implementing responses? I. Governance and Leadership II. The firm’s risk assessment process III. Relevant Ethical Requirements IV. Acceptance and continuance of client relationship V. Monitoring and remediation VI. Engagement performance VII. Resources VIII. Information and communication a. b. c. d. All of the above components Only II and VI All except I and III All except II and V 26. Which of the following would be least likely to be regarded as a test of a control? a. Tests of the additions to property by physical inspection. b. Comparisons of the signatures on cancelled checks to the authorized check signer list. c. Tests of signatures on purchase orders. d. Recalculation of payroll deductions. 27. Which of internal a. b. c. d. the following components is the foundation for all other components of control? Control risk assessment. Control environment. Information and communication. Monitoring. 28. An audit program is created to specify which of the following? a. The type of audit opinion to be rendered based upon procedures performed. b. The audit procedures that will be performed every year for the client. c. How an auditor should think while performing audit procedures. d. Audit objectives and procedures to be followed during the audit process. 29. Which one of the following is the primary reason for documenting audit work? a. To prevent litigation by other parties that question the audit performance. b. To provide a stand-alone medium that gives audit conclusions and supports the opinion. c. To give the client a full reporting of all work performed on their behalf. d. To supply a point of reference for all auditors performing the work subsequently. Page 4 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam 30. Which item is correct concerning the risk of material misstatement? a. Risk of material misstatement arises because audit procedures have been misapplied. b. Risk of material misstatement can be controlled and changed by the auditor. c. Risk of material misstatement must be assessed in non-quantitative terms. d. Risk of material misstatement is controllable by the client. 31. In considering internal control within the revenue/receipt cycle, what is the purpose of a transaction walk-through? a. To assure that employees are performing assigned functions accurately. b. To confirm the auditor's understanding of the internal control structure. c. To select documents for detailed tests of controls. d. To verify the results of the auditor's sampling plan. 32. Which of the following factors would lead an auditor to assess inherent risk at a higher level? a. The account balance is easily determined without estimation. b. The account balance is composed of a high volume of nonroutine transactions. c. The account balance is composed of simple transactions. d. All of the above would lead the auditor to assess a higher level of inherent risk. 33. Which of a firm’s I. II. III. a. b. c. d. the following is a reason a predecessor auditor can decline to reply to current auditor? Data is under court order. They must always respond. The client does not approve of confidential information being shared. I, II, III I and III only II only III only 34. Which of the following statements is false? a. Inherent risk is inversely related to the level of control risk. b. Inherent risk is directly related to the amount of evidence required in account testing. c. Inherent risk is the susceptibility of the financial statements to material misstatement, assuming no internal controls. d. Inherent risk and control risk are assessed by the auditor and controlled by the client. 35. If the results of tests of controls support the design and operations of controls as expected, the auditor uses ____ control risk as the preliminary assessment. a. a lower b. the same c. a higher d. either a lower or higher PROBLEM 1 The following comprises Cash and Cash Equivalents account details of Antiope Inc.’s for the period ended December 31, 2022: Current account at Bank of the Philippine Islands (P200,000 of the amount is compensating balance for a 2-year loans payable to the bank due December 31, 2023. The entity is not legally restricted from withdrawing the balance as per the agreement with the bank) Current account at Equitable PCI Bank (Overdrafts are repayable on demand and forms an integral part of the entity’s cash management policy) Page 5 of 21 P6,000,000 (300,000) 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam Payroll account Foreign bank account – restricted (in USD) ** Postage stamps An officer’s post-dated check Bank drafts Credit memo from a vendor for a purchase return Traveler’s check Customer’s not-sufficient-funds check Money orders Petty cash fund (P10,200 in currencies, P2,100 in employee check dated January 3, 2023 and expense vouchers for P16,500) Treasury bills, due 3/31/23 (purchased 11/30/22) Treasury bills, due 1/31/23 (purchased 10/31/22) Redeemable preference shares, mandatory redemption date 3/31/2023 (acquired 3/31/2022) Change fund Bond sinking fund 1,500,000 60,000 3,000 12,000 30,000 60,000 150,000 45,000 90,000 30,000 600,000 900,000 100,000 10,000 1,000,000 **current exchange rate as of December 31, 2022 is at P55 for every USD1. 36. What is the correct cash and cash equivalent to be reported by the company in its December 31, 2022 balance sheet? a. 8,390,200 c. 8,490,200 b. 8,392,300 d. 8,472,300 PROBLEM 2: The following information resulted from a count of Hippolyta Corp.’s cash on hand was conducted on January 3, 2023 in relation to the audit of the entity’s financial statements for the period ended December 31, 2022: a. Custodian’s accountability was petty cash fund with an imprest balance of P15,000 and undeposited collections from December 27, 2022 to the date of count appearing in the cash records at P72,000. b. The items on hand on the count date were: Currencies and coins Checks: Date Payor 12/10 ABC Corp. – Customer 12/27 E. James – Employee 12/28 DEF Co. – Customer 12/29 Hippolyta Corp. 1/2 1/4 P32,800 Payee Hippolyta Corp. Hippolyta Corp. Hippolyta Corp. Marawi Co. – Supplier Hippolyta Corp. Hippolyta Corp. XYS Co – Customer UVW Inc. – Customer *returned by the bank marked NSF Petty cash expense vouchers: Date Particulars 12/28 Office repairs 12/28 Postage stamps 12/29 Officers’ meals 1/2 Gas and oil Employee IOUs Unused postage stamps Petty cash receipt vouchers: Date Particulars 12/29 Employee contributions for charity 12/30 Return of travel expense advance Page 6 of 21 20,000* 2,000 12,000 15,000 32,000 19,000 Amount 2,100 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 2,500 Amount 3,200 500 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam Requirements: 37. What is the cash shortage/overage as a result from the cash count? a. None c. 4,500 b. 2,900 d. 800 38. What is the adjusted petty cash fund balance as of December 31, 2022? a. 3,100 c. 6,800 b. 5,100 d. 1,400 PROBLEM 3: You are auditing the cash in bank balance of Etta Co. in line with your firm’s audit of the entity’s financial statement as of and for the period ended December 31, 2022. The following information are deemed relevant in your audit: a. The bank statement for the month of December had the following information: December 1, balance 2,580,000 Total bank credits 9,650,000 Total bank debits 8,990,000 December 31, balance ? b. The November bank reconciliation statement prepared by the client included the following reconciling items. November book reconciling items were eventually recorded in the books where necessary in December. • A note receivable amounting to P220,000 was collected by the bank in November on the company’s behalf. Interest on the note which was also collected by the bank was at P22,000. • Total bank service charge for the month of November was P9,600. • A collection check amounting to P90,000 was returned by the bank together with the November bank statement and was marked NSF. • Deposits in transit and outstanding checks by the end of November were at P520,000 and P920,000, respectively. • The company recorded a disbursement check at P125,000 in November. The November bank statement showed the check clearing the bank at the correct amount which was P152,000. The error was subsequently corrected by the company in December. c. Audit examination revealed the following December items: • Deposits in transit and outstanding checks amounted to P786,000 and P889,000, respectively. • The bank erroneously credited the company P120,000 for a customer collection of Atta Corp. The bank discovered and immediately corrected the error in December. • Bank also erroneously charged the company P86,000. The same has not been corrected however by month end. • Bank loan proceeds automatically credited to the company’s account by the end of December was at P500,000. This has not been recorded in the books yet. • A P80,000 customer check was returned by the bank in December marked NSF. The company redeposited the same check in December upon notifying the customer and has since cleared the bank also in December. The company did not record the checks return and redeposit anymore since the same will have no effect to the cash balance. • Bank service charge for the month of December was at P12,400. d. The general ledger shows the following balances: December 1, balance 2,064,600 December 31, balance 2,735,400 Requirements: 39. What is the correct cash in bank balance as of December 31, 2022? a. 3,051,000 c. 3,223,000 b. 3,240,000 d. 3,137,000 40. What is the total cash debits appearing the company’s books for the month of December? a. 9,538,000 c. 9,796,000 b. 9,578,000 d. 9,458,000 Page 7 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam 41. What is the total cash credits appearing the company’s books for the month of December? a. 8,993,600 c. 8,753,000 b. 8,532,800 d. 8,787,200 42. Which of the following will least likely appear in an audit program for the audit of cash in bank accounts? a. Verifying items listed as deposit in transit in the client-prepared bank reconciliation statement have been processed as deposits on the cutoff bank statement as these should appear chronologically on the cut-off bank statement. b. Determining whether checks processed in the cut-off bank statement with dates after year-end, appears as outstanding checks in the clientprepared bank reconciliation statement. c. Confirmation with the bank regarding cash balances and liabilities to the bank. d. Preparing schedule of interbank transfers to verify that both sides of the transfer are property accounted for and to detect any kiting. PROBLEM 4: In the course of your audit of Steve Company’s “Receivables” account as of December 31, 2022, you found out that the account comprised the following items: Trade accounts receivable P1,550,000 Trade accounts receivable, assigned (proceeds from 750,000 assignment amounted to P650,000) Trade accounts receivable, factored (proceeds from 300,000 factoring done on a without-recourse basis amounted to P250,000 Trade notes receivable 200,000 Trade notes receivable, discounted (proceeds from 100,000 discounting done on a with-recourse basis amounted to P80,000, Recourse obligation is considered significant) Trade receivables rendered worthless 50,000 Installments receivable, normally due 1 year to two 250,000 years Customers’ accounts reporting credit 60,000 balances arising from sales returns Customers’ accounts reporting credit balances 40,000 arising from advance payments Cash advances to associate company 800,000 Claims from shipping company for damaged goods while 30,000 in-transit Subscriptions receivable due in 60 days 400,000 Deposits on long term contract bids 200,000 Requirements: 43. How much is the total trade receivables? a. 3,150,000 c. b. 2,850,000 d. 3,050,000 2,750,000 44. How much is the amount to be presented as “trade and other receivables” under current assets section of the statement of financial position? a. 3,380,000 c. 3,280,000 b. 3,480,000 d. 4,280,000 PROBLEM 5: The accountant of James Corp. presented the following reconciliation in line with your audit of the company’s receivables for the period ended December 31, 2022: Page 8 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam Balance per General Ledger Invoice price of goods delivered on December 29. Received by the customer on December 31. Freight Term: FOB Buyer Invoice price of goods delivered on December 30. Goods still in transit as of December 31. Freight term: FOB Destination Invoice price of goods delivered on December 31. Goods still in transit as of December 31. Freight term: FOB Shipping Point Customer collection check dated November 30, in payment of an Invoice dated October 20, returned by the bank marked NSF Customer collection check dated December 30, in payment of an Invoice dated November 20 Customer collection check dated January 3, in payment of an invoice Dated December 10 Credit memo for sales returns on sales invoice dated August 4 Preference shares subscriptions receivable, Due March 3, 2024 Write-off of worthless accounts (Sales invoice dates April 10 – P44,000; July 20 – P32,000) Balance per Subsidiary Ledger P2,910,000 (80,000) (50,000) 75,000 (120,000) 60,000 90,000 20,000 (250,000) 76,000 P2,731,000 Audit notes: a. The accountant also prepared the following aging schedule based on the subsidiary ledger and inquiries also revealed their estimation policy regarding the portion estimated to be doubtful of collection: Age Amount % Doubtful of collection Current (1-60 days) P1,120,000 2% 1-60 days past due (61-120 days) 650,000 10% 61-120 days past due (121-180 520,000 20% days) More than 120 days past due 441,000 40% (>180 days) b. The company sell under terms 5/20, n/60. The company further estimates per past experience that 25% of the accounts that are current (1-60 days) will probably be collected within the discount period. c. The allowance for bad debts had a January 1, 2022 balance of P302,800. The company had a P46,000 recovery of previously written-off accounts during the year. There were write-off of accounts receivable during the year other than that which appears in the reconciliation schedule. Requirements: 45. What is the correct cash accounts receivable balance, gross of any allowances? a. 2,795,000 c. 2,775,000 b. 2,990,000 d. 2,790,000 46. What is the correct amortized cost of accounts receivable as of December 31, 2022? a. 2,424,550 c. 2,422,800 b. 2,440,550 d. 2,408,550 47. What is the correct bad debt expense for 2022? a. 79,400 c. 75,400 b. 83,400 d. 67,400 48. Which of the following is the least concern of the auditor when auditing possible overstatement error on receivables? a. Ascertaining whether the billing department monitors the prenumbering of the delivery receipt when preparing sales invoices. b. Determining whether sales invoices are being reviewed and approved by other than the preparer of the invoice to check on accuracy of the prepared invoices. Page 9 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM c. d. AUD First Pre-Board Exam Determining that sales invoices are being prepared based on approved sales order and delivery receipts and whether the documents are in agreement before preparing the sales invoice. Determining whether entries in daily sales summary and sales journals corresponds to sales invoices, delivery receipts and sales orders which are all in agreement. PROBLEM 6: The following aging schedule based on accounts receivable subsidiary ledger has been prepared by the accountant of Trevor Corp. in line with your audit of its financial statement for the period ended December 31, 2022: Age Amount % Collectability Current (1-60 days) P2,240,000 99% 1-60 days past due (61-120 days) 870,000 95 61-120 days past due (121-180 days) 740,000 80 More than 120 days past due (>180 days) 646,000 50 Audit notes: a. A credit balance in one of the customer’s account amounting to P20,000 is included in the current (1-60 days) account. This resulted from the customer cash advance for a delivery to be made in 2023. b. Another credit balance amounting to P28,000 resulting from a collection of a previously written-off account is included in the current (1-60 days) account. Investigation revealed that the client failed to reverse the write-off entry upon recovery and recorded only the cash collection. c. The unadjusted December 31, 2022 balance of the allowance for bad debts was at P452,000. d. The following exceptions were noted as a result of your accounts receivable confirmation procedures: Customer Amount Exception noted per Books Diana Inc. P160,000 The customer claims the correct amount is P120,000. The difference was for an invoice dated September 15 priced at P160 per unit whereas the agreement per Sales Order was at P120 per unit. Client acknowledges the invoice error. Prince Co. 220,000 The customer claims the correct amount is at P195,000. The difference was for a credit memo issued in December for a sales returns in December. The goods return was covered by a sales invoice originally dated August 24. Investigation revealed that the credit memo was recorded in January 2023. Steve Co. 250,000 The customer claims that the amount is the total selling price of goods they receive on consignment from Trevor Corp. in December. Steve Co. further reports that 40% of these goods remained unsold. Commission rate as agreed upon between parties was at 12% of the sales price. The client acknowledges the customer’s report. Barbra Inc. 60,000 No reply has been received from this customer even with the second confirmation request sent. There has been no evidence of subsequent collections either. The client admits receivable are worthless. Further investigation revealed that outstanding invoices to this customer were all dated April 2022. Minerva Co. 120,000 The customer claims no amount owing to the client as the customer has advanced P280,000 cash to the client in December for all deliveries to be made in December and January. Investigation revealed that the P120,000 outstanding balance per books was for a delivery made in December. The cash advance was recorded by the entity as Cash Sales in December. Client acknowledges the error. Page 10 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam Requirements: 49. What is the correct cash accounts receivable balance, gross of any allowances? a. 4,199,000 c. 4,137,000 b. 4,181,000 d. 4,149,000 50. What is the correct amortized cost of accounts receivable as of December 31, 2022? a. 3,678,250 c. 3,683,000 b. 3,700,820 d. 3,801,800 51. What is the correct bad debt expense for 2022? a. 78,000 c. 46,000 b. 18,000 d. 106,000 52. Which of the following is incorrect regarding the use of confirmation letters in auditing receivables? a. b. c. d. Confirmation of receivables is consistent with the auditor’s objective of gathering evidence regarding the receivables existence/occurrence. Positive confirmation requests is necessary where the auditor expects based on past experience that there will be many exceptions. Negative confirmation requests may be used by the auditor where control risk assessment is placed at less than high level. If no response is received to a negative confirmation letter, the auditor should send a second confirmation request and perform alternative procedures if still no response is received. PROBLEM 7: The following accounts were lifted form the unadjusted trial balance of Penny Corp. of December 31, 2022: Cash P963,200 Accounts receivables 2,254,000 Inventory 6,050,000 Accounts payable 4,201,000 as During your audit, you noted that Penny Corp. held its cash books open after year end. In addition, your audit revealed the following information: a. Receipts for January 2023 of P654,600 were recorded in December 2022 cash receipts journal. The receipts of P360,100 represent cash sales and P294,500 represent collections of receivables from customers, net of 5% cash discount. b. Accounts payable of P372,400 was paid in January 2023. The payments, on which discounts of P12,400 were taken, were included in the December 2022 check register. c. Merchandise inventory resulted from a physical count conduced on December 30, 2022. The following information has been discovered relating to certain inventory transactions. • Goods invoiced at P275,000 were shipped on consignment to a customer on December 28 and was recorded as sales on account. Cost goods was at P210,000. • Goods costing P216,000 were received from a vendor on January 4, 2023. The related invoice was received and recorded on January 6, 2023. The goods were shipped on December 31, 2022, terms FOB shipping point. • Goods with the sales invoice price of P637,500 were shipped and recorded on December 31, 2022, and were received by the customer on January 3, 2023. The terms of the invoice were FOB shipping point. The goods costing P520,000 were included in the 2022 ending inventory physical count on December 30. Page 11 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD First Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Requirements: Based on the above information and the result of your audit, what are the adjusted balances of the following accounts: 53. Cash a. b. 963,200 681,000 c. d. 668,600 688,600 54. Accounts receivable a. 2,908,600 b. 2,564,000 c. d. 2,289,000 2,548,500 55. Inventory a. 5,956,000 b. 6,035,000 c. d. 5,860,000 6,080,000 56. Accounts payable a. 4,789,400 b. 4,603,500 c. d. 4,790,900 4,573,000 57. Which of the following audit procedures would the auditor least likely perform in auditing inventories for possible overstatement error? a. Attending and observing physical count of inventories conducted by the client. b. Performing test counts for a sample of the prenumbered inventory tags, trace these counts not the client’s count sheets and to the client’s final inventory listing. c. Selecting items on the client’s final inventory listing, which is essentially the subsidiary ledger for the adjusted general ledger balance, and then agreeing those selected items to the inventory count tags noted as a result of the auditors test counts. d. Performing cut off procedures on sales and purchases made before and after year-end to ascertain whether items were included in the physical count for those that are not yet valid sales as at year end and those that are already valid purchases as at year end. PROBLEM 8: The following resulted from you audit staff’s sales cut-off procedures, in line with your audit of Funko Inc.’s financial statements for the period ended December 31, 2022: December Sales Journal Entries SI Delivery Amount Number Date 21091 Dec. 27 P56,000 21092 Dec. 28 120,000 21093 Dec. 29 90,000 21094 Dec. 31 42,000 21095 Dec. 31 58,000 21096 Jan. 1 60,000 January Sales Journal Entries SI Delivery Amount Number Date 21097 Dec. 30 P90,000 21098 21099 21100 Jan. 2 Jan. 2 Jan. 3 80,000 58,000 100,000 Remarks FOB Destination Shipped to Consignee FOB Destination (Still in-transit as of Dec. 31) FOB Shipping Point (Still in-transit as of Dec. 31) FOB Buyer’s Warehouse (Still in-transit as of Dec. 31) FOB Supplier’s Warehouse Remarks FOB Shipping Point (Still in-transit as of Dec. 31) FOB Shipping Point Sold under bill and hold agreement in Dec. FOB Destination Audit notes: a. Physical count of goods was conducted by the client on December 30, 2022. As a result all goods delivered on or before December 30 were no longer included in the physical count. b. Gross profit rate on all sales was at 30%. c. The consignee’s report regarding SI 21092 disclosed that 60% of the goods covered by the invoice remained unsold. Commission rate as agreed upon with the consignee was at 10% of sales price. Page 12 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam Requirements: Based on the above information and the result of your audit, what are the net adjustments to the following: 58. Accounts receivable a. 76,800 credit c. 136,800 credit b. 132,000 credit d. 88,600 credit 59. Inventory a. 84,000 debit b. 43,400 debit c. d. 72,800 debit 7,000 credit 60. Net Income a. 88,600 decrease b. 35,400 decrease c. d. 93,400 decrease 110,800 decrease PROBLEM 9: You were assigned to audit the Property, plant and equipment accounts of your firm’s continuing audit of the financial statement of Houston Corp. for the period ended December 31, 2022. The following schedule was derived from your prior year working papers: December 31, 2021 Cost Land P2,500,000 Building 5,200,000 Factory Machineries 4,800,000 Office Equipment 3,500,000 Accumulated Depreciation Building (1,411,429) Factory Machineries (2,342,400) Office Equipment (945,000) Net P11,301,171 Audit notes: a. The company’s depreciation policy are as follows: Building SYD, 20 years (no salvage value) Factory Double Declining Balance, 10 years Machineries (10% salvage value based on cost) Office Equipment Straight-line method, 10 years (10% salvage value based on cost) The assets were acquired during the company’s inception of operation at the beginning of 2019. b. In line with your audit examination, you requested a schedule of property additions and repairs and maintenance for the year. The following schedules as a result were made available: Schedule of Property Additions December 31, 2022 Date Particulars Amount Mar. 2 Additional Factory Machinery (note c) P2,050,000 Jun. 30 Repairs on Office Equipment 200,000 Sept. 30 Additional Office Equipment (note d) 800,000 Dec. 1 Repainting cost on the Building 120,000 Date Jan. 2 Jan. 2 Schedule of Repairs and Maintenance Expense December 31, 2022 Particulars Amount Installation of a new elevator system P1,200,000 in the building (note e) 2-year maintenance contract for 500,000 factory machineries c. Investigations revealed that the additional factory machinery was acquired on March 2 on installment basis. The installment price of P2,000,000 is payable at the rate of P500,000 annually starting March 2, 2022. Cash price of the factory machinery was at P1,600,000. Freight and installation cost amounted to P50,000. Page 13 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD First Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM d. The additional office equipment were acquired on account on September 30, 2022 under the terms 10/20, n/60. By the end of the year, the amount payable is yet to be settled by the company. Invoice price of the equipment was at P800,000. e. The installation of the new elevator system was settled in cash totaling to P1.2M. It was ascertained that the elevator system will be useful over the remaining life of the Building. Requirements: 61. What is the correct depreciation expense on the Building (including Building Improvements, if any) for 2022? a. 554,286 c. 518,095 b. 420,952 d. 502,596 62. What is the carrying value of the Factory Machineries as of December 31, 2022? a. 3,368,580 c. 3,341,080 b. 3,651,972 d. 3,430,180 63. What is the correct accumulated depreciation balance for the Office Equipment as of December 31, 2022? a. 1,260,000 c. 1,278,000 b. 1,276,200 d. 1,324,800 64. What is the correct repairs and maintenance expense for 2022? a. 820,000 c. 620,000 b. 870,000 d. 570,000 PROBLEM 10: The long-lived assets and related accounts of Foo Inc. had the following balances as of January 1, 2021: PPE Cost Land Building, 150% declining balance, 20 years Machinery and equipment, straight line, 10 years Automobiles, 150% declining balance, 3 years INTANGIBLES Patent Cost 1,920,000 P350,000 4,500,000 1,160,000 1,800,000 Accumulated Depreciation 1,050,000 405,000 900,000 Accumulated Amortization 240,000 Review of transactions during the period revealed the following information: a. The patent was as a result of internal development. The cost amounting to P1,920,000 included research costs amounting to P290,000 and development costs amounting to P430,000. The balance was the costs related to the registration and processing the patent application with the government which it approved at the beginning of 2020. It was estimated that the patent will have a useful life of 16 years. On January 1, 2022, the company determined that the useful life of patent was only eight years from the date of grant. b. On January 1, 2022, in connection with the purchase of a trademark from Fighter Corp., the parties entered into a noncompetition agreement and consulting contract. The company paid Fighter Corp. P800,000, of which three-fourths was for the trademark, and one-fourth was for the agreement not to compete for a five-year period in the line business covered by the trademark. The company considers the life of the trademark to be indefinite. c. On June 30, 2022, a machine purchased for P60,000 on January 1, 2021, was sold for P36,000. Page 14 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam d. On September 30, 2022, the company purchased a new automobile for P460,000 cash and trade-in of an automobile purchased for P540,000 on January 1, 2021. The new automobile has a cash price of P620,000. e. On November 1, 2022, Foo Inc. acquired a tract of land with an existing building in exchange for 10,000 shares of Foo Inc.’s P20 par value share capital that had a market price of P38 per share on this date. Foo Inc. paid legal and other directly attributable cost to the acquisition totaling P25,000. The last property tax bill indicated assessed values of P240,000 for land and P60,000 for building. Shortly after the acquisition, the building was razed at a cost of P45,000 in anticipation of new building construction within the year. 65. How much is the total land to be reported in the company’s December 31, 2021 balance sheet? a. 710,000 c. 674,000 b. 800,000 d. 660,000 66. What is the total depreciation expense on Machinery and equipment in 2022? a. 113,000 c. 110,000 b. 116,000 d. 100,000 67. How much is the carrying value of the Automobiles to be presented in the December 31, 2022 statement of financial position? a. 1,335,000 c. 885,000 b. 857,500 d. 846,000 68. What is the total amortization expense on all intangibles for the period? a. 215,000 c. 320,000 b. 330,000 d. 250,000 69. Assuming that the remaining annual net cash flows expected from the patent, noncompeting agreement and trademark are P158,278, P78,868 and P55,000 respectively, and assuming further that the prevailing market rate of interest at the end of the year is 10%, what is the total impairment loss in intangibles for 2022? a. 275,000 c. 325,000 b. 350,000 d. 415,000 70. Where few property additions and disposals are expected to have occurred during the year, your audit plan and direction for auditing property plant and equipment and intangibles would involve: a. A preliminary understanding of the client’s internal control over the acquire to retire business process and an extensive substantive test of transactions for property additions and disposals during the year. b. A complete examination of the effectiveness of internal controls over the acquire to retire business process and a less extensive substantive test of account balance for PPE and Intangibles as at the end of the year. c. A preliminary understanding of the client’s internal control over the acquire to retire business process and a less extensive substantive test of account balance for PPE and Intangibles as at the end of the year. d. A complete examination of the effectiveness of internal controls over the acquire to retire business process and an extensive substantive test of transactions for property additions and disposals during the year. - END of EXAMINATION - Page 15 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD First Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM ANSWERS & SOLUTIONS/CLARIFICATIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 B A C A D C B A C A D B A B C C A C A C A D A C D PROBLEM 1: ANTIOPE INC. 36. A Current Account at BPI Overdraft (cash management policy) Payroll account Bank drafts Traveler's checks Money orders Petty cash fund, adjusted balance Treasury bills, due 1/31/23 Change fund Total Cash and Cash Equivalents 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 A B D B D B B B A B A D B C D D B B C C D A A B C 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 A D C C A A B C B C A C B D C A B A C A 6,000,000 (300,000) 1,500,000 30,000 150,000 90,000 10,200 900,000 10,000 8,390,200 PROBLEM 2: HIPPOLYTA CORP. 37. D Count date: January 3, 2023 Accountability Petty cash fund Undeposited collections Petty cash receipt vouchers Total Accountability Valid supporting items: Cash items Currencies Accommodated check (E. James) Collection Checks DEF Corp. (dated 12/28) XYS Co. (dated 1/2) Non cash items Petty cash expense vouchers Employee IOUs SHORTAGE Page 16 of 21 15,000 72,000 3,700 90,700 32,800 2,000 12,000 32,000 78,800 9,600 1,500 11,100 89,900 800 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD First Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Adjusting Entry: Expenses (Up to 12/31) Receivable from employees PC Shortage Petty cash fund 38. 7,600 1,500 800 9,900 B. Petty cash fund, imprest balance Net adjustment (as of 12/31) Petty cash fund, adjusted balance 15,000 (9,900) 5,100 Alternative Solution: Cash on hand as of January 3 Less: Undeposited collection PC receipt vouchers Add: PC expense voucher dated Jan. Petty cash fund, adjusted balance 78,800 (72,000) (3,700) 2,000 5,100 PROBLEM 3: ETTA CO. 39. C.; 40. D.; 41. D. Proof of Cash Balances per bank statement Deposit in transit - November - December Outstanding check - November - December Bank error-December; Corrected in December Bank error-December; Not yet corrected Adjusted balances Balances per books Unrecorded bank credit November - December Unrecorded bank debit November - December NSF check - returned and redeposited in Dec. Book error - November; Corrected - December Adjusted balances November 2,580,000 520,000 Receipt 9,650,000 (520,000) 786,000 (920,000) Disbursements 8,990,000 December 3,240,000 786,000 (920,000) 889,000 (889,000) (120,000) (120,000) 2,180,000 9,796,000 (86,000) 8,753,000 86,000 3,223,000 2,064,600 9,458,000 8,787,200 2,735,400 242,000 (242,000) 500,000 (9,600) (90,000) (27,000) 2,180,000 500,000 (9,600) (90,000) 12,400 80,000 80,000 9,796,000 (27,000) 8,753,000 (12,400) 3,223,000 42. B PROBLEM 4: STEVE COMPANY 43. B. Trade accounts Trade accounts, assigned Trade notes receivables Trade notes receivable, discounted (as a loan) Installment receivable Cash advances to associates Claims from shipping companies Subscriptions receivable - current Deposits on long term contracts Total Page 17 of 21 Trade receivable 1,550,000 750,000 200,000 Non-trade (current) Non-trade (Noncurrent) 100,000 250,000 800,000 30,000 400,000 200,000 2,850,000 430,000 1,000,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD First Pre-Board Exam 44. C. Trade receivables Non-trade (current) receivables Trade and other receivables - Current 2,850,000 430,000 3,280,000 PROBLEM 4: JAMES CORP. 45. C. 46. D. General Unadjusted balances Goods delivered Dec. 29 (Valid sale) Sale in transit, FOB Dest. (Not valid sale) 2,910,000 Sale in transit, FOB SP (Valid sale) NSF collection check (Not valid collection) Collection check dated 12/30 (Valid collection) Post-dated collection check (Not valid coll.) Sales returns 75,000 Subscriptions receivable Write-off of receivables (250,000) Adjusted balances Allowance for bad debts in % Allowance for bad debts in PhP Allowance for sales returns (1,140K*25%*5%) Amortized Cost 2,775,000 Unadjusted balances Cr. Bal. - customer adv. Cr. Bal - recovery from previous write-off Diana Inc. Prince Co. Steve Co. - unsold goods out on consignment Steve Co. - commission on sold goods Barbra Co. - write-off of receivable Minerva Co. Adjusted balances Allowance for bad debt in % Allowance for bad debt in PhP Amortized Cost Page 18 of 21 2,731,000 80,000 1-60 days 1,120,000 80,000 61-120 days 121-180 days 650,000 520,000 >180 days 441,000 (50,000) 120,000 120,000 (60,000) (60,000) 90,000 (20,000) (20,000) (76,000) (32,000) (44,000) 468,000 20% 93,600 397,000 40% 158,800 2,775,000 (352,200) 1,140,000 2% 22,800 770,000 10% 77,000 (14,250) 2,408,550 47. A. Allowance for bad debt, end Add: Write-off of receivables Less: Recovery of previous write-offs Allowance for bad debt, beg (Jan. 1) Bad debt expense 48. A. PROBLEM 6: TREVOR CORP. 49. B. 50. C. Subsidiary 352,200 76,000 (46,000) (302,800) 79,400 Total 4,496,000 20,000 1-60 days 2,240,000 20,000 28,000 (40,000) (25,000) 28,000 (100,000) (100,000) (18,000) (18,000) (60,000) (120,000) 4,181,000 (498,000) 3,683,000 61-120 days 870,000 121-180 days 740,000 >180 days 646,000 (40,000) (25,000) (60,000) (120,000) 2,050,000 1% 20,500 830,000 5% 41,500 715,000 20% 143,000 586,000 50% 293,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD First Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 51. A. Allowance for bad debt, end Add: Write-off of receivables per audit Less: Recovery of previous write-offs per audit Allowance for BD, unadjusted ending bal. Bad debt expense 498,000 60,000 (28,000) (452,000) 78,000 52. D. PROBLEM 7: PENNY CORP. 53. C. 54. C. 55. A. 56. A. Unadjusted balances 2023 cash sales recorded in 2022 2023 collection of AR recorded in 2022 Gross of Sales Discount (294,500/95%) 2023 payment of AP recorded in 2022 Net of Purchase Discount (372,40012,400) Goods out on consignment Purchase in transit - FOB Shipping Point Sales in transit - FOB Shipping Point Adjusted Balances Cash 963,200 (360,100) Receivables 2,254,000 (294,500) 310,000 Inventory 6,050,000 360,000 372,400 (275,000) 668,600 Accounts Payable 4,201,000 210,000 216,000 (520,000) 5,956,000 2,289,000 216,000 4,789,400 57. B. PROBLEM 8: FUNKO INC. 58. C. 59. B 60. C. 21092 Shipment to consgnee Adjustement to AR/Sales (120,000*60%) Commission on portion sold (120K*40%*10%) Adjustment to Inventory (120K*60%)*70% 21093 Sales in Transit: FOB Destination 21094 Sales in Transit: FOB SP (delivered after count) 21095 Sales in Transit: FOB Buyer (delivered after count) 21096 2023 Shipment 21097 Sales in Transit: FOB SP 21099 Bill and Hold agreement in 2022 Net Adjustment Accounts Receivable Inventory Net Income (72,000) (72,000) (4,800) (4,800) (90,000) (58,000) (60,000) 90,000 58,000 (136,800) 50,400 63,000 50,400 (27,000) (29,400) (29,400) (40,600) 43,400 (58,000) (60,000) 90,000 17,400 (93,400) PROBLEM 9: HOUSTON CORP. 61. A. Building: SYD, 20 years (no salvage value) Depreciation for 2022: On Opening Bal: 5.2M*(17/210) On Addition/Elevator System: 1.2M*(17/153) Total Page 19 of 21 420,952 133,333 554,286 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD First Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 62. C. Factory Machineries, Cost (12/31/22) Balance, January 1 Addition, Mar 2 Total Accum. Deprecition, January 1 Depreciation expense, 2022** 4,800,000 1,650,000 6,450,000 (2,342,400) (766,520) (3,108,920) 3,341,080 Carrying Value, 12/31/22 **Depreciation for 2022 Opening Bal (4.8M*80%^3)*20% Addition (1.65M*20%)*10/12 Total 491,520 275,000 766,520 63. B. Office Equipment, Accum. Depr, Jan. 1 Depreciation for 2022** Office Equipment, Accum. Depr., Dec. 31, 2022 **Depreciation for 2022 Opening Bal (3.5M*90%)/10 Addition (720,000*90%)/10*3/12 Total 64. D. Jun. 30 Repairs on Office Equipment Dec. 1 Repainting cost on the Building Jan. 2 2-year maintance contract for machinery Expense for 2022 (500,000/2years) Total Expense PROBLEM 10: FOO INC. 65. C. Land, Beginning Balance Acquisition during 2022: FMV of shares issued (10,000*P38) Legal fees and other DACs Total Amount allocable to Land (240,000/300,000) Land, Ending Balance 66. A. Depreciation on: Disposal on 6/30: 60,000/10yrs*6/12 Balance: 1.1M/10yrs Total Depreciation on Machinery and Equipment 945,000 331,200 1,276,200 315,000 16,200 331,200 200,000 120,000 250,000 570,000 350,000 380,000 25,000 405,000 80% 324,000 674,000 3,000 110,000 113,000 67. B. Cost, Decemer 31, 2022 Beginning Balance Cost of disposed automobile on Sept. 30 Cost of new automobile on Sept. 30 Accum. Depr., Dec. 31, 2022 Beginning Balance AD of disposed automobile on Sept. 30* Depreciation at year-end** Carrying Value of Automobiles, Dec. 31, 2022 Page 20 of 21 1,800,000 (540,000) 620,000 900,000 (371,250) 493,750 1,880,000 1,022,500 857,500 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 45 – May 2023 CPALE Batch 11 February 2023 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM *AD of disposed auto on Sept. 30 Depreciation in 2021 (540,000*50%) Depreciatoin in 2022 (270,000*50%)*9/12 **2022 Depreciation on Automobiles Deprecation on: Disposal on 9/30 (270,000*50%)*9/12 Newly Acquired on 9/30 (620,000*50%)*3/12 Balance*** (630,000*50%) Total Depreciation Expense in 2022 CV of the beginning balance (1.8M-900K) Less: CV of the diposed asset at the beg. (540K-270K) CV of the balance at the beg of the year 68. A. Amortization on Patent Correct CV of Patent, 1/1/2022 (1,200,000*14/16) Divide by remaining life: (8yrs-2yrs) Amortization on Noncompetition Agreement (800,000*1/4)/5years Total Amortization in 2022 AUD First Pre-Board Exam 270,000 101,250 371,250 101,250 77,500 315,000 493,750 900,000 270,000 630,000 1,050,000 6 875,000 600,000 275,000 Noncompeting agreement, 12/31/22 (200K40K) Recoverable Amount/Value in Use Impairment loss on Patent 160,000 250,000 None Total Impairment Loss 175,000 40,000 215,000 69. C. Patent CV, 12/31/22 (1,050,0000-175,000) Recoverable Amount/Value in Use Impairment loss on Patent Trademark (no definite life), 12/31/22 Rec. value/PV of net cash flows in perpetuity (55,000/10%) Impairment loss on Trademark *** 600,000 550,000 50,000 325,000 70. A. Page 21 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com