Chapter 6 – Audit Responsibilities and Objectives

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Audit Responsibilities
and Objectives
Chapter 6
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-1
Learning Objective 1
Explain the objective of
conducting an audit of
financial statements and
an audit of internal controls.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Objective of Conducting an
Audit of Financial Statements
The objective of the ordinary audit of financial
statements is the expression of an opinion of
the fairness with which they present fairly, in
all respects, financial position, result of
operations, and its cash flows in
conformity with GAAP.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-3
Steps to Develop Audit
Objectives
1. Understand objectives and
responsibilities for the audit.
2. Divide financial statements into cycles.
3. Know management assertions about
accounts.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-4
Steps to Develop Audit
Objectives
4. Know general audit objectives for
classes of transactions and accounts.
5. Know specific audit objectives for
classes of transactions and accounts.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-5
Learning Objective 2
Distinguish management’s
responsibility for the financial
statements and internal control
from the auditor’s responsibility
for verifying the financial
statements and effectiveness
of internal control.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-6
Management’s
Responsibilities
Management is responsible for the financial
statements and for internal control.
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act increases management’s
responsibility for the financial statements.
It requires the CEO and the CFO of public
companies to certify the quarterly and annual
financial statements submitted to the SEC.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-7
Management’s
Responsibilities
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act provides for criminal
penalties for anyone who knowingly falsely
certifies the statements.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6-8
Learning Objective 3
Explain the auditor’s
responsibility for discovering
material misstatements.
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6-9
Auditor’s Responsibilities
 Material versus immaterial misstatements
 Reasonable assurance
 Errors versus fraud
 Professional skepticism
 Fraud resulting from fraudulent financial
reporting versus misappropriation of assets
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Auditor’s Responsibilities for
Discovering Illegal Acts
 Direct-effect illegal acts
 Indirect-effect illegal acts
 Evidence accumulation when there is no reason
to believe indirect-effect illegal act exists
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Auditor’s Responsibilities for
Discovering Illegal Acts
 Evidence accumulation and other actions
when there is reason to believe direct- or
indirect-effect illegal acts may exist
 Actions when the auditor knows of an illegal act
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 12
Learning Objective 4
Classify transactions and account
balances into financial statement
cycles and identify benefits of a
cycle approach to segmenting
the audit.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Financial Statements Cycles
Audits are performed by dividing the financial
statements into smaller segments or components.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Transaction Flow Example
Transactions
Journals
Sales
Sales
journal
Cash
receipts
Cash receipts
journal
Acquisition
of goods
and services
Acquisitions
journal
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Ledgers,
Trial Balance,
and Financial
Statements
General ledger
and subsidiary
records
General ledger
trial balance
Financial
statements
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Transaction Flow Example
Transactions
Cash
disbursements
Journals
Cash
disbursements
journal
Payroll
services and
disbursements
Payroll
journal
Allocation
and
adjustments
General
journal
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
Ledgers,
Trial Balance,
and Financial
Statements
General ledger
and subsidiary
records
General ledger
trial balance
Financial
statements
6 - 16
Relationships Among
Transaction Cycles
General
cash
Capital acquisition
and repayment cycle
Sales and
collection
cycle
Acquisition
and payment
cycle
Payroll and
personnel
cycle
Inventory and
warehousing
cycle
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Learning Objective 5
Describe why the auditor obtains
a combination of assurance by
auditing classes of transactions
and ending balances in accounts,
including presentation and
disclosure.
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Balance and Transactions
Affecting Balances Example
Accounts Receivable (in thousands)
Beginning balance $ 17,521
Sales
Ending balance
$144,328
$137,087 Cash receipts
$
Sales returns
1,242 and allowances
$
Charge-off of
3,323 uncollectible
accounts
$ 20,197
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 19
Learning Objective 6
Distinguish among the three
categories of management
assertions about financial
information.
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6 - 20
Management Assertions
1. Assertions about classes of transactions and
events for the period under audit
2. Assertions about account balances a period end
3. Assertions about presentation and disclosure
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Management Assertions for
Each Category of Assertions
Assertions About Classes
of Transactions and Events
Assertions About Assertions About
Account Balances Presentation and Disclosure
Occurrence
Existence
Occurrence and rights
and obligations
Completeness
Completeness
Completeness
Accuracy
Valuation and
allocation
Accuracy and
valuation
Classification
Classification and
understandability
Cutoff
Rights and
obligations
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Learning Objective 7
Link the six general transactionrelated audit objectives to
management assertions
for classes of transaction.
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General Transactions-related
Audit Objectives
Occurrence
Recorded transactions
exist
Completeness
Existing transactions
are recorded
Accuracy
Recorded transactions
are stated at the
correct amounts
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6 - 24
General Transactions-related
Audit Objectives
Posting and
summarization
Transactions are included
in the master files and
are correctly summarized.
Classification
Transactions are properly
classified.
Timing
Transactions are recorded
on the correct dates.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Management Assertions and
Transaction-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Sales Transactions
Management Assertions
About Classes of
Transactions and Events
General Transactionrelated Audit
Objectives
Specific Sales Transactionrelated Audit Objectives
Occurrence
Occurrence
Recorded sales are for
shipments made to
nonfictitious customers
Completeness
Completeness
Existing sales
transactions are recorded
Accuracy
Accuracy
Recorded sales are for
the amount of goods
shipped and are correctly
billed and recorded
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Management Assertions and
Transaction-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Sales Transactions
Management Assertions
About Classes of
Transactions and Events
General Transactionrelated Audit
Objectives
Specific Sales Transactionrelated Audit Objectives
Accuracy
Posting and
summarization
Sales transactions are
properly included in the
master file and are
correctly summarized
Classification
Classification
Sales transactions are
properly classified
Cutoff
Timing
Sales transactions are
recorded on the correct
dates.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
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Learning Objective 8
Link the eight general balancerelated audit objectives to
management assertions
for account balances.
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General Balance-related
Audit Objectives
Existence
Amounts included exist
Completeness
Existing amounts are
included
Accuracy
Amounts included are
stated at the correct
amounts
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6 - 29
General Balance-related
Audit Objectives
Classification
Amounts are properly
classified
Cutoff
Transactions are recorded
in the proper period
Detail tie-in
Account balances agree
with master file amounts,
and with the general ledger
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 30
General Balance-related
Audit Objectives
Realizable
value
Assets are included at
estimated realizable value
Rights and
obligations
Assets must be owned
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6 - 31
Management Assertions and
Transaction-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Inventory
Management Assertions
About Account Balances
General Balance- Specific Balance-related Audit
related Audit
Objectives Applied to Inventory
Objectives
Existence
Existence
All recorded inventory exists
at the balance sheet date
Completeness
Completeness
All existing inventory has
been counted and included
in the inventory summary
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 32
Management Assertions and
Transaction-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Inventory
Management Assertions
About Account Balances
General Balance- Specific Balance-related Audit
related Audit
Objectives Applied to Inventory
Objectives
Valuation and
allocation
Accuracy
Inventory quantities on the
client’s perpetual records
agree with items physically
on hand
Prices used to value
inventories are materially
correct
Extensions of price times
quantity are correct and
details are correctly added
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 33
Management Assertions and
Transaction-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Inventory
Management Assertions
About Account Balances
General Balance- Specific Balance-related Audit
related Audit
Objectives Applied to Inventory
Objectives
Valuation and
allocation
Classification
Cutoff
Inventory items are properly
classified as to raw
materials, work in process,
and finished goods
Purchase cutoff at year end
is proper
Sales cutoff at year end is
proper
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 34
Management Assertions and
Transaction-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Inventory
Management Assertions
About Account Balances
General Balance- Specific Balance-related Audit
related Audit
Objectives Applied to Inventory
Objectives
Valuation and
allocation
Detail tie-in
Realizable
value
Rights and obligations Rights and
obligations
Total of inventory items
agrees with general ledger
Inventories have been written
down where net realizable
value is impaired
The company has title to all
inventory items listed
Inventories are not pledged
as collateral
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 35
Learning Objective 9
Link the four presentation and
disclosure-related audit objectives
to management assertions for
presentation and disclosure.
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6 - 36
Management Assertions and Presentation
and Disclosure-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Notes Payable
Management
Assertions About
Presentation and
Disclosure
General
Presentationand Disclosurerelated Audit
Objectives
Specific Presentation and
Disclosure-related Audit Objectives
Applied to Notes Payable
Occurrence
and rights and
obligations
Occurrence
and rights and
obligations
Notes payable as described in the
footnotes exist and are
obligations of the company
Completeness
Completeness
All required disclosures related
to notes payable are included in
the financial statement footnotes
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 37
Management Assertions and Presentation
and Disclosure-related Audit Objectives
Hillsburg Hardware Company:
As Applied to Notes Payable
Management
Assertions About
Presentation and
Disclosure
General
Presentationand Disclosurerelated Audit
Objectives
Specific Presentation and
Disclosure-related Audit Objectives
Applied to Notes Payable
Valuation and
allocation
Valuation and
allocation
Footnote disclosures related to
notes payable are accurate.
Classification
Classification
Notes payable are appropriately
and
and
classified as to short-term and
understandability understandability long-term obligations and
related financial statement
disclosures are understandable
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 38
Learning Objective 10
Explain the relationship between
audit objectives and the
accumulation of audit evidence.
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 39
How Audit Objectives Are Met
The auditor must obtain sufficient appropriate
audit evidence to support all management
assertions in the financial statements.
 An audit process has four specific phases
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 40
Four Phases of a Financial
Statement Audit
Plan and design
Phase I an audit approach
Phase II
Perform tests of
controls and
substantive tests
of transactions
Perform analytical
procedures and
Phase III tests of details
of balances
Complete the
Phase IV audit and issue
an audit report
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 41
End of Chapter 6
©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder
6 - 42
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