Auditing and Assurance
Auditing and Assurance
Auditing and Assurance
ANALYSIS APPROACH
5th edition
Larry F. Konrath
Electronic Presentation
by Harold
O. Wilson
KEY CONCEPTS OVERVIEW
• Audits add creditability to published
financial statements.
• Opinions by independent CPAs, as to
fairness of financial statements are
generally required by securities laws.
• Auditors evaluate evidence supporting
financial statements and assess
fairness of presentations.
GENERAL TOPICS
• Perspectives of Auditing.
• Attestations and Assurances.
• Auditing defined in contrast to accounting.
• Independent Auditor and Internal Auditor:
Training and Competencies.
• Evidence: Collection and Evaluation.
LEARNING
OBJECTIVES
• Differentiate attestation and assurance.
• Identify various services by auditors.
• Define auditing and its assertions.
• Distinguish independent and internal audits.
• Understand audit evidence and its merits.
• Describe audit reports and their variations.
• Understand steps in the auditing process.
ASSURANCE SERVICES,
ATTESTATION & AUDITING
• ASSURANCE SERVICES:
Independent professional
services designed to improve
the quality of information for
decision making. [A very
broad definition!]
ASSURANCE SERVICES,
ATTESTATION & AUDITING
• ATTESTATION: An expert’s
communication of a conclusion
about the reliability of someone
else’s assertions. [A broad
definition.]
• ASSERTATIONS [in our context]: The
representations of management as to the
fairness of financial statements’ content.
ASSURANCE SERVICES,
ATTESTATION & AUDITING
• AUDITING: A systematic process of
objectively obtaining and evaluating
evidence regarding selected assertions
about economic actions and events to
ascertain the degree of correspondence
between those assertions and
established criteria, and
communicating the results
to interested parties.
SCHEMA
ALWAYS POSSIBLE!
AUDIT REPORTS:
OPINIONS
• “Clean Opinion.” No exceptions to GAAP
conformity and no audit scope restrictions
• “Fair, except for …” Specific qualification(s)
where auditor had specific scope
restrictions or not-too-severe reservations
(e.g., as to contingencies or alternatives)
• “Adverse Opinion.” Unfair or misleading
presentations; severe qualifications
AUDIT REPORTS:
DISCLAIMER OF OPINION
If there is a lack of independence, or
there were severe scope restrictions,
OR a client’s financial statements have
material uncertainties (or “strange-
but-true inconsistencies” to GAAP),
the reasons for precluding the
formation of an opinion must be
clearly stated by the auditor.
CAUTION!
A “Disclaimer” is NOT to be
issued in lieu of an “Adverse
Opinion” in cases where the
latter is appropriate!
THE AUDIT PROCESS
AUDIT PROGRAMS &
PROCEDURES
• Planning the Audit
– Preliminaries (client interviews, screening
of clients, assessing staff needs, etc.)
– Design of Audit Programs/Procedures
– Engagement Letters (objectives, deadlines,
arrangements, fees, etc.)
AR = P(MM$) < 5%
AUDIT RISK ANALYSIS
AR = f(entity philosophy, personnel
pressures/integrity, characteristics of the
industry, internal controls, competency of
client personnel, results of audit testing,
objective and subjective probabilities as
evaluated by the auditor, and/or unknown
variables)
Professional Judgment is essential!
AUDIT RISK ANALYSIS
AR = f(many variables), AND
P(“Fair Financials”) = 1 - AR
which “should be” 95% or better!