Auditing the Production Cycle - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Auditing the Production Cycle

Description:

Auditing the Production Cycle Substantive Tests of Inventory Presentation and Disclosure Compare statement presentation with GAAP: Confirm agreements for assignment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:133
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: aa97
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Auditing the Production Cycle


1
Auditing the Production Cycle
2
Transactions
  • Production cycle relates to production activities
    or transactions of converting raw material into
    finished. The transactions includes
  • The use of raw material costs
  • The use of direct labor costs
  • The use of factory overhead costs
  • Common terms
  • Raw material direct labor prime costs
  • Direct labor FOC conversion costs

3
Accounts Balances
  • Related accounts balances
  • Raw material inventory
  • Salary and wages
  • All accounts include as factory overhead costs.
  • WIP (Work in Process)
  • WIP Raw Materials
  • WIP Direct Labor Costs
  • WIP Factory Overhead Costs
  • 5. WIP Inventory
  • 6. Finished Goods Inventory
  • 7. Cost of Goods Sold

4
Interfaces Transactions
  • The production cycle interfaces with
  • Expenditures cycle on preparing raw material
    and FOC.
  • HRM payroll cycle on preparing human
    resources for production.
  • Investing cycle on providing facilities for
    production.
  • Revenue cycle on providing information of
    customer demand or order.

5
Audit Objectives
  • Testing the fairness of management assertion
    relates to production cycle, they are
  • The usage of raw material costs
  • The usage of labor costs
  • The usage of FOC
  • The WIP inventory
  • The finished goods inventory
  • The cost of goods sold

6
Audit Objectives in Detail
Assertion Category Transaction Class Audit Objective Account Balance Audit Objectives
Existence or occurrence Recorded manufacturing transactions represent materials, labor, and overhead transferred to production and the movement of completed production to finished goods during the current period. Inventories included in the balance sheet physically exist. Cost of goods sold represents the cost of goods shipped (sold) during the period.
Completeness All manufacturing transactions that occurred during the period have been recorded. Inventories include all materials, products, and supplies on hand at the balance sheet date. Cost of goods sold includes the effects of all sales transactions during the period.
7
Audit Objectives in Detail
Assertion Category Transaction Class Audit Objective Account Balance Audit Objectives
Rights and obligations The entity has rights to the inventories resulting from recorded manufacturing transactions. The reporting entity has legal title to the inventories at the balance sheet date.
Valuation or allocation Manufacturing transactions are correctly journalized, summarized, and posted. Inventories are properly stated at the lower of cost or market. Cost of goods sold is based on the consistent application of an acceptable cost flow method or methods.
8
Audit Objectives in Detail
Assertion Category Transaction Class Audit Objective Account Balance Audit Objectives
Presentation and disclosure The details of manufacturing transactions support their presentation in the financial statements including their classification and disclosure. Inventories and cost of goods sold are properly identified and classified in the financial statements. Disclosures pertaining to basis of valuation and the pledging or assignment of inventories are adequate.
9
Inherent Risks
  1. The volume of purchases, manufacturing, and sales
    transactions that affects these accounts is
    generally high, increasing the opportunities for
    misstatements to occur.
  2. Contentious issues surrounding the
    identification, measurement, and allocation of
    inventory-able costs such as indirect materials,
    labor, and manufacturing overhead, joint product
    costs, and the disposition of cost variances,
    accounting for scarp, and other accounting
    issues.

10
Inherent Risks
  1. The wide diversity of inventory items sometimes
    requires the use of special procedures to
    determine inventory quantities and estimation of
    quantities by experts.
  2. Inventories are often stored at multiple sites,
    adding to the difficulties associated with
    maintaining physical controls over theft and
    damages, and properly accounting for goods in
    transit between sites.

11
Inherent Risks
  • The wide diversity of inventory items may present
    special problems in determining their quantity
    and market value.
  • Inventories are vulnerable to spoilage,
    obsolescence, and other factors such as general
    economic conditions that may affect demand and
    salability, and thus the proper valuation of the
    inventories.
  • Inventory may be sold subject to right of return
    and repurchase agreements.

12
Analytical Procedures
  • Analytical procedures useful to test the
    potential misstatement. The following are the
    alternatives of ratio analysis
  • Inventory turn days
  • Avg. inventory payable cost of goods sold x
    365
  • Audit significant
  • Prior experience in inventory turn days combined
    with knowledge of cost of sales can be useful in
    estimating current inventory levels. A
    lengthening of the period may indicate existence
    problems, or lower of cost or market problems.

13
Analytical Procedures
  • Inventory growth to cost of sales growths
  • ((inventory n Inventory n-1) 1) ((cost of
    sales n cost of sales n-2) 1
  • Audit significant
  • Ratio larger than 1.0 indicate that inventories
    are growing faster than sales. Large ratios may
    indicate possible inventory obsolescence
    problems.
  • Finished goods produced to raw material used
  • Finished goods quantities raw material
    quantities
  • Audit significant
  • Useful in estimating the efficiency of the
    manufacturing process. May be helpful in
    evaluating the reasonableness of production costs.

14
Analytical Procedures
  • Finished goods produced to direct labor
  • Finished goods quantities direct labor hours
  • Audit significant
  • Useful in estimating the efficiency of the
    manufacturing process. May be helpful in
    evaluating the reasonableness of production costs
  • Product defects per million
  • Number of product defects as a percent of each
    million produced.
  • Audit significant
  • Useful in estimating the effectiveness of the
    manufacturing process. May be helpful in
    evaluating the reasonableness of production costs
    and warranty expenses.

15
Common Documents and Records
  • Production order. Form indicating the quantity
    and kind of goods to be manufactured. An order
    may pertain to a job order or a continuous
    process.
  • Material requirements report. Listing of raw
    materials and parts needed to fill a production
    order.
  • Material issue slip. Written authorization from a
    production department for stores to release
    materials for use on an approved production
    order.
  • Time ticket. Record of time worked by an employee
    on a specific job.

16
Common Documents and Records
  • Move ticket. Notice authorizing the physical
    movement of work in process between production
    departments, and between work in process and
    finished goods.
  • Daily production activity report. Report showing
    raw materials and labor used during the day.
  • Completed production report. Report showing that
    work has been completed on a production order.
  • Inventory subsidiary ledgers or master file
    (perpetual inventory records). Records maintained
    separately for raw materials, work in process,
    and finished goods.
  • Standard cost master file. A computer file
    contains standard costs.

17
Common Documents and Records
  • Raw materials inventory master file. A computer
    file with the quantities of raw materials
    inventory on hand.
  • Work-in-process inventory master file. A computer
    file contains the sum of actual work-in-process
    costs. The file is used to prepare the daily
    production report.
  • Finished goods inventory master file. A computer
    file that contains the sum total of production
    costs. It may be used as a perpetual inventory
    for finished goods.

18
Manufacturing Functions
  • Initiating Production (a) planning and
    controlling production, (b) issuing raw
    materials.
  • Movement of goods (a) processing goods in
    production, (b) transferring completed work to
    finished goods, (c) protecting inventories.
  • Recording manufacturing and inventory
    transactions (a) determining and recording
    manufacturing costs, (b) maintaining correctness
    of inventory balances.

19
Control Risks
  • Initiating Production
  • Planning and controlling production, risk,
    Excessive production may be ordered, control,
    Approval of production orders in production
    planning and control.
  • Issuing raw materials, risk, unauthorized use of
    raw materials, control, Signed materials issue
    slips for approved production orders are required
    for all materials released to production, and/or
    Computer accounts for prenumbered materials
    issues slips and reconciles slips with recording
    in daily production reports.

20
Control Risks
  • Movement of Goods
  • Processing goods in production, risk, direct
    labor hours may not be charged to production
    orders, control, computer compares production
    hours (or time tickets) to record direct labor
    hours on daily production reports, and/or
    Computer accounts for hours worked and hours
    charged to daily production reports.
  • Transferring completed work to finished goods
    inventory, risk, finished goods personnel may
    claim goods were not received from production,

21
Control Risks
  • Movement of Goods
  • control, Signature of finished goods warehouse
    personnel on final move ticket on receipt of
    goods, and/or, computer accounts for inventory
    move tickets and reconciles with recording on
    completed production report
  • Protecting inventories, risk, inventories may be
    stolen from the warehouse, control, Use of locked
    warehouse with access restricted to authorized
    personnel only, risk, WIP may be stolen or
    misrouted during production, control, use of
    plant surveillance personnel, control, Use of
    plant surveillance personnel,

22
Control Risks
  • Movement of Goods
  • and/or, Signed inventory move tickets to control
    movement of goods through production department,
    with tickets reconciled to daily production
    reports and completed production reports.
  • Recording Manufacturing and Inventory
    Transactions
  • Determining and recording manufacturing costs
  • Risk, manufacturing costs may be recorded in
    incorrect amounts, control, use of chart of
    accounts timely reporting of manufacturing cost
    data for management performance reviews including
    budget comparisons.

23
Control Risks
  • Recording Manufacturing and Inventory
    Transactions
  • Risk, direct manufacturing costs allocated to WIP
    may not be recorded or recorded at incorrect
    amounts, control, computer compares daily
    production report data with underlying source
    documents (inventory move tickets and time
    cards).
  • Risk, inappropriate overhead rates or standard
    costs may be used, control, management approval
    of overhead rates and standard costs timely
    reporting of manufacturing cost data for
    management performance reviews and investigation
    of variances.
  • Risk, cost of completed production may not be
    transferred to completed goods or transferred in
    incorrect amounts.

24
Control Risks
  • Recording Manufacturing and Inventory
    Transactions
  • control, Computer compares completed production
    report data with underlying source documents
    (inventory move tickets and time cards).
  • Maintaining the correctness of inventory
    balances
  • Risk, Recorded inventory quantities may not agree
    with inventory-owned quantities on hand, control,
    periodic independent counts of inventories
    comparison with records of amounts and ownership.

25
Control Risks
  • Recording Manufacturing and Inventory
    Transactions
  • Risk, inventory carrying values in subsidiary
    ledgers or master files may not agree with
    control accounts, control, Computer checks on
    agreement of subsidiary records and control
    accounts.
  • Risk, inventories may be carried at amounts in
    excess of market values, control, periodic
    inspection of inventory condition periodic
    inventory activity reports for management
    performance reviews.
  • Risk, management of inventory may not be held
    accountably, resulting in a variety of
    misstatements in the financial statements,
    control, an appropriate level of management
    monitors the level of production, production
    costs, and the reasonableness of inventory levels
    relative to sales volume.

26
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Initial Procedures
  • Perform initial procedures on inventory balances
    and records that will be subjected to further
    testing
  • Trace beginning inventory balances to prior
    years working papers.
  • Review activity in inventory accounts and
    investigate entries that appear unusual in amount
    or source.
  • Verify totals of perpetual records and other
    inventory schedules and their agreement with
    ending general ledger balances.

27
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Analytical Procedures
  • Perform analytical procedures
  • Review industry experience and trends.
  • Examine an analysis of inventory turnover.
  • Review relationships of inventory balances to
    recent purchasing, production, and sales
    activities.
  • Compare inventory balances to anticipated sales
    volume.

28
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Tests of Details of Transactions
  • On a test basis, vouch entries in inventory
    accounts to supporting documentation (e.g.
    vendors invoices, manufacturing cost records,
    completed production reports, and sales and sales
    returns records).
  • On a test basis, trace data from purchases,
    manufacturing, completed production, and sales
    records to inventory accounts.
  • Test cut-off of purchases and sales returns
    (receiving), movement of goods through
    manufacturing departments (routing), and sales
    (shipping).

29
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Test of Details of Balances
  • Observe clients physical inventory count
  • Decide on timing and extent of test.
  • Evaluate adequacy of clients inventory taking
    plans.
  • Observe care taken in clients counts and make
    test counts.
  • Look for indications of slow-moving, damaged, or
    obsolete inventory.
  • Account for all inventory tags and count sheets
    used in physical count.

30
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Test of Details of Balances
  • Test clerical accuracy of inventory listings
  • Recalculate totals and extensions of quantities
    times unit prices.
  • Trace test counts (from item 6.c.) to listings.
  • Vouch items on listings to inventory tags and
    count sheets.
  • Reconcile physical counts to perpetual records
    and general ledger balances and review adjusting
    entries.

31
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Test of Details of Balances
  • Test inventory pricing
  • Examine vendors paid invoices for purchased
    inventories.
  • Examine propriety of direct labor and overhead
    rates, standard costs, and disposition of
    variances pertaining to manufactured inventories.
  • Confirm inventories at locations outside the
    entity.
  • Examine consignment agreements and contracts.

32
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Tests of Details of Balances Accounting
    Estimates
  • Evaluate the net realizable value of inventory
  • Examine sales invoices after year-end and perform
    lower-of-cost-or-market test.
  • Compare inventories with entitys current sales
    catalog and sales reports.
  • Inquire about slow-moving, excess, or obsolete
    inventories and determine need for write-down.
  • Evaluate managements process for estimating the
    net realizable value of inventory using
    hindsight.

33
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Tests of Details of Balances Accounting
    Estimates
  • Evaluate the net realizable value of inventory
    given information about industry trends,
    inventory turnover trends, and specific
    slow-moving inventory.
  • Mandatory Procedures
  • Observation of physical inventory count included
    as step 6 above.

34
Substantive Tests of Inventory
  • Presentation and Disclosure
  • Compare statement presentation with GAAP
  • Confirm agreements for assignment and pledging of
    inventories.
  • Review presentation and disclosures for
    inventories in drafts of financial statements and
    determine conformity with GAAP.

35
Thank You
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com