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BUS 425

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Title: Day One Subject: Auditing Author: Tad Miller Last modified by: Tad Miller Created Date: 1/8/1996 1:06:22 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BUS 425


1
BUS 425 Auditing
  • Chapter 1
  • The Demand for Audit Services

2
WorldCom Cynthia Cooper
  • The company had recorded billions of dollars of
    regular fees paid to local telephone companies as
    capital assets. This accounting trick allowed the
    company to turn a 662 million loss into a 2.4
    billion profit in 2001.

3
WorldCom Cynthia Cooper
  • Line cost expense 3,062
  • Cash 3,062
  • Adjusting JE
  • PPE 3,062
  • Line cost expense 3,062

4
(No Transcript)
5
Madyson
  • What is the definition of Auditing?

6
financial statements
  • Auditing ----
  • Is the accumulation and evaluation of evidence
    about information to determine and report on the
    degree of correspondence between the information
    and established criteria.
  • Page 2

GAAP
7
Page 33
8
Vivian
  • What is audit evidence?

9
  • Evidence ----
  • is any information used by the auditor to
    determine whether the information being audited
    is stated in accordance with the established
    criteria.
  • page 2

10
  • Evidence ----
  • electronic data about transactions
  • documented data about transactions
  • written communications
  • observations by the auditor
  • oral testimony (responses to questions)

11
Fiona
  • What is the objective of AU-C 330

12
AU-C 330 response to RoMM
  • The objective of the auditor is to obtain
    sufficient appropriate audit evidence regarding
    the assessed risk of material misstatement
    through designing and implementing appropriate
    responses to those risks.

13
Marc
  • What is the objective of AU-C 500

14
AU-C 500 Audit Evidence
  • The objective of the auditor is to design and
    perform audit procedures that enable the auditor
    to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence
    to be able to draw reasonable conclusions on
    which to base the auditors opinion.

15
Page 59
16
Vouch or Trace project
Go to web site http//clubs.cob.calpoly.edu/cmi
ller/ACTG2042520page.html look up sales
journal - talk about overstatement /
occurrence look at sales journal talk about
overstatement / valuation look at sales orders
talk about understatement / completeness
17
  • Independent Auditors Report
  • Report on the Financial Statements
  • We have audited the accompanying financial
    statements of ABC Company, which comprise the
    balance sheet as of December 31, 20X1, and the
    related statements of income, changes in
    stockholders' equity, and cash flows for the year
    then ended, and the related notes to the
    financial statements.
  • Managements Responsibility for the Financial
    Statements
  • Management is responsible for the preparation and
    fair presentation of these financial statements
    in accordance with accounting principles
    generally accepted in the United States of
    America this includes the design,
    implementation, and maintenance of internal
    control relevant to the preparation and fair
    presentation of financial statements that are
    free from material misstatement, whether due to
    fraud or error.
  • Auditors Responsibility
  • Our responsibility is to express an opinion on
    these financial statements based on our audit. We
    conducted our audit in accordance with auditing
    standards generally accepted in the United States
    of America. Those standards require that we plan
    and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
    assurance about whether the financial statements
    are free from material misstatement.
  • An audit involves performing procedures to obtain
    audit evidence about the amounts and disclosures
    in the financial statements. The procedures
    selected depend on the auditor's judgment,
    including the assessment of the risks of material
    misstatement of the financial statements, whether
    due to fraud or error. In making those risk
    assessments, the auditor considers internal
    control relevant to the entity's preparation and
    fair presentation of the financial statements in
    order to design audit procedures that are
    appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the
    purpose of expressing an opinion on the
    effectiveness of the entity's internal control.2
    Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit
    also includes evaluating the appropriateness of
    accounting policies used and the reasonableness
    of significant accounting estimates made by
    management, as well as evaluating the overall
    presentation of the financial statements.
  • We believe that the audit evidence we have
    obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide
    a basis for our audit opinion.
  • Opinion
  • In our opinion, the financial statements referred
    to above present fairly, in all material
    respects, the financial position of ABC Company
    as of December 31, 20X1, and the results of its
    operations and its cash flows for the year then
    ended in accordance with accounting principles
    generally accepted in the United States of
    America.
  • Auditor's signature, city and state, date of
    report

18
  • Independent Auditors Report
  • Report on the Financial Statements
  • We have audited the accompanying financial
    statements of ABC Company, which comprise the
    balance sheet as of December 31, 20X1, and the
    related statements of income, changes in
    stockholders' equity, and cash flows for the year
    then ended, and the related notes to the
    financial statements.
  • Managements Responsibility for the Financial
    Statements
  • Management is responsible for the preparation and
    fair presentation of these financial statements
    in accordance with accounting principles
    generally accepted in the United States of
    America this includes the design,
    implementation, and maintenance of internal
    control relevant to the preparation and fair
    presentation of financial statements that are
    free from material misstatement, whether due to
    fraud or error.
  • Auditors Responsibility

19
  • Auditors Responsibility
  • Our responsibility is to express an opinion on
    these financial statements based on our audit. We
    conducted our audit in accordance with auditing
    standards generally accepted in the United States
    of America. Those standards require that we plan
    and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
    assurance about whether the financial statements
    are free from material misstatement.
  • An audit involves performing procedures to obtain
    audit evidence about the amounts and disclosures
    in the financial statements. The procedures
    selected depend on the auditor's judgment,
    including the assessment of the risks of material
    misstatement of the financial statements, whether
    due to fraud or error. In making those risk
    assessments, the auditor considers internal
    control relevant to the entity's preparation and
    fair presentation of the financial statements in
    order to design audit procedures that are
    appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the
    purpose of expressing an opinion on the
    effectiveness of the entity's internal control.
    Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit
    also includes evaluating the appropriateness of
    accounting policies used and the reasonableness
    of significant accounting estimates made by
    management, as well as evaluating the overall
    presentation of the financial statements.
  • We believe that the audit evidence we have
    obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide
    a basis for our audit opinion.
  •  

20
  •  
  • Opinion
  • In our opinion, the financial statements referred
    to above present fairly, in all material
    respects, the financial position of ABC Company
    as of December 31, 20X1, and the results of its
    operations and its cash flows for the year then
    ended in accordance with accounting principles
    generally accepted in the United States of
    America.
  • Report on Other Legal and Regulatory Requirements
  • Auditor's signature
  • Auditor's city and state
  • Date of the auditor's report

21
Materiality page 118
  • The magnitude of an omission or misstatement of
    accounting information that, in light of the
    surrounding circumstances, makes it probable that
    the judgment of a reasonable person relying on
    the information would have been changed or
    influenced by the omission or misstatement,

22
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23
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24
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25
Ciara
  • What is our operational definition of
    independence?

26
Independence
  • A member should maintain objectivity and be free
    of conflicts of interest in discharging
    professional responsibilities. A member in public
    practice should be independent in fact and
    appearance when providing professional auditing
    or attestation services.

27
Independence
  • Independence enhances the auditors ability to
    act with integrity, to be objective, and to
    maintain an attitude of professional skepticism.
  • Independence includes
  • independence of mind (fact)
  • Independence of appearance

28
Jonathan S
  • What does FASB stand for ?

29
Jena
  • What is the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002?

30
Christina
  • Which of the following are government agencies ?
  • FASB
  • SEC
  • PCAOB

31
Julia
  • What does GAAS stand for ?
  • What does GAAP stand for ?

32
  • GAAP
  • FASB
  • FAS
  • ASC 310-10-25-3
  • ASU

GAAS public private PCAOB AICPA AS
SAS
33
Katherine
  • What is Business Risk?
  • What is Information Risk?

34
  • Business Risk - the risk (probability) that an
    entity will fail to meet its objectives
  • Information Risk - the probability that the
    information upon which the decision was made was
    inaccurate.

35
Loren
  • What is the Risk-Free interest rate?

36
Alyssa
  • You are a bank lending officer
  • In relation to the risk-free interest rate
  • What interest rate would you charge to a company
    with a great deal of business risk?

37
Lauren
  • You are a bank lending officer
  • In relation to the risk-free interest rate
  • What interest rate would you charge to a company
    with a great deal of information risk?

38
Xiaodan
  • What are some conditions that create demand for
    auditing?

39
conditions which create demand for audits
  • Page 5
  • Remoteness owner separate from management
  • Motives of the provider
  • Voluminous data
  • Complex transactions

40
Jake M
  • Talk about the difference between
  • assurance
  • attestation
  • auditing

41
(No Transcript)
42
  • Assurance improves the quality of information
  • Attestation report regarding the reliability of
    specific assertions made by management
  • Audit opinion regarding managements assertions
    embodied in financial statements

43
Important
  • Specified audit objectives
  • AU-C 200, 315, 500, 700 Independence)
  • Unmodified Audit Report
  • Managements Assertions p. 59

44
Nicole
  • What are the three lines of service typically
    provided by a public accounting firm ?

45
Typical lines of business
  • Audit (accounting, attestation, audit)
  • Tax
  • Consulting (advisory services)

46
Huyen
  • What are the various job levels or career levels
    in a public accounting firm ?

47
CPA partnership structure
  • Partner P
  • Senior Mngr SM SM
  • Manager X Y Z
  • Senior X X X Y Y Y Z Z
  • Staff XXX XXX XXX YYY YYY YYY ZZZ ZZ

48
Education cpa exam
  • As of Dec. 31, 2013 / Jan. 1, 2014
  • Bachelors degree
  • 225 quarter hours
  • 36 business
  • 36 30 accounting
  • 20 accounting
  • 10 ethics
  • 1 year experience
  • http//www.dca.ca.gov/

49
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50
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51
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52
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53
(No Transcript)
54
transactions Account balances Presentation disclosure
occurrence existence occurrence rights obligations
completeness completeness completeness
accuracy valuation allocation accuracy valuation
classification classification understandability
cutoff
rights obligations
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