Chapter 5: Audit Evidence and Documentation Flashcards

1
Q

audit risk

A

the risk that the auditor will incorrectly give an unqualified opinion on financial statements that are materially misstated

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2
Q

best case scenario

A

both audit opinion and actual have no material misstatement

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3
Q

audit risk, catastrophic

A

audit opinion = no material misstatement and there actually is some

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4
Q

bad scenario, loss of client

A

audit opinion is material misstatement and there isn’t any

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5
Q

shit happens

A

auditor give material misstatement and there is material misstatement

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6
Q

inherent risk

A

risk of misstatement in account assuming no controls

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7
Q

control risk

A

risk that material misstatement will not be prevented or detected and corrected by controls

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8
Q

detection risk

A

risk that audit procedures do not detect material misstatements

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9
Q

the auditor must

A

obtain sufficient and appropriate audit evidence by performing audit procedures to afford a reasonable basis for an opinion regarding the financial statements under audit

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10
Q

major types of audit evidence

A
  1. AIS
  2. documentary evidence
  3. third-party representations
  4. physical evidence
  5. computations
  6. data interrelationships (analytical procedures)
  7. client representations
  8. evidence from related party transactions
  9. subjective audit evidence (like estimates)
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11
Q

auditing estimates

A
  1. review management’s approach and consider its reasonableness
  2. independently develop an estimate (auditor’s own method)
  3. review subsequent events bearing on estimate
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12
Q

appropriate

A

a measure of audit evidence quality–relevance and its reliability

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13
Q

independent source

A

if obtained from knowledgeable independent sources outside the client company rather than from nonindependent sources

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14
Q

effective controls

A

if generated internally through system of effective controls rather than ineffective controls

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15
Q

directly

A

if obtained directly by auditor rather than indirectly

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16
Q

documentary

A

documentary in form rather than oral representation

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17
Q

original documents

A

original documents rather than copies or facsimilies

18
Q

quantity for sufficiency

A

(of evidence) enough evidence to form a reasonable opinion

19
Q

scope

A
  1. nature- what audit procedure
  2. timing- when to perform procedure
  3. extent- how many items should be subjected to the procedure
20
Q

inquiries

A

with management and employees

21
Q

observation

A

observe inventories, cash, securities, segregation of duties, etc.

22
Q

inspect

A

read documents

23
Q

vouch

A

from financial statements to internal documents

24
Q

trace

A

from internal documents to financial statements

25
Q

recalculate

A

test the mathematical accuracy of documents and records

26
Q

analytical

A

use of trend analysis, ratios, regressions, etc. to identify significant unusual items that will be tested

27
Q

confirm

A

with third parties

28
Q

reperformance

A

an independent execution of procedures and controls that were originally performed by the client

29
Q

further audit procedures

A

tests of controls
substantive procedures
NOT risk assessment procedures those come before

30
Q

risk assessment procedures

A
  1. inquiries of management and others within the entity
  2. analytical procedures
  3. observation
  4. inspection
  5. other procedures such as inspections of others outside the entity and reviewing info from external sources such as analysts, banks, etc.
31
Q

tests of controls

A

test for operating effectiveness, don’t really include monetary values i.e. the means of processing

32
Q

substantive tests

A

tests the ends of processing, they directly test whether the balance in the account is correct

  1. tests if details (in transactions, ending balances, disclosures)–dual purpose tests test at least two of these
  2. analytical procedures (identify unusual values to be tested)
33
Q

Risk assessment (Planning)

A

determine the nature, timing, and extent of other audit tests (required)

34
Q

Substantive testing

A

to obtain evidential matter about particular assertions related to account balances or classes of transactions (not required but generally performed)

35
Q

Near the end of the audit (overall review)

A

assess conclusions reached and in the evaluation of the overall financial statement presentation (required)

36
Q

Working Papers

A
  1. document basis for opinion–should include a written audit program for every audit
  2. evidence of compliance with GAAS
  3. coordinate and supervise audit
  4. audit documentation must contain sufficient info to enable an experienced auditor understand nature, timing, and extent and results of procedures performed, evidence obtained, and conclusion reached and determine who performed the work and the date completed and the person who reviewed and the date of review
37
Q

tickmarks

A

notes on the working papers summarizing results of audit tests

38
Q

cross reference

A

when the same info is included on two work papers, auditors indicate on each work paper index of the other work paper containing the identical info

39
Q

documentation completion date

A

60 days after the audit report release date (45 for public)

40
Q

saved

A

5 years non public

7 years public

41
Q

engagement completion document

A

PCAOB requirement that the auditor must prepare identifying significant findings or issues, actions taken to address them (including addition evidence obtained) and the basis for the conclusion in connection with each engagement