Chapter 1
Overview
Learning Objectives
After completing this chapter
- You should have an overall understanding of the audit risk assessment standards (SAS
Nos. 104-111) and the fraud risk assessment standard (SAS No. 99) to enable you to
integrate the requirements of those standards into the typical audit process.
- You should also be able to describe the key activities in the typical process for auditing
an entity’s financial statements in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Introduction
Statement on Auditing Standards Nos. 104 through 111 became effective for audits of financial
statements for periods beginning on or after December 15, 2006 with earlier application
permitted. These standards are referred to as the “Risk Assessment Standards” in this course. The
individual standards include the following:
- SAS No. 104, Amendment to Statement on Auditing Standards No. 1, Codification of
Auditing Standards and Procedures (“Due Professional Care in the Performance of
Work”)
- SAS No. 105, Amendment to Statement on Auditing Standards No. 95, Generally
Accepted Auditing Standards
- SAS No. 106, Audit Evidence
- SAS No. 107, Audit Risk and Materiality in Conducting an Audit
- SAS No. 108, Planning and Supervision
- SAS No. 109, Understanding the Entity and Its Environment and Assessing the Risks of
Material Misstatement
- SAS No. 110, Performing Audit Procedures in Response to Assessed Risks and
Evaluating the Audit Evidence Obtained
- SAS No. 111, Amendment to Statement on Auditing Standards No. 39, Audit Sampling
SAS No. 99,
Consideration of Fraud in a Financial Statement Audit has been in effect for audits
of financial statements for periods that began on or after December 15, 2002.
This course starts with an overview of the Risk Assessment Standards and SAS No. 99, followed
by an overview of the typical audit process. The program then examines how to integrate the
Audit Risk Standards and SAS No. 99 into the audit process to gain efficiency and effectiveness.
The goal of the program is to enable the auditor to discharge his or her responsibility to plan and
perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance that material misstatements, whether caused by
error or fraud, are detected. The program also partially addresses SAS No. 103,
Audit
Documentation, SAS No. 112,
Communicating Internal Control Related Matters Identified in an
Audit and SAS No. 114,
The Auditor’s Communication With Those Charged With Governance.
Overview of the Risk Assessment Standards
In general, the Audit Risk Standards:
- Expand the quality and depth of the auditor’s required understanding of the entity and its
environment, including its internal control – The standards require the auditor to obtain
an understanding of a significantly expanded set of information about specific elements
of the entity and its environment. The purpose of the required understanding of this
broadened set of information about the entity and its environment is to enhance the
auditor’s ability to identify and assess risks that may lead to material misstatements in the
financial statements. The auditor is required to perform risk assessment procedures on all
audits to obtain an understanding of the entity and its control environment, including its
internal control. Risk assessment procedures include updating information obtained in
prior audits that the auditor intends to use in the current audit. The expanded
understanding about the entity and its environment should also be helpful to the auditor
throughout the audit when making judgments about materiality and when critically
evaluating audit evidence.
- Require the auditor to assess the risks of material misstatements at the financial
statement level and at the assertion level on all audits based on the understanding
obtained – The standards note that assessing risks of material misstatements encompasses
an assessment of inherent risk, control risk and combined risk. The auditor may no longer
assess “risk at the maximum” without support for that assessment. Thus, auditors are
required to support all risk assessments at whatever level, including risks at the
maximum, based on their understanding of the entity and its environment, including its
internal control. In addition, the auditor is required to identify “significant risks”
(described later) that require special audit consideration, and risks for which substantive
procedures alone will not reduce audit risk to an appropriate level.
- Encourage tests of controls – The auditor is required to understand internal control on
every audit. Such understanding includes a requirement to evaluate the internal control
design, including whether the controls have been implemented for significant processes
and controls. Since auditors may no longer assess control risk “at the maximum” without
support for that assessment, at least some auditors have changed their audit approach to
include testing of controls. These auditors are benefiting by shifting more audit work to
interim periods instead of after year-end.
- Emphasize the importance of the entity’s risk assessment process – When the auditor
identifies potential risks of material misstatements in the financial statements, it is
important for the auditor to consider the entity’s risk assessment process and how it fits in
with the entity’s process of setting objectives and strategies and assessing related
business risks. Generally new customers, products, locations, accounting standards,
events, etc. create the potential for risks of material misstatements. When the auditor
identifies risks of material misstatements that the entity’s risk assessment processes failed
to detect, he or she is required to consider why the process failed and whether the process
is appropriate in the circumstance.
- Strengthen the linkage between assessed risks and the auditor’s responses to those risks –
Additional guidance is provided to help auditors provide more effective responses to
identified risks. An overall response addresses risks of material misstatement at the
financial statement level while a response to address risks at the financial statement
assertion level is more specific with respect to the nature, timing, and extent of
procedures. The auditor is required to perform substantive procedures for “significant
risks.” These substantive procedures consist of tests of details alone or tests of details
combined with substantive analytical procedures that are specifically responsive to the
identified risks. If the auditor plans to rely on the operating effectiveness of controls to
mitigate a significant risk, he or she is required to obtain evidence about the operating
effectiveness of those controls from tests of controls. The auditor cannot conclude that
controls to mitigate significant risks are operating effectively based on tests of controls
performed in prior audits even when the auditor has also determined that the controls did
not change since that testing.
- Clarify the auditor’s ability to rely on audit evidence gathered in prior audits – Except
for controls related to significant risks, the auditor, who plans to rely on controls that
have not changed since they were last tested, should perform tests of the operating
effectiveness of those controls at least every third audit.
- Strengthen guidance for testing disclosures – The auditor is required to test the
“completeness” of disclosures and their understandability.
- Clarify and expand guidance on evaluating audit findings – When evaluating audit
findings, auditors should consider the effect of uncorrected misstatements related to prior
periods on the current-period financial statements.
- Expand documentation requirements – Auditors are required to document, among other
things, the following items:
– Results of risk assessments both at the financial statement level and assertion level;
– The nature, timing, and extent of audit procedures performed;
– The linkage of auditor responses with the assessed risks at the assertion level; and,
– Results of the audit procedures.
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