Study Unit 13: questions Flashcards
The auditor who interviews the plant manager is most likely to rely upon this interview as primary support for an audit conclusion on
The necessity to record a provision for deferred maintenance costs.
The auditor typically does not use the responses to inquiries as primary support for an audit conclusion. However, the determination by management that a liability exists should convince the auditor that an entry should be made.
An analysis of which of the following accounts would best aid in verifying that all fixed assets have been capitalized?
Repairs and maintenance.
To determine whether all transactions affecting fixed assets for the period are correctly reflected in the balance of the account, the auditor should (1) perform analytical procedures, (2) reconcile subsidiary and general ledgers, and (3) analyze repairs and maintenance. The auditor should vouch significant debits from the repairs and maintenance expense account to determine whether any should have been capitalized.
The auditor may conclude that depreciation charges are insufficient by noting
Excessive recurring losses on assets retired.
Excessive recurring losses on assets retired indicate excess carrying amounts at the dates of disposition. The implication is that the method of cost allocation has not been sufficient. The effect of understating depreciation in prior periods would have been to overstate income in those periods and understate income in the period of retirement.
In performing a search for unrecorded retirements of fixed assets, an auditor most likely would
Inspect the property ledger and the insurance and tax records, and then tour the client’s facilities.
An auditor determines that a client has properly capitalized a leased asset (and corresponding lease liability) as representing, in substance, an installment purchase. As part of the auditor’s procedures, (s)he should
Evaluate the propriety of the interest rate used in discounting the future lease payments.
Under U.S. GAAP, a capital lease is recorded by the lessee as an asset and a liability at the present value of the minimum lease payments. Thus, the interest rate used in the discounting process is an important consideration in determining whether the asset is fairly presented in the balance sheet. The interest rate is the lessee’s incremental borrowing rate, unless the lessor’s implicit rate in the lease is known and is less than the lessee’s incremental rate.
In verifying the amount of goodwill recorded by a client in the current period, the most convincing evidence an auditor can obtain is by comparing the recorded amounts of assets acquired and liabilities assumed with the
Fair values as evidenced by independent appraisals.
When auditing prepaid insurance, an auditor discovers that the original insurance policy on plant equipment is not available for inspection. The policy’s absence most likely indicates the possibility of a(n)
Lien on the plant equipment.
When liens are placed on equipment or property, the lienholder often requires that the assets be insured and that the lienholder be named as the beneficiary. Hence, the policy is likely to be held by the lienholder even though the client is required to pay the premiums.
In testing for unrecorded retirements of equipment, an auditor most likely would
Select items of equipment from the accounting records and then locate them during the plant tour.
When the risk of material misstatement is assessed as low for assertions related to payroll, substantive tests of payroll balances most likely would be limited to applying analytical procedures and
Recalculating payroll accruals.
When controls are judged to be effective, the auditor’s procedures are typically limited to analytical procedures and testing for completeness and cutoff of the year-end accruals.
An auditor usually obtains evidence of a company’s equity transactions by reviewing its
Minutes of board of directors meetings.
Equity transactions are typically few in number and large in amount. They require authorization by the board of directors. Thus, an auditor reviews the minutes of the board meetings to identify transactions.
During an audit of a company’s equity accounts, the auditor determines whether restrictions have been imposed on retained earnings resulting from loans, agreements, or state law. This audit procedure most likely is intended to verify relevant assertion about
A.Existence or occurrence.
B.Classification and understandability.
C.Valuation and allocation.
D.Completeness.
Classification and understandability.
The presentation and disclosure assertions include assertions about classification and understandability. Financial information should be properly presented and disclosed, and disclosures should be clear (AU-C 315 and AS No. 15). Hence, when restrictions have been placed on retained earnings, the auditor should determine that they are properly disclosed in the notes to the financial statements.
When a company has a material amount of treasury stock certificates on hand, a year-end count of the certificates by the auditor is
Always part of the audit plan.
All capital transactions should be verified. Thus, the auditor should count the certificates of treasury stock on hand at year end at the same time the other securities are counted. This procedure provides direct evidence that the treasury stock exists and is in the possession of the entity. Any treasury stock certificates not on hand are confirmed with the holders.
The auditor is concerned with establishing that dividends are paid to client corporation shareholders who hold stock as of the
Record date.
Persons who hold stock in the corporation as of the record date are entitled to payment of the dividend. The auditor should test the dividend payment list to gather evidence that dividends were paid to the appropriate shareholders. The integrity of the dividend payment process is enhanced when an independent agent (usually a financial institution) is used to pay dividends.
A bond trust indenture is the contractual agreement between the bondholders and the bond issuer. It contains the date of issue and the date of maturity of the bond issue. It also contains:
(1) the amount of the bonds,
(2) interest rates,
(3) payment dates,
(4) descriptions of collateral,
(5) provisions for conversion or retirement,
(6) trustee duties,
(7) sinking-fund requirements, and
(8) restrictions on the borrower.
During its fiscal year, a company issued, at a discount, a substantial amount of first-mortgage bonds. When performing audit work in connection with the bond issue, the independent auditor should
Review the minutes for authorization.
Bonds issued during the year under audit should be traced to the minutes of the shareholders’ or board of directors’ meetings to check for proper authorization. The amount sold should be no greater than the amount authorized in the minutes.