Financial audit

Contents

Basic definition

A financial audit is the examination of financial records and reports of a company, in order to verify that the figures in the financial reports are relevant, accurate, and complete. The general focus is on making sure that all assets and liabilities are properly recorded on the balance sheet, that the statement of income and expenses is correct.

Doing a financial audit is called the "attest" function. The general purpose is for an independent party (the CPA firm) to provide written assurance (the audit report) that financial reports are "fairly presented in conformity with generally accepted accounting principals."

Because of major accounting scandals (failure by CPA firms to detect widespread fraud), assessing internal control procedures have increased in magnitude as a part of financial audits.

Financial audits are typically done by external auditors (CPA firms). Many organizations, including most very large organizations, also employ (or hire) internal auditors, who do not attest to financial reports. (Internal auditors often assist external auditors, and, in theory, since both do internal control work, their efforts should be coordinated.)

History

Prior to the 1930s, corporations were required neither to submit annual reports to government agencies or shareholders nor to have such reports audited. In the United States, the 1934 Securities and Exchange Act required all publicly traded companies to disclosure certain financial information, and that financial information be audited. The establishment of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) created a body to enforce the audit requirements.

In the United States, the SEC has generally deferred to the accounting industry (acting through various organizations throughout the years) as to the accounting standards for finanical reporting, and the U.S. Congress has deferred to the SEC. Accordingly, financial auditing standards (and what financial audits accomplish) has tended to change (and increase) only after auditing failures.

Steps

Main elements of the accounts to be audited

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Audit is usually done annually through 3 main steps.

Interim review

This is the first approach of the company. It usually occurs in the middle of the financial year. For instance, a company closes its accounts yearly on December 31st. The interim audit will start in June, covering the first half of the fiscal year.

The purpose is

Hard Close

This audit precedes the closing date. For a company closing on December 31, 20xx, the Hard Close would typically occur using numbers as of November 30, 20xx. Note: some hard closes are performed using the numbers as of the preceding quarter end (i.e. in the above example as of September 30, 20xx). The purpose is to audit all movements year to date.

This audit step is not mandatory, but is generally performed on larger companies to reduce the amount of time spent on the audit during Final.

Final

This is the latest step of the audit, usually some weeks after the closing. For a company closing on December 31, 2000, the Final would occur on January 30, 2001. Thanks to the work already done during the Hard Close, only the remaining range between the date of the Hard Close and the closing has to be audited.

Main tests for each process

Stakes

Audit has some specificities throughout the world but has some mains components. One of the main problem in audit is the conflict between the need to control a company and the business relationship. On one hand, the audit company has to thoroughly check the books, but on the other side, it has to keep its customer that is its source of revenue. In practical terms, this means that the audit company will try to protect itself by carrying out the minimum checks, but if it has a slight doubt, it won't go further if the client is a bit reluctant to give out information. The power of the auditor is limited by its appeal for revenues.

Biggest audit companies (often called Fat or Big Four)

Differences in terminology - US GAAP vs UK GAAP

Whilst the format of financial statements is roughly the same in the US and Europe, there are some differences in the accounting terms used.

The table below highlights some of the common ones:

US accounting term UK accounting term
Facilities or Fixed Assets Fixed Assets
Inventory Stock
Receivables / Accounts Receivable Debtors / Sales Ledger
Payables / Accounts Payable Creditors / Purchase Ledger
Stockholders' Equity or Shareholders' Equity Shareholders' Funds
Income Statement Profit and Loss Account
Revenue Turnover

See also: Financial audit, Deloitte, Enron, Ernst & Young, KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers