Audit of Accounts
receivables
If your
company is subject to an annual audit, the auditors will review its accounts
receivable in some detail. Accounts receivable is frequently the largest asset
that a company has, so auditors tend to spend a considerable amount of time
gaining assurance that the amount of the stated asset is reasonable.
Objective of the Audit of Accounts Receivable
The overall objective of the audit
of accounts receivable and sales is
to determine if they are fairly presented in the context of the financial
statements as a whole.The sales account is closely tied to accounts
receivable; therefore,
evidence supporting accounts receivable tends to support sales.
Here are
some of the accounts receivable audit procedures that they may follow:
a) Trace receivable report to general ledger.
The auditors will ask for a period-end accounts receivable aging report, from
which they trace the grand total to the amount in the accounts receivable
account in the general ledger. (If these totals do not match, you may have a
journal entry somewhere in the general ledger account that should not be there)
b) Calculate the receivable report total.
The auditors will add up the invoices on the accounts receivable aging report
to verify that the total they traced to the general ledger is correct.
c) Investigate reconciling items.
If you have journal entries in the accounts receivable account in the general
ledger, the auditors will likely want to review the justification for the
larger amounts. This means that these journal entries should be fully
documented.
d) Test invoices listed in receivable report.
The auditors will select some invoices from the accounts receivable aging
report and compare them to supporting documentation to see if they were billed
in the correct amounts, to the correct customers, and on the correct dates.
e) Match invoices to shipping log.
The auditors will match invoice dates to the shipment dates for those items in
the shipping log, to see if sales are being recorded in the correct accounting
period. This can include an examination of invoices issued after the period
being audited, to see if they should have been included in a prior period.
f) Confirm accounts receivable.
A major auditor activity is to contact your customers directly and ask them to
confirm the amounts of unpaid accounts receivable as of the end of the
reporting period they are auditing. This is primarily for larger account
balances, but may include a few random customers having smaller outstanding
invoices.
g) Review cash receipts. If
the auditors are unable to confirm accounts receivable, their backup auditing
technique is to verify that customers have paid the invoices, for which they
will want to review checks copies and trace them through your bank account.
h) Assess the allowance for doubtful accounts.
The auditors will review the process that you follow to derive an allowance for
doubtful accounts. This will include a consistency comparison with the method
you used in the last year, and a determination of whether the method is
appropriate for your business environment.
i) Assess bad debt write-offs.
The auditors will compare the proportion of bad debt expense to sales for this
year in comparison to prior years, to see if the current expense appears
reasonable.
j) Review credit memos.
The auditors will review a selection of the credit memos issued during the
audit period to see if they were properly authorized, whether they were issued
in the correct period, and whether the circumstances of their issuance may
indicate other problems. They may also review credit memos issued after the
period being audited, to see if they relate to transactions from within the
audit period.
k) Assess bill and hold sales.
If you have situations where you are billing customers for sales despite still
retaining the goods on-site (known as "bill and hold"), the auditors
will examine your supporting documentation to determine whether a sale has
actually taken place.
l) Review receiving log.
The auditors will review the receiving log to see if it records an inordinately
large amount of customer returns after the audit period, which would suggest
that the company may have shipped more goods near the end of the audit period
than customers had authorized.
m)
Related party receivables.
If there are any related party receivables, the auditors may review them for collect-ability,
as well as whether they should instead be recorded as wages or dividends, and
whether they were properly authorized.
n) Trend analysis.
The auditors may review a trend line of sales and accounts receivable, or a
comparison of the two over time, to see if there are any unusual trends.
Another possible comparison is of receivables to current assets. They may also
measure the average collection period. If so, expect them to make inquiries
about the reasons for changes in the trends.
The preceding list of audit procedures is
designed to detect a variety of audit risks, which include the following:
- That receivables do not exist
- That recorded receivable balances are inaccurate
- That it may not be possible to collect accounts receivable
- That the derivation of the allowance for doubtful accounts may not properly reflect bad debt experience
- That sales transactions were not processed in the correct periods
- That revenue was incorrectly recognized
********************
0 comments:
Post a Comment