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©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 1 Audit of Cash Balances Chapter 23.

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Presentation on theme: "©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 1 Audit of Cash Balances Chapter 23."— Presentation transcript:

1 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 1 Audit of Cash Balances Chapter 23

2 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 2 Learning Objective 1 Show the relationship of cash in the bank to the various transaction cycles.

3 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 3 Relationships of Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles Cash in Bank Capital Stock – Common Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par – Common Redemption of stock Redemption of stock Issue of stock Issue of stock Dividends Payable Payment of dividends Capital Acquisition and Repayment Cycle:

4 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 4 Relationships of Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles Acquisition and Payment Cycle: Cash in Bank Accounts Payable Payment

5 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 5 Relationships of Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles Sales and Collection Cycle: Cash in Bank Accounts Receivable Gross Sales Cash sales Cash receipts Cash Discounts Taken

6 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 6 Relationships of Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles Payroll and Personnel Cycle: Cash in Bank Accrued Wages, Salaries, Bonuses, and Commissions Withheld Income Taxes and Other Deductions Payment Accrued Payroll Tax Expense Payment

7 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 7 Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles  Failure to bill a customer  An embezzlement of cash by interception ofcash receipts from customers before they are recorded, with the account charged off as a bad debt Misstatements which may not be discovered as a part of the audit of the bank reconciliation:

8 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 8 Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles  Duplicate payment of a vendor’s invoice  Improper payments of officers’ personal expenditures  Payment for raw materials that were not received  Payment to an employee for more hours worked  Payment of interest to a related party for an amount in excess of the going rate

9 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 9 Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles Misstatements which are normally discovered as a part of the tests of a bank reconciliation:  Failure to include a check that has not cleared the bank, even though it has been recorded in the cash disbursements journal  Cash received by the client subsequent to the balance sheet date but recorded as cash receipts in the current year

10 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 10 Cash in the Bank and Transaction Cycles  Deposits recorded as cash receipts near the end of the year, deposited in the bank in the same month, and included in the bank reconciliation as a deposit in transit  Payments on notes payable debited directly to the bank balance by the bank but not entered in the client’s records

11 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 11 Learning Objective 2 Identify the major types of cash accounts maintained by business entities.

12 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 12  General cash account  Imprest accounts  Branch bank account  Imprest petty cash fund  Cash equivalents Types of Cash Accounts

13 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 13 Relationship of General Cash to Other Cash Accounts Branch Bank Account Cash Equivalents Imprest Payroll Account Imprest Petty Cash Fund General Cash

14 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 14 Learning Objective 3 Design and perform audit tests of the general cash account.

15 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 15 Identify client business risks affecting cash in bank Methodology for Designing Tests of Balances for Cash in the Bank Set tolerable misstatement and assess inherent risk for cash in bank Assess control risk for several cycles Phase I

16 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 16 Methodology for Designing Tests of Balances for Cash in the Bank Design and perform tests of controls and substantive tests of transactions for several cycles Phase II

17 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 17 Timing Items to select Sample size Audit procedures Methodology for Designing Tests of Balances for Cash in the Bank Design and perform analytical procedures for cash in bank Design tests of details of cash in bank to satisfy balance-related audit objectives Phase III

18 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 18 Audit Schedule for a Bank Reconciliation Clawson Industries Bank Reconciliation 12/31/07 Schedule A-2 Date Prepared by Client DED 1/10/08 Approved by SW1/18/08 Account 101 – General account, First National Bank Balance per bank$109,713 Add: Deposits in transit 21,117 Deduct: Outstanding checks– 87,462 Other reconciling items: Bank error – 15,200 Balance per bank, adjusted$ 28,168 Balance per books before adjustments$ 32,584 Adjustments: Unrecorded bank service charge 216 NSF4,200 – 4,416 Balance per books, adjusted$ 28,168

19 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 19 Balance-related Audit Objectives Detail tie-in: Cash in the bank foots correctly and agrees with the general ledger. Existence: Cash in the bank as stated on the reconciliation exists. Completeness: Existing cash in the bank is recorded.

20 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 20 Balance-related Audit Objectives Accuracy : Cash in the bank as stated on the reconciliation is accurate. Cutoff: Cash receipts and cash disbursements transactions are recorded in the proper period.

21 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 21  Receipt of a bank confirmation  Receipt of a cutoff bank statement  Tests of the bank reconciliation Procedures

22 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 22 Extended Tests of the Bank Reconciliation When the auditor believes that the year-end bank reconciliation may be intentionally misstated, it is appropriate to perform extended tests of the year-end bank reconciliation.

23 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 23 Types of Audit Tests Used for General Cash in Bank Cash in Bank Ending balance TOC-T + TOC-B + STOT + AP + TDB = Sufficient appropriate evidence Audited by TOC-T, STOT, and AP Beginning balance Cash receiptsCash disbursements Audited by TOC-T, STOT, and AP Audited by TOC-B, AP, and TDB

24 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 24 Learning Objective 4 Recognize when to extend audit tests of the general cash account to test further for material fraud.

25 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 25 Fraud Oriented Procedures The auditor must extend the procedures in the audit of year-end cash to determine the possibility of a material fraud.

26 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 26 Extended Tests of the Bank Reconciliation When the auditor believes that the year-end bank reconciliation may be intentionally misstated, it is appropriate to perform extended tests of the year-end bank reconciliation.

27 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 27 Proof of Cash  All recorded cash receipts were deposited  All deposits in the bank were recorded in the accounting records  All recorded cash disbursements were paid by the bank  All amounts that were paid by the bank were recorded

28 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 28 1.The balance on the bank statement with the general ledger balance at the beginning of the proof-of-cash period 2.Cash receipts deposited per the bank with the cash receipts journal for a given period Proof of Cash Includes the following reconciliation tasks:

29 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 29 3.Cancelled checks clearing the bank with those recorded in the cash disbursements journal for a given period 4.The balance on the bank statement with the general ledger balance at the end of the proof-of-cash period Proof of Cash Includes the following reconciliation tasks:

30 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 30 The accuracy of the information on the interbank transfer schedule should be verified. The interbank transfers must be recorded in both the receiving and disbursing banks. The date of the recording of the disbursements and receipts for each transfer must be in the same fiscal year. Interbank Transfers

31 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 31 Disbursements on the interbank transfer schedule should be correctly included in or excluded from year-end bank reconciliation as outstanding checks. Interbank Transfers Receipts on the interbank transfer schedule should be correctly included in or excluded from year-end bank reconciliations as deposits in transit.

32 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 32 Learning Objective 5 Design and perform audit tests of the imprest payroll bank account.

33 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 33 Typically, the only reconciling items are outstanding checks. Audit of the Imprest Payroll Bank Account

34 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 34 Learning Objective 6 Design and perform audit tests of imprest petty cash.

35 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 35 Petty cash is a unique account because it is often immaterial in amount, yet it is verified on many audits. The account is verified primarily because of the potential for embezzlement and the client’s expectation of an audit review even when the amount is immaterial. Petty Cash

36 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 36  Audit tests for petty cash  Internal controls over petty cash Audit of Imprest Petty Cash

37 ©2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 12/e, Arens/Beasley/Elder 23 - 37 End of Chapter 23


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