ISA 701 and Materiality Disclosure as Methods to Minimize the Audit Expectation Gap
Abstract
:“Capitalism without bankruptcy is like Christianity without hell”Frank Borman—American astronaut
1. Introduction
- reporting (area ‘1’),
- assurance being provided (area ‘2’),
- regulation and liability (area ‘3’),
- audit independence (area ‘4’).
2. Literature Review
- emphasing the need to educate the public and reassure them about the exaggerated public outcries over isolated audit failures,
- codifying existing practices to legitimize them,
- attempting to control the audit expectation gap debate and repeatedly propounding the views of the profession,
- emphasing an awareness of the objective of the audit,
- readiness to extend the scope of an audit.
- areas of higher risk of material misstatement or in which significant risks were identified (IAASB 2009e, ISA 315),
- financial statement areas, which involve substantial management judgment (e.g., accounting estimates),
- effects of significant events or transactions, which occurred during the audited period.
- discuss this with the engagement quality control reviewer (if appointed),
- explain in the report that there are no KAM to be reported, including the rationale for such a conclusion (IAASB 2009c, ISA 230),
- communicate this with those charged with governance.
3. Research Methodology
- annual consolidated financial statements (annual reports)4,
- independent auditor reports,
- BDO (33, i.e., 10%);
- Grant Thornton (25, i.e., 8%);
- PKF (17, i.e., 5%).
- values of selected financial statements line items;
- detailed description of all KAMs reported;
- overall materiality levels and applied calculation methods.
4. Presentation of Research Results
- for five businesses (1.6% of the tested sample) no KAMs were reported by the auditors,
- revenue is the most vastly used as a KAM category (45.3% of auditors’ reports contained this KAM),
- the following 9 KAMs referred to all seven assertions: accounting policy, acquisition accounting, covenants, discontinued operations, first time adoption, fraud, going concern, initial audit and initial public offering (IPO),
- the valuation was the most frequently appearing assertion (745 items from a total of 2094, 35.6%);
- there is no clear differentiation in terms of presented patterns between Big 4 and non-Big 4 audit firms.
- coverage of sectors by Big 4 representatives was fairly even, with the exception of the energy, which was dominated by EY,
- specialization of auditors may be observed (Baker Tilly’s portfolio comprises mostly of food WIG) but no concentration over any particular auditor is visible within any sector,
- the most broadly used OM RoT was 4%, which was applied primarily:
- ■
- by KPMG,
- ■
- for normalized PBT,
- ■
- in construction WIG;
- relatively, among Big 4, EY has the least differentiated benchmarks, with PBT being the main variable used to determine materiality,
- among Big 4, profit before tax (PBT) was the most commonly used benchmark, followed by normalized PBT, while among non-Big 4 it was revenue and total assets respectively,
- there was no other clear differentiation in terms of presented patterns between Big 4 and non-Big 4 audit firms.
- for PBT, KPMG is 28.6% and PwC is 12.5% below the bottom threshold of 5% PBT, which means that they are even more detailed and conservative than as per the example presented in ISA 320, EY keeps it almost in the middle between the lower and upper limits, while Deloitte maintains its OM 27.3% over this base,
- for EBITDA, Deloitte stands out from the competition by getting close to the upper limit of the threshold, while the remainders keep it in the middle of the scale,
- for revenue, all Big 4 auditors except for Deloitte set up their OM below 1% revenue as per the example presented in ISA 320,
- finally, the situation for total assets is akin to the one for the revenue.
5. Summary and Conclusions
- among Big 4, profit before tax (PBT) was the most commonly used benchmark, followed by normalized PBT, while among non-Big 4 it was revenue and total assets respectively,
- there were identified the following Key Audit Matters which are related with all assertions: going concern, business combination accounting, fraud risk, first-year audit and discontinued operations,
- under the current approach, some financial statement items, such as other operating expenses, are not audited at all, it should be noted that this particular category is quite capacious and can easily hide undesirable “surprises”,
- although many individual Key Audit Matters were identified by auditors, they were fairly little differentiated, key categories, applied to most of the companies, were the same as benchmarks used for calculation of overall materiality,
- valuation stands out as the assertion, which is of utmost significance to the auditors, what clearly drives the way in which audit procedures are designed and performed,
- the extent of caution applied by non-Big 4 auditors, expressed by the level of overall materiality and its relation to relevant guidelines, is, in general, lower than the one exercised by their Big 4 colleagues, this means that audits performed by lesser firms may be less diligent than the ones conducted by market leaders.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Referring to what society expects of auditors and what can reasonably be expected of auditors to accomplish. |
2 | The gap between the responsibilities that society reasonably expects auditors to perform and auditors’ actual responsibilities under statute. |
3 | The difference between the expected standard of performance of auditors and the actual performance of responsibilities by auditors. |
4 | The research was executed based on the analysis of the annual consolidated financial statements or standalone financial statements in situations where there was no capital group. The tested sample consisted of 317 financial statements (both consolidated and standalone). |
5 | The following types of assertions were defined and analysed: C—completeness; A—accuracy; V—valuation; CO—cut-off; PD—presentation and disclosures; E—existence; RO—rights and obligations. |
Balance Sheet | |
---|---|
Fixed assets | 1570 |
Intangible assets | 270 |
Tangible assets | 985 |
Long-term receivables | 36 |
Long-term investments | 231 |
Long-term prepayments | 48 |
Current assets | 641 |
Inventory | 168 |
Short-term receivables | 228 |
Short-term investments | 218 |
Short-term prepayments | 27 |
Total assets | 2211 |
Equity | 1013 |
Provisions for liabi. and accruals | 44 |
Long-term liabilities | 701 |
Short-term liabilities | 453 |
Total equity and liabilities | 2211 |
Profit and Loss | |
Net revenues from sales | 1570 |
Operating expenses, incl. | 1407 |
Amortization and depreciation | 90 |
Other operating income | 14 |
Other operating expenses | 9 |
Financial income | 9 |
Financial expenses | 23 |
Gross profit (loss) | 154 |
Net profit (loss) | 106 |
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Iwanowicz, T.; Iwanowicz, B. ISA 701 and Materiality Disclosure as Methods to Minimize the Audit Expectation Gap. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2019, 12, 161. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm12040161
Iwanowicz T, Iwanowicz B. ISA 701 and Materiality Disclosure as Methods to Minimize the Audit Expectation Gap. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2019; 12(4):161. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm12040161
Chicago/Turabian StyleIwanowicz, Tomasz, and Bartłomiej Iwanowicz. 2019. "ISA 701 and Materiality Disclosure as Methods to Minimize the Audit Expectation Gap" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 12, no. 4: 161. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm12040161
APA StyleIwanowicz, T., & Iwanowicz, B. (2019). ISA 701 and Materiality Disclosure as Methods to Minimize the Audit Expectation Gap. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 12(4), 161. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm12040161