ANALYTICAL PROCEDURES AS A METHOD OF IDENTIFICATION OF INFORMATION IN THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF THE COMPANY

Author(s):  
Pavel Alexandrovich Aletkin ◽  
Nadezhda Timofeevna Leontyeva
Author(s):  
E. I. Efremova

The relevance of the study of the problems of applying analytical procedures in the audit of financial statements of non-state medical institutions is due to the increasing requirements for auditors: since we work in one of the most difficult and uneven economic climates in our time, audit is becoming an even more important guarantor of stability than ever before. The advantage of using analytical procedures is that they help to minimize audit costs and allow you to use the resources limited under the contract with maximum efficiency. The importance of applying analytical procedures is also due to the increase in the number of services provided by audit companies, such as consultations, etc.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 17-25
Author(s):  
Shamharir Abidin ◽  
Mohammed Abobaker Baabbad

This study sets out to investigate the extent to which Yemeni auditors use analytical review procedures during the audit of client’s financial statements. It also examines the stage of auditing procedure in which Yemeni auditors implement analytical review procedures. Moreover, the study determines the relationships between the importance’s factors and the use of analytical review procedures. The findings of the study have indicated that the Analytical Procedures were utilized on high percentage by audits in larger and high experienced audit firms compared to small and low experienced audit firms where the results have shown low percentage. Nevertheless, the role of auditors’ perception towards Analytical Procedures has proved to have a significant effect of usage of Analytical Procedures


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. I1-I13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew L. Hoag ◽  
Gabriel D. Saucedo

SUMMARY This case introduces students to nonfinancial measures (NFMs) and encourages thoughtful consideration and discourse surrounding their reporting and use by managers and auditors. NFMs are commonly reported by companies to provide increased transparency of operations and to more effectively describe performance. External parties such as analysts and auditors make use of NFMs in performing valuation assessments, fraud risk assessments, and substantive analytical procedures. In completing this case, students will be exposed to actual NFMs disclosed in SEC filings and employ Microsoft Excel knowledge to perform foundational analytical procedures. Students will also analyze how these NFMs link to the financial statements, as well as reflect upon the implications of NFMs for both internal and external users.


Author(s):  
Liudmyla Sokolenko ◽  

The paper studies approaches to the analytical procedures design for assessing profitability in auditing of housing and communal services management companies’ financial statements in order to increase the validity of the auditor's conclusion. The purpose of the article is to prove the usefulness of using analytical procedures for assessing profitability of management company’s financial statements during its auditing, formulating their tasks and directions of information and documentary support. It has been established that the use of economic and mathematical modeling and the calculation of the panel of profitability indicators as analytical procedures essentially make it possible to assess the management company activity efficiency, as well as use of resources, and the effectiveness of debt management. In article the auditor’s tasks of analytical procedures for assessing the profitability of housing and communal services management company were specified: 1) assessment of the management company’s profitability trend during the last reporting periods for establishing general trends in its performance and future activities development; 2) identification of factors that determine management company’s profitability changes over the analyzed time period, that will make it possible to record significant ones and describe potential threats to profitability; 3) determination of reserves for increasing profitability for specific business processes or types of activities; 4) establishing the impact of changes in profitability on the management company’s ability to ensure the continuous operation. A list of profitability indicators performance has been formed. They should be calculated in the path of analytical procedures. Also it is recommended to draw up a working document "Analytical procedures for assessing the profitability of a management company". Basing on the content of profitability indicators and the possibilities of their calculation in the auditor's analytical procedures, auditor’s considerations have been formulated. They should guide the auditor in interpreting the calculated indicators.


2000 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 27-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven M. Glover ◽  
James Jiambalvo ◽  
Jane Kennedy

This study examines auditors' decisions to revise preliminary audit plans after analytical procedures performed during interim testing reveal significant, unexpected fluctuations. We examine the effects of two variables on these decisions: (1) the presence or absence of an explicit incentive for management to misstate the financial statements, and (2) the degree to which management's explanation for the fluctuation is independently corroborated. We hypothesize that these two variables interact. Auditors will be more likely to increase their planned tests when there is minimal corroboration of management's explanation for the fluctuation and there is an explicit incentive for management to misrepresent the financial statements. The results of an experiment are consistent with this hypothesis. While our results suggest that auditors are more likely to revise audit plans in these conditions, we also find that a relatively high proportion of auditors do not revise their plans when faced with increased audit risk signaled by significant, unexpected fluctuations. Future research is needed to better understand auditors' reluctance to expand testing and whether this reluctance jeopardizes audit effectiveness.


2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven M. Glover ◽  
Douglas F. Prawitt ◽  
Michael S. Drake

SUMMARY Substantive analytical procedures can be an important and effective audit tool to gather evidence and highlight areas of potential misstatement, and for decades have been one of the common substantive procedures applied to income statement accounts. Recently, however, there is a growing trend for public company auditors to forego substantive analytical procedures on large income statement accounts, such as revenue, due to criticisms from regulatory inspectors that such procedures are not capable of providing useful substantive evidence. In this commentary, we address the concern that discouraging the application of appropriately rigorous substantive analytical procedures may diminish overall audit quality. We consider whether rigorous substantive analytical procedures can be designed to provide useful evidence at moderate and low levels of assurance for large income statement accounts, such as revenue, even when the significant-difference threshold exceeds overall materiality. Such procedures can provide strong evidence that financial statements are free of massive fraud or unintentional misstatement. Further, the moderate or low assurance obtained by such substantive analytical procedures can be combined with assurance provided by other audit procedures to yield high overall assurance. We illustrate one potential approach that may be useful in designing substantive analytical procedures to achieve moderate or low assurance and we explain how our approach is consistent with auditing theory and auditing standards.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. I1-I10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul M. Clikeman ◽  
Jamie Diaz

SUMMARY This instructional case demonstrates auditors' use of analytical procedures during the planning/risk assessment phase of a financial statement audit. An Excel spreadsheet enables instructors to embed up to seven operating problems or potential accounting issues into a fictitious consumer electronics manufacturer's current year financial statements. Questionnaires from students at two universities indicate that the case is effective at helping undergraduate auditing students understand (1) auditors' use of analytical procedures during the planning stage of the audit, and (2) the types of accounting issues and operating problems that might be identified using analytical procedures.


2020 ◽  
pp. 103-111
Author(s):  
Oksana Knyshek ◽  
◽  
Olena Konovalova ◽  
Valentyna Synelnyk ◽  
◽  
...  

In the conditions of the economic crisis, there is more and more growth in the need for reliable information about the prospects for the enterprise development for making economic decisions. The audit of the continuity of enterprise activity allows to improve the quality of information contained in the financial statements, as well as to provide all stakeholders with information resource, which contains an independent professional judgment of the auditor on the activities of the entity on a continuous basis. The purpose of the article is to reveal the essence of the going concern principle in accounting and audit and to substantiate practical tools for conducting an audit of the continuity of enterprise activity. The theoretical provisions on the definition of going concern principle and going concern assumption were disclosed. Analytical procedures used in the audit of the continuity of enterprise activity were characterized. The analytical procedures given in the study can be used at all stages of the audit of financial statements. The methods of carrying out express-diagnostics under the hour of finding out the factors of influence on the continuity of the enterprise activity was presented. The content of the test questionnaire for assessing the continuity of the enterprise activity was proposed. Criteria for assessing indicators depending on their actual level were substantiated to determine the possibility of continuous operation of an enterprise. Using the rating of indicators of the financial condition, the auditor will be able to determine the class of the enterprise and, accordingly, the risk of bankruptcy and the relationship of interested users with this enterprise. The influence of the assessing result of adhere to the going concern principle on the auditor's opinion was revealed.


Author(s):  
С.В. Колесников ◽  
Н.Б. Клишевич ◽  
Г.А. Юдина ◽  
М.А. Клишевич

Работа посвящена аналитическим процедурам в аудите дебиторской (ДЗ) и кредиторской (КЗ) задолженностей для организаций алюминиевой отрасли. Целью исследования является адаптация аналитических процедур в аудите ДЗ и КЗ с учетом рисков и отраслевой специфики. Задачи исследования: раскрытие специфики ДЗ и КЗ, а также специфики алюминиевой отрасли и ее влияния на бухгалтерскую (финансовую) отчетность, классификация рисков для выявления проблемных мест. The work is devoted to analytical procedures in the audit of receivables (hereinafter-AR) and payables (hereinafter – AP) for organizations of the aluminum industry. The purpose of the study is to adapt analytical procedures in the audit of AR and AP taking into account the risks and industry specifics. Research objectives: disclosure of the specifics of the AR and AP, as well as the specifics of the aluminum industry and its impact on accounting (financial) statements, risk classification to identify "problem areas".


Auditor ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-24
Author(s):  
Yuriy Kochinev ◽  
E. Antysheva

Th e article substantiates the choice of non-fi nancial indicators used in analytical procedures for assessing the risk of unfair misstatement of reporting, which can be used along with fi nancial indicators, but which (unlike fi nancial indicators) are diffi cult to manipulate. A set of control ratios has been developed, including non-fi nancial indicators for organizations of various types of activities.


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