Glisten PLC
Glisten PLC
Glisten PLC
ISA 300 states that auditors should obtain an understanding of the accounting
and internal control systems sufficient to plan an audit and to develop an
effective audit approach.
3. Assigning of Responsibility
4. Transactions Records:
Treasury has increasingly become a strategic business partner across all areas of the
business that adds value to the operating divisions of the company. As an auditor I
want to see strict internal control over treasury procedures like borrowings,
repayments, investment portfolio and working capital procedures.
6. Segregation of Duties
One person should not be responsible for the recording and processing of duties.
Involvement of many people reduces the risk of intentional manipulation or error and
increases the element of checking. Functions which should be separated include
authorization, execution, custody, recording and in case of computer-based
accounting system, systems development and daily operations.
7. Custody of Assets:
Physical custody of assets and procedures and security measures designed to ensure
that access to assets is limited to authorised personnel. Access can be direct, e.g being
able to enter the warehouse or indirect access via documentation e.g personnel
knowing the correct procedures, may be able to extract goods by doing the right paper
work.
Examples are locking of securities (share certificates etc) in a safe with procedures for
the custody of use of keys. Use of passes to restrict access to the warehouse. Use of
password to restrict access to particular computer files.
Risk Assessment:
Inherent risk and control risk related to the company set to be high that suggest less
reliance on internal control. I relied more heavily on external evidence such as
confirmations, physical inspections, calculations and reconciliations.
Materiality for Income Statement:
Based on the total assets of the company the estimated errors totalling £800,000 or
1% of total asset would be material for balance sheet.
Aggregate materiality:
For planning purposes I consider £700,000 to be material for any one of the financial
statements. If any one of the financial statements errors totalling exceeds this figure, it
will be considered materially misstated.
Task 3.
Materiality levels judged in part 2 are further classified on individual basis that means
the impact of a single misstatement on the financial statements. I also considered
aggregate materiality that is the total effect of two or more misstatements, each of
which is not material by itself. In this third part I allocated the materiality to the
relevant accounts and set a tolerable misstatement for each account. The tolerable
error is the minimum misstatement that can exist in an account balance for it to be
misstated.
Although revenue figure does not fluctuate considerably if compared with previous
year. But still possibility of misstatement of the figure is high. Revenue amount could
be highly overstated or understated. Any overstatement or understatement of 50% of
aggregate materiality i.e £350,000 will be material and revenue will be considered
misstated.
Cost of Sales:
Cost of sales £58.6m represents 80% of total revenues that lowers the profit margin of
the company. As an auditor I suspect an overstatement of this figure. It can misstate
the profit figure sizeably. Some precise measures are needed to evaluate the reliability
of the stated figures because it directly effects the profits of the company. Therefore
low materiality levels are suggested and any misstatement over £300,000 is
considered as material.
Finance Cost:
The group holds an interest hedge over £23m of its debt to bring stability to its
financing costs. These hedges are classed as derivatives. The marked to market fair
value of this hedge at the year end was a liability of over £4m which give rise to the
finance cost of the company to £6 million. There is a probability of misstatement of
this figure due to its importance. As compare to previous year it shows an abnormal
increase, that raise the chances of overstatement of figure. With low materiality level
an amount of £50,000 is considered material which is 7% of aggregate materiality.
The carrying amount of goodwill is based on the company’s cash generating units.
Goodwill is valued on assumptions of forecasted profits, growth rates and discount
factors. Significant fact is that the amount of goodwill is more than half of the total
assets amount. I expect there is more chances of materiality to be overstated.
Therefore it will require a 100% audit.
Equity:
Equity figure needs to be accurate and I expect no error under this head. This account
needs a 100% audit.
Inventories:
Inventories represent 10% of total assets and this amount does not vary noticeably
from previous year. There are possible chances of errors in the inventory figure and
cost of detection is higher. An error upto 30% of aggregate materiality i.e 200,000/- is
estimated to be maximum misstatement in this account.
Financial Liabilities:
The group holds an interest hedge over £23m of its debt to bring stability to its
financing costs. These hedges are classed as derivatives. The marked to market fair
value of this hedge at the year end was a liability of over £4m which give rise to the
finance cost of the company to £6 million. There is a probability of misstatement of
this figure due to its importance. As compare to previous year it shows an abnormal
increase, that raise the chances of overstatement of figure. With low materiality level
an amount of £35,000 is considered material which is 5% of aggregate materiality.
Borrowings:
Company has three loans and overdraft facility from banks. Bank loans due after one
year showed £24m. Materiality is presumed to be zero and a 100% audit required for
this head.
This allocation is made on the basis of expected monitory misstatements and audit
costs. Larger materiality allocations are made to receivables and inventories as I
expect more misstatements in these accounts and also the cost of detection related to
these accounts is high.
Task 4:
On the basis of evidence and information I gathered from the work I have performed I
need to reallocate some portion of materiality to accounts.
On the other hand in purchasing process I found some weaknesses that need to be
adequate. Some large amount purchases need to be verified from external sources. I
expect some overstatement that will effect the cost of sales. Therefore materiality
levels need to be high. The maximum tolerable misstatement figure is increased by
£100,000 i.e from £300,000 to £400,000.
Inventory figure includes raw material, consumables, finished goods and goods for
resale. The stated amounts represent all and only existing stock and work in progress.
Adequate provisions are made for foreseeable losses. I found reasonable evidence that
stocks and work in progress presented in the financial statements in accordance with
the Companies Act and accounting standards. The maximum misstatement in
inventory account is estimated to be £250,000.
Property, plant and equipment are stated at cost less depreciation. Depreciation is
provided at rates calculated to write off the cost of fixed assets less their estimated
residual value over their expected useful lives. Any addition or disposal require
approval by concerned department. Additions of £2 m has been made during the year.
Disposals also show a large figure for the year. All additions, depreciations and
impairments has made according to the rules.
Financial instrument of the company comprise borrowings, some cash and liquid
sources and items such as trade receivables and trade payables that arise directly from
its operations. The purpose of these financial instruments is to manage the finances of
the company’s operations. Loan and receivables are non financial assets with fixed or
determinable payments that are not quoted in an active market and are included in
current assets. Financial liabilities are carried at amortized cost. Company has good
internal control procedures to value these instruments. I expect less errors under this
head.