In Part 1 of the article on AU-C 320, requirements of the
standard, definitions and types of error were discussed. This Part will focus on the practical application
of the standard.
Preliminary Estimate
of Materiality for the Financial Statements as a Whole (Planning Materiality)
Simply put, the preliminary estimate of materiality at the
financial statement level is the maximum amount by which the auditors believe
the statements could be misstated, by known or unknown error or fraud, and
still not affect the decisions of reasonable financial statement users. Clarified Auditing Standards require
quantification of materiality levels, which are estimates of the perceptions of
likely users of financial statements. These estimates guide auditors’
decision-making and design of auditing procedures. Again, these estimates are only guides and are
not specific determinations of what is, and is not, material in an audit. The nature of engagement risks, the needs of
financial statement users, and audit objectives provide information for the
ultimate determination of materiality.
Usually, a single base such as the higher of total revenues
or total assets is selected for the financial statements taken as a whole. Once the base is determined, the dollar
amount of the base is normally multiplied by a percentage factor, sometimes
determined by the volume of the base, to determine the allowance for known
and unknown error and fraud in the financial statements taken as a
whole. Next, a percentage factor based on risk at the financial statement level
is multiplied times planning materiality to determine tolerable misstatement,
or performance materiality, which is the maximum amount of known and likely
error (uncorrected error) an auditor can accept in the financial statements
without adjustment.
A Practical Framework
for Materiality Calculations
A general range of 50% to 75 % of planning materiality,
based on moderate risk at the financial statement level, is commonly used to
calculate tolerable misstatement (performance materiality) at the financial
statement level. Extremely low risk
could enable an auditor to calculate performance materiality at an even higher
level, say 80% to 90%. Lower risk at the financial statement level will result
in fewer individually significant items.
When risk is high at the financial statement level, a lower
level of tolerable misstatement can result by using a factor of 10% to 30%.
This will result in a lower, lower limit for individually significant items and
gathering more evidence from auditing smaller account balances, general journal
entries, unusual transactions, etc.
All the percentage factors illustrative above are based on
an auditors’ professional judgment resulting from the assessed level of risk at
the financial statement level. None of the factors are specified in the
auditing standards.
Individually Significant Items for Financial Statements Taken as a Whole:
Performance materiality (tolerable misstatement) is the base
for determining the lower limit for individually significant items in the
financial statements taken as a whole, ranging from 10% to 100% of performance
materiality, depending on high risk or low risk respectively. For engagements with higher risk of material
misstatement at the financial statement level, individually significant items
will generally be those account balances, transactions or general journal
entries in excess of 10% to 30% of performance materiality. When risk of material misstatement at the
financial statement level is lower, a percentage of up to 100% may be used for
determining individually significant items.
When risk is low at the financial statement level, the lower limit may
be commonly calculated at 80% to 90% of performance materiality; moderate risk
calculations may be 50% to 60% of tolerable misstatement and high risk 20% to
30%. The determinations of appropriate
percentages are matters of professional judgment based on the facts and
circumstances of each engagement.
Individually Significant Items for Financial Statement Classifications—Assertion Levels
Clarified Auditing Standards clearly indicate that
performance materiality (tolerable misstatement) is affected by risk. Risk of material misstatement is often
different for each financial statement classification. Because the lower limit
for individually significant items is calculated based on performance
materiality, and because performance materiality must be determined separately
for each material financial statement classification, the lower limit for
individually significant items will also vary by financial statement
classification. Performance materiality
at the assertion or account classification level can range from 10% to 100% of performance
materiality at the financial statement level. The same general rule of 10% to
100%, based on high or low risk, may be followed for calculating individually
significant items at the assertion or account classification levels.
Some auditors have used 100% of tolerable misstatement at
the financial statement level to determine the lower limit for individually
significant items and sample sizes at the assertion level. To reach this level of tolerable misstatement
at the assertion level for sampling or non-sampling purposes, the risk
assessment procedures must provide sufficient evidence to reduce the assessed
level of risk of material misstatement to a very low level. Risk of material
misstatement at account classification (assertion) levels for smaller entities
ordinarily will be slightly less than high to moderate resulting in tolerable
misstatement calculated at 30% to 60% of financial statement tolerable
misstatement.
Part 3 of this materiality article will contain a discussion
of how to perform good error analysis, which is the end of the risk assessment
process. A later article will discuss
the Clarified Auditing Standard, Audit
Sampling.
More Information
These eBook resources, without CPE credit, can be
obtained from my website, www.cpafirmsupport.com
:
- Small Audits Made Easy and Profitable
- Performing Auditing Tests of Balances Procedures
- Staff Training Series for Entry-Level Accountants, New In-Charge Accountants and Engagement Leaders
- Key Accounting Issues for Non-Profit Organizations
- A Practical Potpourri of Time Savings on Audits
- The Financial Reporting Framework for Small- and Medium-Sized Entities
My exclusive presentation of webcasts on CPE
Credit.com and self-study courses covering various applications of auditing
standards can be accessed by clicking the appropriate box on the left side of
my home page, www.cpafirmsupport.com.
Registered users accessing webcasts or self-study courses on my website receive
a 20% discount on CPE materials presented by myself and numerous other authors
on a variety of professional topics.
My assistance in CPA firm quality control
consulting, audit planning and peer review preparation can be obtained by
sending an email using the “Contact Us” tab on my home page.
This is my first visit to your website. I am very impressed! Thank you for this information.
ReplyDelete