Summary of ISA 570 – Going concern

Definition Going concern assumption means the entity is able and intends to continue its operations for the foreseeable future. If the entity is a going concern, financial statement should reflect the concept in terms of assets realization and liabilities discharge. Scope of ISA 570 This ISA defines the auditor’s responsibilities regarding going concern implications used … Read more

Summary of ISA 560 – Subsequent events

Important definitions Financial statement date – The latest date covered by the financial statement under consideration. Financial statement approval date– The date on which financial statements were approved. Date of audit report– The date the financial statement is audited or the auditor signs the audit report. Date of the financial statement issued– The date the … Read more

Summary of ISA 550 – Related parties

Important definitions Arm’s length transaction—This refers to the terms and conditions of the transaction between independent and informed parties in the market. Related party– The Party is related if it has significant control/influence directly or indirectly on the reporting entity. Additionally, the party is related in the following ways. Scope of ISA 550 This ISA … Read more

ISA 540 – Auditing accounting estimates and related disclosures

Important definitions Accounting estimates – The monetary amount exposed to estimate uncertainty. Estimate uncertainty– It’s a lack of precision/accuracy in the measured/estimated amount. Management bias– Audit management may be motivated to window-dress financial statements. Scope of ISA 540 ISA 540 defines the auditor’s responsibilities regarding accounting estimates and related disclosures in the business financial statement. … Read more

Summary of ISA-530 – Audit sampling

Important Definitions Audit sampling is when the auditor decides to perform audit procedures on less than 100% of transactions/balances in the population (not testing all transactions in the accounting ledger). Sampling risk—Sampling risk refers to the risk of not detecting material misstatement because 100% of transactions/balances were not audited. Non-sampling risk– Audit risk because of … Read more

Summary of ISA 520 Analytical procedures

Definition Analytical procedures are the evaluation of relevant financial and non-financial information given in the business financial statement. The evaluation aims to identify logical/plausible relations between different numbers/balances, business information, market conditions/competitors, trends, related figures, deviations from expected values, and other information available. If inconsistencies or serious fluctuations are identified (not making sense), the auditor … Read more

ISA 510 – Initial audit engagement (Opening balance audit)

ISA 510 discussed Initial audit engagement and is relevant when. Scope of ISA 510 This ISA defines the auditor’s responsibility related to opening balances. Additionally, the disclosures/facts/contingencies/commitments that existed at the beginning of the accounting period are included in the scope of ISA 510. Requirements of ISA 510 ISA 510 requires auditors to execute the … Read more

ISA 500 Summary (Audit evidence)

Important definitions Accounting records—An accounting record refers to the initial record of entries, supporting documents such as bills, payment details, checks, funds transfer receipts, spreadsheets, and other supporting documents. Sufficient – the quantity of the audit evidence should be reasonable to support the audit report’s conclusion. Appropriate—The quality of the audit evidence should be reliable … Read more

What is the other matter paragraph (OMP)?

The other matter paragraph (OMP) is an additional paragraph or information added to the audit report. This information is not included in the financial statement but in the audit report only. It is the auditor’s discretion/professional judgment whether they want readers of the audit report to consider/read this specific information included in the audit report. … Read more

What drives materiality in the audit of financial statements?

The following three factors make any amount material. 1-Material by amount Any amount is material if large enough to distort the decision of financial statement users. So, any trivial amount that does not impact their decision is immaterial. Generally, this type of materiality is performance materiality & overall materiality. Performance materiality – This materiality level … Read more