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Chapter 17
TRADE RECEIVABLES
1. The relevant assertions
If you want to audit the receivables balance you have to find ways of testing each
assertion that the
receivables balance makes: existence, rights and obligations, completeness, accuracy,
valuation and
allocation, classification and presentation.
2. External confirmation
Assuming trade receivables are material, it’s almost universal to use external confirmation procedures
(a 'receivables circularisation') to obtain audit evidence. This involves asking customers to respond
directly to the auditor to confirm what they owe. This provides good evidence about the existence of
a receivable and its accuracy, but it says very little about the valuation of a receivable. It could well be
that a customer who is in trouble will verify that the receivable exists to play for time: they don’t want
to arouse suspicions. Quite a separate valuation exercise has to be done later.
There are two types of confirmation request:
๏
Positive
-
requests a reply from everyone who
has been written to, whether or not
they agree with the balance. This is most suitable where the risk of
misstatement is high (e.g. weak internal controls, errors expected or
suspicion of irregularity or disputed amounts).
๏
Negative
-
requests a reply only if the customer does
not agree with the balance
that they have been asked to confirm. But if you don’t get a reply how do
you know whether that person agrees with the balance or whether they
simply haven’t bothered replying? This type is appropriate when control
risk is low (i.e. errors are not expected), there is a large proportion of
smaller balances and customers are not expected to ignore the request.
A request for confirmation will usually include management's authorisation or encouragement for the
customer to disclose confidential information to the auditor. The auditor
must have control over
sending the requests and receive responses directly. You may remember when we looked at the
reliability of audit evidence that auditor-directly obtained evidence is more reliable than client-
obtained evidence. Here, if the customers replied to the client, the client could simply throw away
those letters which show disagreement and pass on only those letters which show agreement. That
would give the auditor quite a wrong impression of the accuracy of the receivables.
Very often stratification will allow a very large percentage of the receivables
balance to be covered by
requesting relatively few confirmations. Perhaps the key accounts of the client will account for 80% of
the receivables balance.
In addition some of the balances will be selected at random for confirmation, together with those
balances which have not moved for some time, credit balances and perhaps nil balances.
The auditor has to keep a careful schedule of customers written to,
replies received, where replies
agree and where they don’t agree.
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