Materiality in Planning and Performing an Audit

CAS 320

Materiality in Planning and Performing an Audit

CAS 320

General
  • The auditor is to apply the concept of materiality in planning and performing the audit
  • Misstatements are considered to be material if they, individually or in the aggregate, could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users
    • Always tie the materiality level chosen for the audit back to the users of the F/S
Determining Materiality and Performance Materiality When Planning the Audit
  • When setting the overall audit strategy, the auditor should determine materiality for the F/S as a whole
    • If there is one or more classes of transactions, account balances or disclosures for which misstatements of lesser amounts could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users the auditor should also determine the materiality level for those particular classes of transactions, account balances or disclosures (see performance materiality below)
    • Determining materiality involves the exercise of professional judgment
    • A percentage is often applied to a chosen benchmark as a starting point in determining materiality for the F/S as a whole
    • Some factors to consider in selecting a benchmark include:
      • Elements of the F/S (assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, expenses)
      • Items users are more focused on (i.e. for the purpose of evaluating financial performance users may tend to focus on profit, revenue or net assets)
      • The relative volatility of the benchmark (if benchmark is volatile, say net income, you may want to choose another benchmark that is stable like revenue)
      • The nature of the entity, where the entity is in its life cycle, and the industry and economic environment in which the entity operates
      • The entity’s ownership structure and the way it is financed (if an entity is financed solely by debt rather than equity, users may put more emphasis on assets, and claims on them, than on the entity’s earnings)
    • Some common benchmarks include: profit before tax, total revenue, gross profit and total expenses, total equity or net asset value
    • When profit before tax from continuing operations is volatile, other benchmarks may be more appropriate, such as gross profit or total revenues
    • Determining a percentage to be applied to a chosen benchmark involves the exercise of professional judgment
      • the auditor may consider 5% of profit before tax from continuing operations to be appropriate for a profit-oriented entity
      • auditor may consider 1% of total revenue or total expenses to be appropriate for a not-for-profit entity
  • What is performance materiality?
    • Performance materiality is the materiality that is set lower than the materiality for the F/S as a whole:
      • for ensuring that the aggregate of all uncorrected and undetected misstatements do not exceed the materiality level for the F/S as a whole; or
      • for particular classes of transactions, account balances or disclosures
    • The auditor should determine performance materiality for purposes of assessing the risks of material misstatement and determining the nature, timing and extent of further audit procedures
    • Auditors do not have to determine a lower materiality for all assertions, accounts, transactions or disclosures; they should only determine a lower materiality (performance materiality) for assertions, accounts, transactions, disclosures if the users would be influenced by a lower amount
Revision as the Audit Progresses
  • Revise the materiality for the F/S as a whole (and if applicable, the performance materiality), if you become aware of new information throughout the audit
    • For example, if initially the materiality was set at 5% of income, and assuming the client made an error that impacted the profit came up in the audit, the auditor should revise the materiality to 5% of the corrected income
Documentation
  • Document the following
    • Materiality for the F/S as a whole
    • If applicable, the materiality level for particular classes of transactions, account balances or disclosures
    • Performance materiality
    • Any revision of the above amounts as the audit progressed

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