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Audit of the Inventory

and Warehousing Cycle

Chapter 21

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 1


Learning Objective 1
Describe the business functions
and the related documents and
records in the inventory and
warehousing cycle.

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Flow of Inventory and Costs
Raw Materials Work-in-Process
Beginning Raw Beginning Cost of
inventory materials inventory goods
used manufactured
Purchases Ending
inventory
Ending
inventory
Cost of
Direct Labor Finished Goods goods sold
Actual Applied Beginning Cost of
inventory goods sold
Manufacturing Overhead
Ending
Actual Applied inventory

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Learning Objective 2
Explain the five parts of the audit
of the inventory and warehousing
cycle.

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Functions in the Cycle
Process Receive Store Process Store Ship
purchase raw raw the finished finished
orders materials materials goods goods goods

Put Put Put


Flow Receive Ship
materials materials completed
of raw finished
in in goods in
Inventory materials goods
storage production storage

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 5


Audit of Inventory

Part of audit Cycle in which tested


Acquire and record Acquisition and
raw materials, labor, payment plus
and overhead payroll and personnel
Internally transfer Inventory and
assets and costs warehousing

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Audit of Inventory

Part of audit Cycle in which tested


Ship goods and record Sales and collection
revenue and costs
Physically observe Inventory and
inventory warehousing
Price and compile Inventory and
inventory warehousing

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 7


Learning Objective 3
Design and perform audit tests
of cost accounting.

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Cost Accounting Controls

1. Physical controls over raw materials,


work in process, and finished goods inventory

2. Controls over the related costs

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 9


Methodology for Designing Controls
and Substantive Tests
Understand internal control
cost accounting system

Assess planned control risk


cost accounting system

Determine extent of testing controls

Design tests of controls and Audit procedures


substantive tests of transactions Sample size
for the cost accounting system
to meet transaction-related Items to select
audit objectives Timing
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Tests of Cost Accounting

Physical controls over inventory

Documents and records for transferring inventory

Perpetual inventory master files

Unit cost records

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Learning Objective 4
Apply analytical procedures to
the accounts in the inventory
and warehousing cycle.

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 12


Analytical Procedures: Inventory
and Warehousing Cycle
Analytical procedure Possible misstatement
Compare gross margin Overstatement or
percentage with that of understatement of
previous years inventory and cost
of goods sold
Compare inventory turnover Obsolete inventory
(cost of goods sold divided by Overstatement or
average inventory) with that understatement
of previous year of inventory

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 13


Analytical Procedures: Inventory
and Warehousing Cycle
Analytical procedure Possible misstatement
Compare unit costs of Overstatement or
inventory with those understatement of unit
of previous years costs, which affect
inventory and cost of
goods sold
Compare extended inventory Misstatements in
value with that of previous compilation, unit costs, or
years extensions, which affect
inventory and cost of
goods sold

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 14


Analytical Procedures: Inventory
and Warehousing Cycle
Analytical procedure Possible misstatement
Compare current year Misstatements of unit costs
manufacturing costs with of inventory, especially
those of previous years direct labor and
(variable costs should be manufacturing overhead,
adjusted for changes which affect inventory and
in volume) cost of goods sold

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 15


Methodology for Designing
Tests of Balances Inventory
Identify client
business risks Phase I
affecting inventory
Set tolerable misstatement
and assess inherent Phase I
risk for inventor
Assess control
risk for Phase I
several cycles
2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 16
Methodology for Designing
Tests of Balances Inventory
Design and perform
tests of controls and
substantive tests Phase II
of transactions
for several cycles

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 17


Methodology for Designing
Tests of Balances Inventory
Design and perform
analytical procedures Phase III
for inventory

Design tests of Audit procedures


details of inventory Sample size
to satisfy balance- Phase III
related audit Items to select
objectives Timing
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Learning Objective 5
Design and perform physical
observation audit tests
for inventory.

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Controls Over Perpetual
Inventory Master Files
Proper instructions for the physical count
Supervision by responsible personnel
Independent internal verification of the counts
Independent reconciliations of the physical
counts with perpetual inventory master files
Adequate control over count sheets or tags

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Audit Decisions

Timing

Sample size

Selection of items

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Physical Observation Tests

The most important part of the observation of


inventory is determining whether the physical
count is being taken in accordance with the
clients instructions.

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 22


Balance-related Audit
Objectives
Existence:
Inventory as recorded on tags exist.
Completeness:
Existing inventory is counted and tagged.
Accuracy:
Inventory is counted accurately.
Classification:
Inventory is classified correctly on the tags.
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Balance-Related Audit
Objectives
Cutoff:
Transactions are recorded in the proper period.
Realizable value:
Obsolete and unusable inventory items are
excluded or noted.
Rights:
The client has rights to inventory recorded
on tags.

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Learning Objective 6
Design and perform audit tests
of pricing and compilation
for inventory.

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 25


Audit of Pricing and Compilation

Inventory price tests

Pricing and compilation controls

Pricing and compilation procedures

Valuation of inventory

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 26


Balance-Related Objectives:
Inventory Pricing and Compilation
Detail tie-in
Existence
Completeness
Accuracy
Classification
Realizable value
Rights

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Valuation of Inventory

Pricing purchased inventory

Pricing manufactured inventory

Cost or market

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Learning Objective 7
Integrate the various parts of
the audit of the inventory
and warehousing cycle.

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Interrelationship of Various
Audit Tests
Tests of acquisition
and payment cycle

Raw materials Work in process


Acquisitions of Other manufacturing
raw materials costs

Raw material used Raw material used

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 30


Interrelationship of Various
Audit Tests
Tests of payroll and
personnel cycle

Work in process Work in process


Direct labor Indirect labor

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 31


Interrelationship of Various
Audit Tests
Inventory tests
Tests of cost accounting records
Tests of physical inventory observation
Tests of pricing and compilation

Raw materials Work in process


Ending inventory Ending inventory

Finished goods
Ending inventory
2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 32
Interrelationship of Various
Audit Tests
Work in process Finished goods
Cost of goods Cost of goods
manufactured manufactured

Finished goods
Tests of
sales and Cost of goods sold
collection cycle

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 33


End of Chapter 21

2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Auditing 13/e, Arens//Elder/Beasley 21 - 34

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