To gain success, any business needs a satisfied base of stakeholders. The stakeholders need transparency to generate trust on the company. This transparency is tried to be generated with the publication of financial information. The stakeholders get all the information they desire about the entity through these reports made for financial information. However, the reports seem sceptical unless they are reviewed and opined by an independent professional. In this report, LLC Company (landlease group) has been chosen to prepare this assignment. It is difficult to rely on whatever the company has published until the reliability is verified. This verification regarding the fairness is to be done only by a qualified professional. Auditor is the most appropriate professional meant for this work.
Auditing refers to the function wherein the auditor inspects and examines the financial accounts of an entity. After the examination is made and the control environment of the entity is analysed, the auditor frames an opinion. The opinion relates to whether, the accounts are being prepared truly and fairly, in all important and material aspects, in harmonisation with the relevant accounting standards and policies. This opinion acts as a trust binding agent for the users of information. An appraisal in this form by an unbiased third party, adds value to the financial reports. However, auditing is not a single day function, and encompasses several aspects. The current report is a discussion regarding those different aspects. The company chosen for the study purpose is Landlease Group (Louwers, Ramsay, Sinason, Strawser & Thibodeau, 2015).
LLC Company (landlease group) was founded in the year 1958 in Sydney. The vision behind the incorporation of this company has been the creation of a successful corporation that combines the aspects of construction, investment and development. Having operations diversified in Australia, Europe, Asia and the America, LLC Company (landlease group) has proven to be a top international infrastructure and property group. The annual reports issued by the company consist of the directors’ report, remuneration report and the financial statements for the financial year. The analysis of same as required is done in the following segments of report (Psaros & Seamer, 2015).
Audit is done in order to analyse the reliability of the financial statements of an entity. However, the auditor does not have enough time to audit all the transactions that company has entered into. Auditing is there to provide a judicious assurance regarding the financial statements. Auditing too cannot provide a 100 % guarantee regarding the fairness of financial statements. That is when the auditor feels the need of setting a level beyond which the transactions are considered highly important (Knechel & Salterio, 2016).
As per ASA 320, Materiality in Planning and Performing Audit, irrespective of the audit procedure followed, the auditor needs to understand the entity’s environment and the control levels present. This analysis and understanding is not done on an ambiguous goal. A certain level is to be decided after understanding the control levels and risk assumed in the entity. This level is a certain amount beyond which the misstatements found if any, or the omissions observed are considered material. These misstatements or omissions, either individually or in aggregate reach materiality (Hines, et al. 2015). Defining materiality is important, so that auditor design his audit procedure in a manner that can help in gathering sufficient and appropriate audit evidence. This shall help in eliminating any sort of risk observed regarding the fairness of transactions. Hence, materiality represents the certain level of amount which is having the capability to impact the decision of the users of the financial statements (Eilifsen & Messier, 2014).
Quantifying materiality is a matter of individual and professional verdict of the auditor. There is no fixed ceiling as on what is the quantified level of materiality. For setting a monetary amount, various procedures are to be followed:
BASE AMOUNT |
PERCENTAGE |
Revenue |
½ to 2 % |
Expenses |
½ to 2 % |
Net income |
5 to 10 % |
Net asset value |
½ to 1 % |
Equity |
2 % |
The base figure is usually the net earnings. But there are situation where the earnings are highly fickle. This volatility breaks the trend pattern. In this kind of scenario, the auditor resorts to either the revenues, or expenses, or equity, or net asset value, whichever is the most stable.
For the company LLC Company (landlease group) the following results are gathered:
2015 |
2016 |
2017 |
2018 |
|
Net Income |
618,600,000 |
698,200,000 |
758,600,000 |
792,800,000 |
Revenue |
13,226,000,000 |
15,029,000,000 |
16,587,700,000 |
16,460,100,000 |
Expenses |
15,126,100,000 |
16,832,100,000 |
18,470,700,000 |
18,942,700,000 |
From the analysis of the above table, it is clear that the LLC Company (landlease group)‘s net profits are following a steady growth. So the net profit being the most favourable option to compute the materiality level, it is chosen (Edgley Jones, & Atkins, 2015). The net profit figure for financial year ending in June 2018 is selected as the base amount. The percentage figure selected is 5 %.
So, preliminary level of materiality = $ 792,800,000 * .05
= $ 39,640,000
Making the adjustments as mentioned above, the materiality figure taken is $ 40,000,000.
As per the analysis of the drafts disclosed after the financial statements of o Landlease Group, certain matters that may cast significance on the audit are mentioned as follows:
LLC Company (landlease group) is following the practice of capitalising the development costs incurred in the projects as inventory. The capitalisation is done over the lifetime. The method used for carrying this inventory is lower of cost or net realisable value. This involves forecasting the future sales, sales price, and the related costs. However, for the long term projects, there lies a huge uncertainty and complexity in forecasting (Fisher & Krumwiede, 2015).
In this situation, the auditor of LLC Company (landlease group) must seek the help of an expert as per ASA 620, using the work of an Auditor’s Expert. The expert can help in analysing the forecasts for a few text sample projects selected. This way reliability can be established for the valuation done by entity (Kanatov, Atymtayeva & Yagaliyeva, 2014).
Audit procedure
In understanding the nature of LLC Company (landlease group) and its working, the auditor at times need to perform analytical audit procedures. These are those audit procedures that help the auditor to gather sufficient and appropriate audit evidence. It is done by setting and establishing a relationship between the financials available for the entity. The same relationship is tried to be used for the non-financial data.
As per ASA 300, planning an Audit of Financial Report, this analysis is useful at the planning stage itself. Key ratios related to the balance sheet and profit and loss statement are calculated to perform a trend analysis (Brown-Liburd, Issa & Lombardi, 2015). The following table presents the key ratios that are computed from the financials of Landlease Group:
KEY RATIOS |
2014 |
2015 |
2016 |
2017 |
2018 |
CURRENT RATIO |
.68 |
0.67 |
0.66 |
0.58 |
0.96 |
Quick ratio |
.38 |
.42 |
045 |
040 |
.69 |
NET MARGIN (%) |
4.69 |
4.68 |
4.65 |
4.57 |
4.82 |
RETURN ON ASSETS (%) |
3.59 |
3.56 |
3.72 |
3.85 |
4.19 |
RETURN ON EQUITY (%) |
12.50 |
12.34 |
12.96 |
12.99 |
12.71 |
RETURN ON INVESTED CAPITAL (%) |
9.62 |
9.54 |
10.21 |
10.41 |
9.95 |
RECEIVABLES TURNOVER |
11.55 |
11.01 |
12.98 |
13.67 |
11.48 |
Payable turnover |
15.5 |
16.5 |
17.5 |
16.7 |
18.5 |
FIXED ASSETS TURNOVER |
37.89 |
37.30 |
38.48 |
38.66 |
36.97 |
Inventory turnover ratio |
17.7 |
19.9 |
22.5 |
18.5 |
22.5 |
Debt to capital ratio |
15.69 |
15.5 |
17.5 |
19.5 |
22 |
Interest coverage ratio |
17.7 |
18.5 |
19.5 |
16.5 |
20.5 |
Dividend pay-out ratio |
7.7 % |
8.5% |
9.5 % |
11.5 % |
12 % |
As per the above table the following results are analysed:
Current ratio : improved
Net margin : improved
Return on assets : improved
Return on equity : declined
Return on invested capital : declined
Receivables turnover : declined
Fixed assets turnover : declined
Debt to capital ratio : Improved
Dividend pay-out ratio : Improved
The trend of the data of LLC Company (landlease group) set by these ratios generates certain doubts. These are expressed in terms of the risk areas. The certain management assertions that are considered in risk are also determined.
The audit procedure in LLC Company (landlease group) is required to be followed to remove the uncertainty and reach a conclusion is mentioned in the table below (Edgley, Jones, & Atkins, 2015).
KEY RISK AREA |
AUDIT ASSERTION |
AUDIT PROCEDURE |
FIXED ASSETS |
Valuation |
The fixed asset turnover ratio of LLC Company (landlease group) has declined whereas the return on assets has improved. This may be due to the improper valuation of the fixed assets because the overall earnings and revenues both have shown a rise (Christensen,., Glover, & Wood, 2012). This may be reduced by the auditor by physically verifying the condition of the assets and taking the help of a valuation professional to correctly value them. |
TRADE RECEIVABLES |
Rights and Obligations |
There is a risk that the receivables shown in the financial report are not even the receivables. They may be a chance that any settled customer is shown as a non-settled debtor. This calls for cash embezzlement. To resolve this and reduce risk, the auditor should go for external confirmation. He must call for balance confirmation from the debtors directly. |
SALES OR TURNOVER |
Occurrence |
There is a doubt regarding the figure of revenue present in the books of in Landlease Group. The revenue has risen but all the turnover ratios have shown a decline. This risk has to be reduced by cross checking the inventory register with the debtor register and cash book. The credit and cash sales need to match with the inventory register. |
CURRENT LIABILITIES |
COMPLETENESS |
The current ratio of the company has improved. This casts a doubt on whether the liabilities are actually less than the current assets in comparison with the previous year. Or whether the complete current liabilities are not recorded. The auditor needs to check the nature of all the current liabilities and check the logs of payment made to settle them. The process of external confirmation can also be relied on. |
The cash flow statement of LLC Company (landlease group) records all the transactions that relate to the cash activities. From the cash flow statement the activity that has generated the highest cash inflows is recorded to be that of investing activities. The amount generated is $ 221.8 million. The activity that has used the major cash balance is financing activity having a total of $ 397.8 million.
The activities that primarily generated cash are:
The activities that primarily used cash are:
LLC Cash flow |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
The main non-cash financial and investing activity comprises of the conversion of convertible securities without using cash, acquiring assets without cash, issuing debt or securities to settle claim, and etc. but as per the analysis of the financial statements of LLC Company (landlease group), no such activity is ascertained (Cohen, Krishnamoorthy, & Wright, (2017).
The only activity that can cast a doubt on the going concern of the LLC Company (landlease group) is the disposal of the consolidated entities by the company. However, the management has asserted no doubts regarding the company’s position to continue business. To remove the doubt that the auditor might have regarding the ability of the company to continue due to this transaction, he must try to analyse the same. The reasons for the disposal must be asked for and the sale agreement should be checked.
Audit procedure to manage the risk
The main audit procedure which will be followed to address the audit risk would be implementing AUDIT ASSERTION test.
The independent auditors have issued and clean and unmodified report for LLC Company (landlease group). There are no additional sections or paragraphs highlighting any issues. Only as per the requirements of standards, the auditor have separately mentioned certain key audit matters relation to inventories, construction and development revenue and equity accounted investments.
Additional section
Audit matters relation to inventories, construction and development revenue and equity accounted investments. However, there is no separate opinion on them.
Nature of the issue
These are the capital nature issues. They are the most significant matters, which auditor thinks that the shareholders should be aware of (Czerney, Schmidt & Thompson, 2014).
Audit opinion
Company has given the opinion that company has complied with the all the applicable rules and regulations. It has given un-qualified audit opinion that company has no issues with the corporate governance.
References
Brown-Liburd, H., Issa, H., & Lombardi, D. (2015). Behavioral implications of Big Data’s impact on audit judgment and decision making and future research directions. Accounting Horizons, 29(2), 451-468.
Christensen, B. E., Glover, S. M., & Wood, D. A. (2012). Extreme estimation uncertainty in fair value estimates: Implications for audit assurance. Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, 31(1), 127-146.
Cohen, J., Krishnamoorthy, G. & Wright, A., (2017). Enterprise risk management and the financial reporting process: The experiences of audit committee members, CFOs, and external auditors. Contemporary Accounting Research, 34(2), pp.1178-1209.
Cohen, J.R. & Simnett, R., (2014). CSR and assurance services: A research agenda. Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, 34(1), pp.59-74.
Czerney, K., Schmidt, J. J., & Thompson, A. M. (2014). Does auditor explanatory language in unqualified audit reports indicate increased financial misstatement risk?. The Accounting Review, 89(6), 2115-2149.
Edgley, C., Jones, M.J. & Atkins, J., (2015). The adoption of the materiality concept in social and environmental reporting assurance: A field study approach. The British Accounting Review, 47(1), pp.1-18.
Edgley, C., Jones, M.J. & Atkins, J., (2015). The adoption of the materiality concept in social and environmental reporting assurance: A field study approach. The British Accounting Review, 47(1), pp.1-18.
Eilifsen, A., & Messier Jr, W. F. (2014). Materiality guidance of the major public accounting firms. Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, 34(2), 3-26.
Eilifsen, A., Hamilton, E., & Messier, W. F. (2017). The Importance of Quantifying Uncertainty: Examining the Effects of Sensitivity Analysis and Audit Materiality Disclosures on Investors’ Judgments and Decisions.
Fisher, J. G., & Krumwiede, K. (2015). Product costing systems: finding the right approach. Journal of Corporate Accounting & Finance, 26(4), 13-21.
Hines, C.S., Masli, A., Mauldin, E.G.& Peters, G.F., (2015). Board risk committees and audit pricing. Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, 34(4), pp.59-84.
Kanatov, M., Atymtayeva, L., & Yagaliyeva, B. (2014, December). Expert systems for information security management and audit. Implementation phase issues. In Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems (SCIS), 2014 Joint 7th International Conference on and Advanced Intelligent Systems (ISIS), 15th International Symposium on (pp. 896-900). IEEE.
Knechel, W. R., & Salterio, S. E. (2016). Auditing: Assurance and risk. Routledge.
Louwers, T. J., Ramsay, R. J., Sinason, D. H., Strawser, J. R., & Thibodeau, J. C. (2015). Auditing & assurance services. McGraw-Hill Education.
Psaros, J., & Seamer, M. (2015). Ranking Corporate Governance of Australia’s Top Companies: A Decade On. Australian Accounting Review, 25(4), 405-412.
Essay Writing Service Features
Our Experience
No matter how complex your assignment is, we can find the right professional for your specific task. Contact Essay is an essay writing company that hires only the smartest minds to help you with your projects. Our expertise allows us to provide students with high-quality academic writing, editing & proofreading services.Free Features
Free revision policy
$10Free bibliography & reference
$8Free title page
$8Free formatting
$8How Our Essay Writing Service Works
First, you will need to complete an order form. It's not difficult but, in case there is anything you find not to be clear, you may always call us so that we can guide you through it. On the order form, you will need to include some basic information concerning your order: subject, topic, number of pages, etc. We also encourage our clients to upload any relevant information or sources that will help.
Complete the order formOnce we have all the information and instructions that we need, we select the most suitable writer for your assignment. While everything seems to be clear, the writer, who has complete knowledge of the subject, may need clarification from you. It is at that point that you would receive a call or email from us.
Writer’s assignmentAs soon as the writer has finished, it will be delivered both to the website and to your email address so that you will not miss it. If your deadline is close at hand, we will place a call to you to make sure that you receive the paper on time.
Completing the order and download