3 Questions in Forensics: Audit quality indicators; Benford's Law; non-cash component, accounting homework help

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Question 1:

The PCAOB recently released a concept statement on audit quality indicators (PCAOB Release No. 2015-005). In it they list 28 potential indicators of audit quality. One of those 28 indicators is "Fraud and other Financial Reporting Misconduct". In an appendix, they list the following ways that they think fraud related metrics might serve as indicators of good or bad audit quality:

Positive indicators:

  • Number of significant deficiencies or material weaknesses in controls designed to address the risk of material misstatement due to fraud, raised by the audit firm in the absence of an error or fraud that has already occurred.
  • Number and severity of material or immaterial errors in financial reporting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct discovered by the audit firm early enough to avoid errors in published financial statements.

Negative indicators:

  • Number of restatements for errors resulting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct with no previously reported material weakness in internal control.
  • Number and severity of material errors in financial reporting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct that the audit firm did not detect prior to restatements of financial statements.

Required:

Based on our fraud discussions and cases this semester, analyze the reasonableness of, and deficiencies in, the suggested metrics.

Question 2: Benford's Law

Part A: For each of the following three fraud scenarios, discuss whether and why a fraud investigation using Benford's Law would be appropriate:

An employee is submitting numerous fake purchase orders and pocketing the cash.

The company has attempted to overstate revenues by recording numerous sales from the first week of the following year as sales in the current year.

The company has attempted to hide significant debt by omitting the monthly payments from the accounting records.

Part B: A forensic technique that is starting to become very popular is the application of Benford's Law to the overall financial statements (i.e., Balance Sheet, Income Statement, Cash Flow Statement, notes, etc.) rather than to individual transaction records. As you have seen in this class, financial statements for real companies tend to be pretty large, and on average have several hundred numbers in them if the notes are included. This technique has recently come under criticism. Two of the complaints are (1) that any given financial statement number is usually the aggregate of other numbers (for instance, the balance in Accounts Receivable is the aggregate of all of the underlying receivables from customers); and (2) that tests on financial statements usually use data which has been re-scaled for easy comparison (e.g., all amounts divided by the company's total assets, or total sales). Required: Discuss the validity of these two criticisms.

Question 3:

Discuss how an analysis of the non-cash component(s) of a company's earnings can be used to identify red flags for financial statement fraud.

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Forensic Final Exam, Spring 2016 Question 1: The PCAOB recently released a concept statement on audit quality indicators (PCAOB Release No. 2015-005). In it they list 28 potential indicators of audit quality. One of those 28 indicators is "Fraud and other Financial Reporting Misconduct". In an appendix, they list the following ways that they think fraud related metrics might serve as indicators of good or bad audit quality: Positive indicators: 1. Number of significant deficiencies or material weaknesses in controls designed to address the risk of material misstatement due to fraud, raised by the audit firm in the absence of an error or fraud that has already occurred. 2. Number and severity of material or immaterial errors in financial reporting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct discovered by the audit firm early enough to avoid errors in published financial statements. Negative indicators: 1. Number of restatements for errors resulting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct with no previously reported material weakness in internal control. 2. Number and severity of material errors in financial reporting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct that the audit firm did not detect prior to restatements of financial statements. Required: Based on our fraud discussions and cases this semester, analyze the reasonableness of, and deficiencies in, the suggested metrics. Question 2: Benford's Law Part A: For each of the following three fraud scenarios, discuss whether and why a fraud investigation using Benford's Law would be appropriate: • An employee is submitting numerous fake purchase orders and pocketing the cash. • The company has attempted to overstate revenues by recording numerous sales from the first week of the following year as sales in the current year. • The company has attempted to hide significant debt by omitting the monthly payments from the accounting records. Part B: A forensic technique that is starting to become very popular is the application of Benford's Law to the overall financial statements (i.e., Balance Sheet, Income Statement, Cash Flow Statement, notes, etc.) rather than to individual transaction records. As you have seen in this class, financial statements for real companies tend to be pretty large, and on average have several hundred numbers in them if the notes are included. This technique has recently come under criticism. Two of the complaints are (1) that any given financial statement number is usually the aggregate of other numbers (for instance, the balance in Accounts Receivable is the aggregate of all of the underlying receivables from customers); and (2) that tests on financial statements usually use data which has been re-scaled for easy comparison (e.g., all amounts divided by the company's total assets, or total sales). Required: Discuss the validity of these two criticisms. Question 3: Discuss how an analysis of the non-cash component(s) of a company's earnings can be used to identify red flags for financial statement fraud. Question 2: Benford's Law Part A: For each of the following three fraud scenarios, discuss whether and why a fraud investigation using Benford's Law would be appropriate: An employee is submitting numerous fake purchase orders and pocketing the cash. The company has attempted to overstate revenues by recording numerous sales from the first week of the following year as sales in the current year. The company has attempted to hide significant debt by omitting the monthly payments from the accounting records. . Part B: A forensic technique that is starting to become very popular is the application of Benford's Law to the overall financial statements (i.e., Balance Sheet, Income Statement, Cash Flow Statement, notes, etc.) rather than to individual transaction records. As you have seen in this class, financial statements for real companies tend to be pretty large, and on average have several hundred numbers in them if the notes are included. This technique has recently come under criticism. Two of the complaints are (1) that any given financial statement number is usually the aggregate of other numbers (for instance, the balance in Accounts Receivable is the aggregate of all of the underlying receivables from customers); and (2) that tests on financial statements usually use data which has been re-scaled for easy comparison (e.g., all amounts divided by the company's total assets, or total sales). Required: Discuss the validity of these two criticisms. Question 1: The PCAOB recently released a concept statement on audit quality indicators (PCAOB Release No. 2015-005). In it they list 28 potential indicators of audit quality. One of those 28 indicators is "Fraud and other Financial Reporting Misconduct". In an appendix, they list the following ways that they think fraud related metrics might serve as indicators of good or bad audit quality: Positive indicators: 1. Number of significant deficiencies or material weaknesses in controls designed to address the risk of material misstatement due to fraud, raised by the audit firm in the absence of an error or fraud that has already occurred. 2. Number and severity of material or immaterial errors in financial reporting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct discovered by the audit firm early enough to avoid errors in published financial statements. Negative indicators: 1. Number of restatements for errors resulting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct with no previously reported material weakness in internal control. 2. Number and severity of material errors in financial reporting from fraud or other financial reporting misconduct that the audit firm did not detect prior to restatements of financial statements. Required: Based on our fraud discussions and cases this semester, analyze the reasonableness of, and deficiencies in, the suggested metrics.
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FORENSIC SCIENCE

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Discussion Question 1
Fraud this is the act of facts misinterpretation with intention of misleading a person into
believing these facts are true. Fraud has led to a lot of losses in the business industries and this is
caused by a company or a person not interested in making an audit on regular basis to check on
the accountability and how the company is fairing on. For a good quality of an audit it comes
from the top of the auditing firm. The deficiencies in controls designed to ...


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