Accounting and Finance Foundations

(Chris Devlin) #1

Unit 13


Accounting and Finance Foundations Unit 13: Auditing 1005

Auditing


Chapter 30


Lesson 30.5 The Audit Process—Issuing the Audit Report (cont’d)


n    Qualified opinion
n Although the financial statements generally followed GAAP, there were some exceptions.
n If the auditor has a qualified opinion, s/he usually adds an explanatory paragraph after the
scope to explain the qualification.
n Disclaimer of opinion
n The auditor could not form an opinion on the financial statements.
n The auditor could not complete the audit due to conflict of interest, scope limitations, doubt
about the company’s ability to continue operating, etc.
n Adverse opinion
n The financial statements do not adhere to GAAP and therefore do not present the company’s
financial situation fairly or accurately.
n The financial statements are materially misstated, incorrect, unreliable, and inaccurate.

How does the auditor determine which opinion is most appropriate? S/He typically asks himself/herself the
following questions:

Were any
significant/material issues
discovered during the audit?

Did the company follow Gener-
ally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP)?

Was the audit completed
in accordance with
Generally Accepted Auditing
Standards (GAAS)?
Unqualified
opinion

No. No significant/material
issues were discovered.

Yes. The company followed
GAAP at all times.

Yes. The audit was completed
in accordance with GAAS.
Qualified
opinion

Yes and no. Somewhat
significant/material issues
were discovered.

Yes and no. Although the
company followed GAAP most
of the time, there were minor
exceptions.

Yes and no. The auditor
was uncertain about a few
somewhat significant/mate-
rial issues and was unable to
gather sufficient evidence to
clarify the issues. Therefore,
the audit was not in complete
accordance with GAAS.
Adverse
opinion

Yes. Highly significant/material
issues were discovered.

No. The company did not follow
GAAP.

No. The auditor encountered
several highly significant/
material issues that s/he
could not clarify through
audit evidence. Therefore,
the audit was not in complete
accordance with GAAS.
Disclaimer of
opinion

If the auditor concludes—at any time—that s/he cannot complete the audit due to conflict of inter-
est, scope limitations, or doubt about the company’s going concern, s/he may withdraw from the
audit and issue no opinion.

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