Part a - Perform the following tasks and document them in the ABC Risk and Material Memo Template Word document. · Preliminary Inherent Risk Assessment - Review the description of ABC Applia

  1. Title: ABC Appliance Inherent Risk and Control Design Assessment

Prepare Inherent Risks and Control Design Assessment.

This course project/case study is divided into the following sections:

  1. Title

  2. Introduction

  3. ABC Case Specifics

  4. Steps to Completion – divided into three tasks that will be completed by the due dates as stated in the syllabus.

You will complete three tasks (stated in the Steps to Completion section of this case study) for this course project; Task 1, 2 and 3 – the due dates for the completion and submission of the tasks are stated in the syllabus. Steps to completion start on Task 1 information and requirements starts on page 12; Task 2 information and requirements starts on page 14; Task 3 information and requirements starts on page 21. You need to understand the course project – which is a case study; the specifics of the ABC Case are in section III. Then, you need to complete each of the Tasks 1, 2, and 3 (listed in section IV) by the deadline listed in the syllabus.

II. Introduction
In this Learning Demonstration (LD), you will demonstrate your knowledge and skills of a portion of the audit process of a small appliance wholesaler.

The firm, ABC Appliance, Inc. (ABC) is fictitious, thus all information in this case is simulated.

The context for this case is that you are a member of an audit team led by a Supervising Senior Auditor who will be making recommendations to the Manager of the engagement, structuring the parts of audit, and presenting the results of a preliminary review to the Manager. ABC has been audited in each of the last five years by a small, local CPA firm. However, your firm has been engaged to do an audit for 2015.

Completing this LD is designed to help partially or completely achieve the following goals by demonstrating the following competencies:

Goal 1: Communication: Learners demonstrate the ability to communicate clearly both orally and in writing.

  • Competencies:

    • 1.1 Organize documents and/or presentation clearly in a manner that promotes understanding

    • 1.2 Develop coherent paragraphs or points so that each is internally unified and so that each functions as part of the whole document or the presentation

    • 1.3 Provide sufficient, correctly cited support that substantiates the writer’s ideas

    • 1.4 Tailor communications to the audience

    • 1.5 Use sentence structure appropriate to the task, message, and the audience

    • 1.6 Follow conventions of Standard Written English

Goal 2: Critical Thinking: Learners demonstrate ability to apply logical, systematic decision-making processes to formulate clear, defensible ideas and to draw ethical conclusions.

  • Competencies:

    • 2.1 Articulate and frame the issue

    • 2.2 Collect and evaluate the information provided

    • 2.3 Evaluate the underlying causes or conditions of elements contributing to an issue

    • 2.4 Use systems thinking to arrive at a decision in the context of an issue

Goal 3: Quantitative Reasoning: Learners demonstrate the ability to use mathematical operations and analytical concepts and operations to address problems and to inform decision-making.

  • Competencies:

  • 3.1 Analyze data using mathematical/algebraic operations

  • 3.2 Use calculated results to inform the problem or process

Goal 4: Leadership, Facilitation, and Collaboration: Learners lead, facilitate, and collaborate with a variety of individuals and diverse teams to achieve organizational objectives.

  • Competency:

    • 4.1 Demonstrate an ability to plan a particular objective or goal

Goal 5: Technical Competencies in Risk Assessment, Risk Management, and Auditing: Learners demonstrate an applied understanding of Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (GAAS), the requisite steps to execute a financial statement audit, and issue an audit report for a domestic public company.

  • Competencies:

    • 5.1 Professional auditing standards: learners demonstrate an applied understanding of professional auditing standards for profit entities

    • 5.2 Planning the audit: learners demonstrate an applied understanding of planning an audit for domestic for-profit firms

III. ABC Case Specifics

    1. Description of Firm and Market Conditions


ABC Appliances, Inc. (ABC) is a small firm with about 50 total employees including corporate officers. It specializes in supplying a relatively small line of high quality household appliances to residential construction contractors in a large and growing metropolitan area. ABC has a large list of customers, mostly custom builders of single family dwellings and some large builders of single and multiple family units. ABC’s basic marketing strategy is to have inventory available at all times and to sell this inventory at competitive prices. At the end of every quarter, the President, Joe Navarro, reviews product costs and adjusts the authorized selling prices of products as necessary. He makes the selling price adjustments based on his assessment of what his competitors will do with pricing and what is required to provide competitive profits to the owners of ABC.

    1. Table 1: A summary of major personnel and their roles

Actor

Role

Cecilia Cheng

Secretary / Treasurer

Frank Harris

Bookkeeper

Jane Jones

Controller

Joe Navarro

President

Franklin Peters

Major shareholder, Chairman of the Board of Directors

Bob Smith

Accountant

Jack Washington

Retired CPA and Board member

The global recession in 2008 affected the wholesale appliance industry, which has had a slow economic recovery since, but is showing signs of recovery. Before the recession, the industry's gross sales were growing at a real rate of about 7% per year, with the usual wide variations from year to year due to fluctuations in the residential housing starts. During the recession, ABC sales fell 15%. However, real growth rates for the industry are starting to increase to about 3% in the current year. ABC management expects future growth in the industry to be around the same level for the next three to five years. Mr. Navarro's market strategy does not seem to be very effective because ABC's sales have not grown as fast as the industry in recent years and fell more than the industry during the recession.

ABC's facilities are located in a single warehouse and office building adjacent to a railroad siding and a major highway. Warehouse personnel simply unload rail deliveries with the forklifts and flat trucks used to handle inventory inside the warehouse. Customers pickup all purchases in this location: thus the company avoids maintenance expenses on its own vehicles, which would be incurred if ABC delivered to its customers. However, ABC has an arrangement with a trucking business next door to deliver goods to some customers on a FOB shipping point basis1. Sales are final when appliances leave the ABC loading dock for customer pickup orders and deliveries.

ABC is a privately held corporation incorporated in the same state in which its home office is located. It operates in its home state and three surrounding states. Stockholders include approximately 300 individuals and businesses. Currently, ABC's top management holds over 50% of the stock. The Board of Directors wants to expand operations and is anticipating going public with an initial public offering (IPO) within the next year. Executing an IPO will require the Board to disclose historical financial information.

ABC currently provides audited financial statements to banks when requesting loans and, therefore, has had audits for each of the last five years from the same accounting firm. Because ABC is small, their local bank insisted on adding restrictive covenants to the firm's last loan agreement. These covenants include a provision that calls the loan immediately and in full, if ABC's current and debt to equity ratios fall below specified levels. The covenants also set limits on the amount of dividends the firm can pay.

To help stimulate sales and operating efficiency, ABC recently instituted a profit sharing bonus agreement for its employees, including top management. Management negotiated the plan because employees have gone without raises for several years. The agreement bases employee bonuses on unaudited net income for the past year because of the need to adjust employees' salaries at the beginning of each year. However, management will adjust future bonuses for any audit adjustments made after the bonuses are set based on unaudited data. The firm sets a bonus pool based on five percent of operating income, which limits the total available to pay bonuses. Management bases individual bonuses on an employee's position, length of service, and certain specific negotiated terms with individual officers.

ABC's Board of Directors includes its current president, secretary/treasurer, and controller. It also includes two shareholders, who each hold about a 5% interest in the firm, and one retired CPA, Jack Washington. While there is no audit committee, the board as a whole takes an active role in hiring and monitoring the firm's outside auditor. It also relies on the leadership of Mr. Washington to determine the scope of the audit engagement. Mr. Washington was recruited to the Board last year because the prior president and controller retired during the year and, therefore, the current president and controller have been in their positions for less than one year. Management promoted the new controller from within, but they recruited the new president from outside the firm.

ABC selected a new auditor for this year's audit engagement because their previous auditor had been with the company for five years. The Board felt it was time to get new insights into their operations. In addition, they wanted to hire a larger auditing firm with a more established reputation to support their anticipated IPO.

    1. The Control Environment

ABC's accountant, Bob Smith, prepares financial statements and various financial statistics for the officers to review monthly. The Board reviews similar statistics on a quarterly basis at the regular Board meetings and questions the officers closely about what is going on in the business. In addition, Mr. Navarro personally follows sales figures and gross profit margins.

Supervisors interview all perspective employees for positions they supervise. In addition, at least one of the corporate officers also interviews each perspective employee. Most of the key employees, including the officers, have been with ABC for more than ten years. However, due to the high demand for accountants, Bob Smith and most of the accounting staff have been employed at ABC for less than 3 years. While ABC checks references for any prospective employee, they do not check criminal records or perform other forms of background checks.

A computer network and personal computers support ABC’s accounting and inventory management systems. Personal computers are located in the offices and warehouse and a central server handles all accounting and inventory files. Printers are located in areas where employees need printed documents and other records routinely. The computer is used to control and process most transactions, to print documents, prepare accounting records, and prepare periodic financial statements. ABC uses commercial software recommended by their auditor. To date, they have had only the usual startup problems. They have used it for two years and have upgraded it once.

ABC only issues accounts and passwords to employees with jobs requiring computer data entry or access to file information and reports. Passwords are required to enter the system. Access is limited such that employees only have access to the information they need to perform their duties. Access is also limited in nature such that some employees who do not have the authority to enter data have read-only access while those whose jobs require data entry have both read and write access. Normal access to the files takes place via the software, which subjects any input to various logical and numerical tests. Most input is backed up by paper trails of source documents and other business papers. In addition, the firm uses an Internet service to back up all files on the Internet. ABC manually runs a backup at the end of each day. They have no other Internet presence other than an informational Website that does not allow potential customers to order merchandise.

ABC has a complete set of policies, procedures, and manuals that management requires employees to use. Management is aggressive about updating the manuals and training new employees to ensure they understand the policies and procedures that affect their duties. Management also requires employees to attend brief review seminars on the policies and procedures that affect their positions once a year. These policies include a code of conduct and employees are required to sign a statement agreeing to it when they are hired.

    1. Sales and Collection Processing
      1. Sales Requisitions

ABC uses the PC network to manage inventory, sales requisitions, and sales orders. Sales clerks who can read the perpetual inventory records via their PCs take customer orders. Most orders originate from phone requests, but a few arrive on a walk-in basis and some occasionally come in the mail. Usually, building contractors or their representatives call to get current price quotes and find out if specific appliances are in stock. When goods are available and the price is satisfactory, a sales clerk originates a sales requisition and the process of approving and filling it begins if customers plan to pick up their order the same day. Orders received after 4:00 PM cannot be delivered the same day; buyers are so informed. In addition, sales clerks can immediately inform a caller about out-of-stock items and establish a back order for the customer. Back orders are processed early each day, but before they are filled, the buyers are called back to confirm that the orders are still valid.

To originate a sales requisition, the sales clerk types the appropriate information into his or her PC: customer number, the product(s) identification, and order quantity. The computer system enters the customer's name and address, and the date of the requisition automatically on all requisitions as originated. The computer keeps track of all customer requisition and order information, and prints a requisition form with today's date on it for transmittal to the controller, Jane Jones.

Sales clerks cannot set up new customers in ABC's computer system. If a new customer calls to place an order, they are referred to Ms. Jones, the controller, who is the only person authorized to set up new customers in the system.

The computer updates the perpetual inventory records by flagging the items as on order as soon as the sales clerk enters the requisition into the system to avoid over-commitment of goods not available due to existing orders that are pending credit approval. However, this is the only way that a sales clerk can alter the perpetual inventory records (i.e., by initiating a sales requisition).

      1. Order Approval

Every few minutes (immediately if things are slow), one of the sales clerks hand-carries the pending requisitions to Jane Jones, the controller. The secretary presents them to Ms. Jones who approves them either immediately, based on first-hand knowledge of the customer's credit record, or after reviewing the customer's account record on her PC. Ms. Jones initials the requisition to indicate approval of the sale and enters an approval for the requisition in the accounting system.

When Ms. Jones enters her approval code, the system creates and prints three copies of a sales order form; assigns a sequential number to it; and moves the sales order record in the computer to the open sales order file. Copies one and two of the sales order are sent to the warehouse where they are held until they can be filled. The approval copy of the requisition form is attached to copy three of the sales order and forwarded to the bookkeeper, Frank Harris. These forms are filed in the open sales order (physical) file for later matching with delivery advices.

The computer system notifies the sales clerk who originated the requisition when Ms. Jones approves or disapproves the requisition. If the customer has requested an update on the order, the sales clerks call back the customer to let them know their orders have been approved and that delivery to their driver has been authorized.

If Ms. Jones disapproves the requisition, the computer system reverses the perpetual inventory entry for the pending sale and removes the record from the temporary customer order file. Sales clerks then call customers Ms. Jones did not approve to inform them of the situation. If they dispute the denial of credit, they are transferred to Ms. Jones’ telephone extension.

      1. Delivery

The sales order forms sent to the warehouse represent authorizations to deliver to the contractors or their representatives. The warehouse supervisor assigns one warehouse clerk to fill each order. This clerk typically retrieves each item with a forklift and brings it to the loading dock area of the warehouse. If the receiving driver is already there, the items are loaded directly, one at a time, until the order is complete. Otherwise, the warehouse clerk gathers all of the items and wraps a length of plastic ribbon around the ordered items to keep them separate from other orders. If the loading area becomes congested, the clerk fills the orders only after drivers have arrived.

After the warehouse clerk fills an order, he enters the product quantities, product number, date, and customer number into a warehouse PC. This triggers the printing of a computer dated sequentially numbered four-copy delivery advice. The customer's driver signs the delivery advice (all copies) to indicate receipt of the complete order and receives the first two copies. Copy three goes into a warehouse file in numerical order. Copy four, along with one copy of the sales order, is delivered to Mr. Harris. The warehouse clerk's working copy of the sales order is usually discarded.

      1. Billing

When Mr. Harris receives a delivery advice, he matches them with the open sales orders and reviews them for agreement in products and quantities ordered and delivered. If they match, Mr. Harris initials the delivery advice and enters the date of delivery into the open sales order file on the PC. The computer automatically prices the products, calculates product amounts, totals the invoice, and calculates the cash discount, which is 2/10 net 30. The computer then prints a sequentially numbered, four-part sales invoice and writes the specifics of the sale to a daily-computerized sales file. The bookkeeper records gross sales, not net. Copies one and two of the invoice are mailed to the customer. Copy three is filed by the customer and copy four, along with the delivery advice, sales order, and approved sales requisition, are filed by invoice number.

In the afternoon, Mr. Harris uses the sales recording software to access the daily sales record, the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger file, and the sales journal file. Sales for the day are posted at their gross amounts to the individual customer's subsidiary accounts receivable and to the sales journal file. The latter file is accessed monthly by the software to summarize sales by product and to make monthly postings to the general ledger. The subsidiary ledger is used to review customer credit worthiness, to manage collections, and to determine write-offs.

      1. Collections Management and Write-offs

The controller, Ms. Jones, whose secretary runs the software to produce an aged account receivable trial balance by customer, manages collections. A working trial balance is generated at least once a week and more frequently if collections lag. Ms. Jones decides what to do about specific accounts. Menu-driven software permits the Secretary to look up individual customer accounts, to write off invoices or whole accounts, and to generate customer statements for invoices past due by any specified number of days. The software also permits the printing of pre-drafted letters to the customers to accompany any of these actions. It is normal practice for Ms. Jones to consider write-offs only once at the end of the month. ABC's general policy is to write off any invoice exceeding six months from the time of sale. However, Ms. Jones is authorized to make all final write-off decisions. The bookkeeper credits the allowance account if write-offs are subsequently collected. The accounts receivable subsidiary ledger is reconciled to the general ledger monthly.

Once each month, another software routine is used to add interest to customers' accounts equal to 1% of all invoices past due by 30 or more days. This routine also lists the interest charges by invoice by account in an interest journal, summarizes transactions for the month, and posts the total to the interest revenue and accounts receivable accounts in the general ledger.

      1. Sales Returns

If customers receive incorrect or damaged items, they typically call and indicate they want to return the goods. One of the officers approves the return and notifies the warehouse to accept the returned goods. When the customer returns the goods, a warehouse clerk completes a receiving report. The warehouse retains one copy, the customer's representative receives a copy, and the bookkeeper receives a copy. Mr. Harris enters the data for the return and the original sale into his PC. The computer records the return in an open credit memorandum file and prints a two-copy credit memorandum. Mr. Harris sends the credit memorandum to the controller, Ms. Jones for approval; she then returns it to Mr. Harris. Upon receipt of the signed credit memorandum, Mr. Harris enters Ms. Jones initials into the credit memorandum record on his PC. The computer then posts the credit to the customers' accounts receivable and transfers the credit memorandum information to the sales return file, from which the entries in the Sales Returns Journal are made by the computer system monthly. ABC exchanges defective goods with the good's supplier for undamaged goods or, if the supplier prefers, the damaged units are disposed of and an allowance is received on the next purchase.

      1. Cash Receipts

The receptionist opens the mail daily, restrictively endorses all checks received, and routes the other mail to appropriate personnel. She separates the checks from the remittance advice (copy two of ABC's sales invoice) and sends the checks to the Secretary-treasurer, Cecilia Cheng, who prepares the bank deposit slip and takes the deposit to the bank. The bank deposit form is a three-copy form. The first and second copies go to the bank with the checks and Mr. Smith, the accountant, receives the third copy.

The receptionist forwards the remittance advices to Mr. Smith, who first reviews them for appropriateness of any discounts taken and enters them into a daily cash receipts file on his PC. After printing a listing of the remittance file and reconciling it to the deposit slip copy provided by Ms. Cheng, Mr. Smith runs software that posts the individual receipts, to include the amount of any cash discounts, to the customers' accounts receivable and the total to the cash receipts journal file. The day's remittance advices are filed by customer number and the copy of the deposit slip is filed by date.

    1. Purchases and Payments Processing
      1. Merchandise Purchases

Each morning before the first sales orders are processed, the bookkeeper, Mr. Harris, runs the software routine that combines (1) the current perpetual inventory quantity, less items flagged as on order by customers, plus any inventory orders in transit for each inventory item with (2) the reorder stock quantities for each item set by Mr. Navarro and the warehouse foreman. When the current quantity of an item is below the reorder level, telephone price quotes for the standard order quantity are sought from various distributors. The computer prints a sequentially numbered, five-copy purchase order form addressed to the supplier who quoted the lowest price.

The computer automatically adds the quantity ordered to the inventory-in-transit files. The inventory-in-transit will be counted in the daily reorder calculation, until the goods arrive and are included in inventory. Mr. Harris calls the supplier to place a purchase order. Subsequently, he mails purchase order copies one and two to the supplier. Copy three of the purchase order is filed in numerical order; copy four goes to the warehouse, with quantities omitted, as authorization to receive goods; and copy five goes to Mr. Smith who places it in an unmatched purchase order file. The following table summarizes the distribution of purchase order copies:

PO Copy #


1 & 2

Mailed to the supplier

3

Filed in numerical order

4

Sent to the warehouse as authorization to receive goods

Sent to Mr. Smith who places it in an unmatched purchase order file

      1. Receipt of Goods

All merchandise is purchased Free on Board (FOB) ABC's railroad siding so ABC does not pay the incoming freight costs nor take title to the inventory until it arrives at their railroad siding. When merchandise arrives, the appropriate purchase order is identified by reference to the accompanying shipping documents. Warehouse personnel count the shipment and inspect it for exterior evidence of damage (e.g., punctures in the cartons or crates). The warehouse only accepts clearly undamaged goods. The warehouse clerk enters quantities received on copy four of the purchase order and signs that copy to acknowledge receipt of the goods. Signed copies of purchase orders are then forwarded to Mr. Smith as receiving advices.

      1. Vouching and Recording Payables for Merchandise

On receipt of signed receiving advices from the warehouse, Mr. Smith enters the quantities received into the perpetual inventory file via a PC. As a byproduct, the computer purges the purchase order from the inventory-in-transit file and produces a message indicating any difference between the quantity ordered and the quantity received. A copy of the purchase order is then attached to copy five in the numerical unmatched purchase order file. It is matched with the vendor’s invoice when the latter arrives.

When the receptionist opens the mail, she forwards any vendor invoices to Mr. Smith who matches them with the unmatched purchase orders and receiving advices. If a receiving advice is not on file for the invoice, he places it in an unmatched invoice file pending receipt of goods. Mr. Smith attempts to match the open purchase orders and unmatched invoices on a daily basis.

When Mr. Smith matches an invoice with the corresponding receiving advice, he compares quantities and prices on the purchase order and receiving advice to the vendor’s invoice and tests the arithmetic accuracy of the invoice. Mr. Smith initials the invoice to indicate that this has been done and then keys the vendor, product quantity, price, date of receipt of goods, and discount information into an open voucher file on the computer. The terms are customarily 2/10 net 30. The information is automatically added to the voucher register file and a sequentially numbered voucher is printed to control subsequent disbursement and to serve as the control document for recording the liability and purchase.

The computer software summarizes the voucher register file monthly and posts the summary figures to the general ledger accounts. Other software produces a trial balance of the open voucher file any time, either by date due or by vendor. The vouchers (now with the vendor's invoice, receiving advices, and copy five of the purchase orders attached) are held in a physical open voucher file in due-date order. The discount date is used unless otherwise ordered by Ms. Cheng.

      1. Non-merchandise Purchases and Services Received

The purchases of supplies and other goods are handled in exactly the same way as purchases of merchandise with two exceptions. First, Mr. Smith, using software that prints the purchase order and adds the information to the open purchase order file, originates purchase orders for such items as a new PC. Second, all such purchases not involving capital assets are posted to expense accounts directly. No inventory accounts are maintained for these items.

When the receptionist opens the mail, invoices for services, such as utilities, are sent to Ms. Cheng for approval. If she approves them, they become the equivalent of a purchase order and receiving advice. Ms. Cheng stamps her approval, signs, and forwards them to Mr. Smith. Mr. Smith periodically (usually once a month) enters the data from such items, including appropriate payment date and terms, into the open voucher file. The invoices and/or statements are attached to the vouchers that are printed by the software program. These voucher packages are placed in the physical open voucher file and are treated the same as the vouchers for purchases of merchandise.

      1. Cash Disbursements

Each morning, Ms. Cheng, the Secretary-treasurer, reviews ABC's short-term cash situation. This process is aided by software that summarizes the vouchers due on that day. Ms. Cheng compares the summarized amount due on that day to the available ready cash and a float factor based on the average daily disbursements and the average number of days it takes for checks to clear the bank. If the cash less float exceeds the amount of vouchers due by at least the minimum cash balance set by Ms. Cheng, she authorizes the payment of all vouchers due on that day. Ms. Cheng then transfers the excess cash from ABC's demand account to a money market account that earns interest. If the difference is less than the minimum cash balance set by Ms. Cheng and there is cash available above the minimum balance required in the money market account, Ms. Cheng authorizes payment of the vouchers due that day and transfers funds from the money market account to ABC's demand account.

If sufficient funds are not available in the combined demand and money market accounts, Ms. Cheng considers borrowing from the bank on the prearranged line of credit. If the line of credit is also inadequate, which is rare, Ms. Cheng confers with Mr. Navarro. Ms. Cheng and Mr. Navarro generally meet at least once a month to plan for intermediate and long-term financing needs.

After Ms. Cheng authorizes the day's payments, the approved voucher packages are forwarded to Ms. Jones who compares the information to the supporting documents. If the voucher data are accurate, Ms. Jones initials the face of the voucher and enters an authorization code via PC into the open voucher file. This triggers the printing of a pre-numbered check and detachable remittance advice based on the data in the open voucher file. The disbursement data are automatically transferred to the cash disbursements journal file and purged from the open voucher file. Ms. Jones signs the checks and forwards them to Mr. Navarro's Secretary.

Mr. Navarro’s secretary cancels the voucher document packages, presents the checks to Mr. Navarro for counter signature, mails the checks to the vendors, and returns the documents to Mr. Smith for filing in voucher number order.

      1. Bank Reconciliations

Upon receipt of the bank statements each month, Ms. Cheng reconciles the beginning and ending balances and the receipts and disbursements to the book amounts. She forwards the reconciliations to Mr. Navarro for review. He then returns them to Ms. Cheng for filing.

    1. Inventory and Cost of Goods Sold


ABC maintains perpetual inventory records on each appliance. Each sale and purchase transaction is entered in the subsidiary ledgers for the particular item sold or purchased as described above. At the end of the month, a worksheet is prepared to cost the ending inventory on a FIFO. Mr. Smith uses a software package to accomplish the costing of ending inventory. The software is able to access both the perpetual inventory ledger and the voucher register file. At the end of the costing routine, the software produces the journal entry to recognize ending inventory and cost of goods sold for the month and enters the latter in the appropriate general ledger accounts.

1 FOB means "Free on Board." FOB shipping point means that the purchaser pays the freight from the ABC's warehouse and also that title to the goods pass to the customer at that point.