New SASs address communications and adjustments.The ASB ASB Asbestos ASB Arbeiter Samariter Bund (German medical help organisation) ASB Anti-Social Behaviour ASB Accounting Standards Board (UK FRC) ASB Aarhus School of Business issued three statements on auditing standards Statements on Auditing Standards, commonly abbreviated as SAS, provide guidance to external auditors on generally accepted auditing standards (abbreviated as GAAS) in regards to auditing an entity and issuing a report. this past winter. * SAS (1) (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, www.sas.com) A software company that specializes in data warehousing and decision support software based on the SAS System. Founded in 1976, SAS is one of the world's largest privately held software companies. See SAS System. no. 90, Audit Committee Communications (December 1999). The ASB issued SAS no. 90 (see Official Releases, page 103) to address concerns about audit committees' oversight of corporate financial reporting. A "blue ribbon blue ribbon denotes highest honor. [Western Folklore: Brewer Dictionary, 127] See : Prize " panel, established by the National Association of Securities Dealers National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) Nonprofit organization formed under the joint sponsorship of the investment bankers' conference and the SEC to comply with the Maloney Act, which provides for the regulation of the OTC market. (NASD NASD See: National Association of Securities Dealers NASD See National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD). ) and the New York Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) World's largest marketplace for securities. The exchange began as an informal meeting of 24 men in 1792 on what is now Wall Street in New York City. (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange ), issued a February 1999 report that articulated these concerns and included recommendations on how to resolve them. The report can be viewed at www.nasd.com/docs/textapp.pdf. One of the report's recommendations was that GAAS See gallium arsenide. require an outside auditor to discuss with a company's audit committee his or her judgments about the quality, not just the acceptability, of the accounting principles applied in the company's financial reports. Accordingly, SAS no. 90, which applies only to SEC engagements, requires the auditor to discuss these issues with the audit committee. SAS no. 90 amends SAS no. 61, Communication With Audit Committees. This amendment is effective for financial statement audits for periods ending on or after December 15, 2000. Earlier application is permitted. Another of the panel's recommendations was that SAS no. 71, Interim Financial Information, require a reporting company's outside auditor to discuss certain issues with the audit committee before the company files its form 10-Q Form 10-Q See 10-Q. and preferably before it publicly announces its financial results. Among the issues worthy of discussion, the panel said, are significant adjustments, management judgments and accounting estimates, significant new accounting policies and disagreements with management. SAS no. 90 amends SAS no. 71 to provide for such review and discussion. This amendment is effective for reviews of interim financial information for periods ending on or after March 15, 2000. Earlier application is permitted. * SAS no. 89, Audit Adjustments (December 1999). In a September 1998 address, SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt, Jr., called on regulators and standard setters, among others, to help improve corporate America's financial reporting. One of the SEC's concerns was that public companies were abusing materiality guidelines in order to manipulate their reported earnings. For example, some companies inappropriately classified small amounts as immaterial, based solely on their size. When repeated, such abuses collectively assumed proportions that were significant to investors and other users of financial statements. The SEC argued, therefore, that individual items' materiality should be evaluated on the basis of their nature as well as their size. The ASB issued SAS no. 89 (see Official Releases, JofA, Feb.00, page 117) to provide guidance in this respect. It amends three earlier SASs: no. 83, Establishing an Understanding With the Client, no. 85, Management Representations and no. 61, Communication With Audit Committees. The amendment to SAS no. 83 requires that from now on, in its engagement letter to the auditor, management must acknowledge its responsibility for correcting material misstatements in the financial statements. It also requires management to confirm, in the engagement letter, that any uncorrected misstatements are immaterial to the financial statements. The amendment to SAS no. 85 requires the addition of an item to the representation letter, s in which management again confirms that the effect of any uncorrected misstatements is immaterial. SAS no. 89 further strengthens the representation letter by stipulating that management must append To add to the end of an existing structure. to it a summary of all uncorrected misstatements. The amendment to SAS no. 61 requires that the auditor inform the audit committee of misstatements management did not correct because it considered them immaterial to the financial statements. SAS no. 89 is effective for audits of financial statements for periods beginning on or after December 15, 1999. Early adoption is permitted. * SAS no. 88, Audit Adjustments (December 1999). SAS no. 88 (see Official Releases, JofA, Feb.00, page 115) addresses "housekeeping" issues for two unrelated topics. Part 1 of SAS no. 88, "Service Organizations," updates SAS no. 70, Reports on the Processing of Transactions by Service Organizations, with new terminology and theory to align it with changes in SAS no. 55, Consideration of Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit, that were brought about by SAS no. 78, Consideration of Internal Control in a Financial Statement Audit: An Amendment to Statement on Auditing Standards no. 55. SAS no. 70 addresses situations in which an outside auditor is auditing an entity that uses a service organization. The auditor must determine whether he or she needs a service auditor's report Auditor's Report Recorded in the annual report, the auditor's report tests to see that a corporation's financial statements comply with GAAP. This is sometimes referred to as the clean opinion. Notes: Most auditor's reports consist of three paragraphs. to properly perform this type of audit. The auditor can base his or her decision on the nature and materiality of transactions the service organization performs for the entity and on the degree of interaction between the entity and the service organization. If the entity's records contain corroborative cor·rob·o·rate tr.v. cor·rob·o·rat·ed, cor·rob·o·rat·ing, cor·rob·o·rates To strengthen or support with other evidence; make more certain. See Synonyms at confirm. information about the service organization's actions and their results, the auditor may be able, without a service auditor's report, to determine whether that organization's reports are accurate. But if the entity's records contain limited information about the service organization's actions, the auditor may have to ask a service auditor to evaluate the accuracy of the organization's reports. Part 2 of SAS no. 88, "Reporting on Consistency," amends AU section 420, Consistency of Application of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles The standard accounting rules, regulations, and procedures used by companies in maintaining their financial records. Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) provide companies and accountants with a consistent set of guidelines that cover both broad accounting (in AICPA AICPA See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). Professional Standards), to specify which changes in a reporting entity are significant enough for an auditor to add a consistency explanatory paragraph to his or her report. The SAS took effect when it was issued. [Figures ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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