Whittington, Sparrow & Co.
Student guidance for the completion of this assignment:
§ You are required to act, for the purposes of the case study, as a professional external auditor. This means responding in a professional and business like way to all tasks set
§ All means of communication used will be assessed as if produced in a real life situation and they must be prepared by you as if being communicated an actual business client
§ Where evaluation or judgements are required always use acceptable yardsticks (legal rules and / or audit standards) to measure against. Further, when critical appraisal is required and subjective judgement necessary always try to explain your point by using realistic examples
Part 1:
Whittington, Sparrow & Co. is a firm of chartered accountants and registered auditors operating from offices in central Manchester. You are employed as an audit manager for the firm.
Simon Blake Ltd (Blakes) is a company specialising in the manufacture and installation of reception masts and electronic components used in the industrial and domestic power generation and wind farms industry.
Whittington, Sparrow & Co. has been invited to tender for the external audit of Blakes.
Justin Whittington (your firms senior audit partner) has expressed his keenness in the success of the tender. This would serve to expand the firms business in this high growth area and dilute the total of audit fees. The firm has a single client, the recurring audit fees from which; last year, accounted for 12.5% of total audit fees and, for this reason, Justin has recommended that a very competitive price be offered.
The original invitation to tender came after a discussion between Justin Whittington and Carol Bond (the chief accountant for Blakes).
Carol Bond trained at your firm and was a senior member of the audit staff before leaving to set up in business on her own 4 years ago.
The original discussion disclosed the following information:
Blakes has, until this year, been exempted from the requirement for statutory because annual turnover had peaked at around £6.0m. Carol, acting as external accountant to Blakes, had been engaged to prepare an annual independent financial statement review and statutory returns for Companies House and the Inland Revenue
Due to a significant increase in demand for Blakes products and services over the last two financial years, it is expected that, for the current year, the statutory exemption will be removed. As a result of the growth, Carol became chief accountant for Blakes 2 years ago and, with the support of two junior staff, has commenced the development of a number of internal audit initiatives
There are 10 shareholders in the company, all drawn from the Blake and the Glossop families. Chris Blake and Denise Glossop work full time for the company; involved in day to day management operations. The rest of the shareholding is on an investment finance basis only
§ Todays date is 1st August 2013 and the companys accounting year end date is 30th September 2013.
§ A meeting has been arranged between your firm and Blakes (in one weeks time) the objective being to present and clarify the legal and practical requirements of the statutory audit to management and to outline the basis of audit fees (with a view to helping secure the engagement)
Required for part 1:
1.1 Prepare explanatory notes to support your forthcoming presentation to the management of Blakes. Your notes should include explanation of:
a. The legal rules relating to the statutory audit including the small companies exemption and corporate governance requirements
200 – 10%
b. The nature, purpose and scope of the external audit and the difference between the statutory audit and the independent financial review
300 – 10%
1.2 Explain:
a. The purpose of the threshold placed on a single audit fee as a proportion of total recurring audit fee income
200 – 5%
b. An appropriate basis for audit fee setting and any issues you feel may arise through competitive tendering
200 – 5%
Total for part 1 – 30%
Part 2:
Thanks, in part, to your clear and informative presentation and competitive fee structure, Blakes has engaged Whittington, Sparrow & Co. as external auditors for the current year.
Through subsequent meetings, communications and investigations, the following information has emerged:
Chris Blake:
Chris is the sales director and, with an office of eight staff, controls all dealings with the companys customers. This includes:
§ Sales contract negotiations
§ Product distribution and installation (including the sub contracting of specialist labour)
§ Sales invoicing and chasing outstanding payments
§ Banking customer receipts
§ Maintenance of the sales ledger (using spreadsheets)
Chris spends most of his time on the road and delegates much responsibility to Barbara Chipley, the senior sales manager. David is actually brother to a colleague auditor at your firm.
Denise Glossop:
Denise is the production (works) manager. The production office employs 5 staff and is responsible for all supplier relations including:
Raw materials ordering, delivery and stock control
Production scheduling and machinery maintenance
Factory workers (60 direct labour employees)
Dealing with purchase invoice receipts and supplier payments
Maintenance of the purchase ledger (using spreadsheets)
Denise spends all of her time at the factory / office site. Purchasing requirements and production scheduling is based on future sales order requirements discussed with Barbara Chipley at weekly planning meetings. Denise is the only authorised signatory of company cheques.
Carol Bond:
Carol Bond is the company accountant and will ultimately be responsible for the preparation of the year end financial statements. The accounting function is a sub section of the business administration office (manager Tom Plant). Carols main responsibilities are:
§ The co ordination of the financial activities of Chris Blake and Denise Glossop to produce monthly management reports (from spreadsheet print outs)
§ Control of the payroll function and paying wages
§ All dealings with the business bankers
Blakes employed Carol as a result of the growth in activity and a requirement for more specific control of the financial function. Her first task was the preparation of a forecast income statement and statement of financial position. This allowed her to become familiar with all of the business operations.
Internal audit work currently consists of testing sales and purchasing operations, through documentation, to the accounts, and reconciliations for receivables, payables and bank accounts.
She admits that the on site directors largely control operations (as they always have) and do not fully understand audit and the internal audit function although she does not doubt their integrity in business matters.
The accounting system is not really appropriate for the size of the business. It is hoped that a new (bespoke) system will be developed and installed early next year.
Required for part 2:
2.1 Discuss any matters you may feel arise from the information provided above. Your discussion should include consideration of:
Family links between auditor and client
200 – 4%
Internal control systems, their effectiveness and internal control risks
300 – 8%
The audit expectation gap and the purpose of the letter of engagement
200 – 4%
2.2 Prepare the letter of engagement for the approval of the Board of Blakes (dated 25th August 2013)
N/A – 4%
Total for part 2 – 20%
Part 3:
Assume that todays date is 15th October 2013.
The draft financial statements for the year ended 30th September 2013 have been prepared and you have obtained additional relevant information (see appendices A and B).
Required for part 3:
3.1 Examine the financial data provided at appendices A, B and C and:
Extract and analyse any (auditor generated) information that you may feel relevant for the purposes of analytical review and audit risk (all workings must be shown)
N/A – 20%
Explain the term materiality and the importance of dis aggregation as part of analytical review
200 – 5%
3.2 Audit planning for the audit will take a risk based approach involving a detailed analysis of Blakes internal control systems
List and explain the four risk elements of audit (including possible sources of evidence for each element)
300 – 5%
List and describe 5 methods that the auditor may use to generate internal control systems audit evidence and how you would apply the methods described in your work for Blakes
300 – 10%
3.3 You have been made aware of Carol Bonds internal audit aims for the organisation
Describe the circumstances where the external auditor might use the work of others as a means to obtaining audit evidence and the extent to which the work of others can be relied upon
300 – 5%
Discuss the extent to which you might use the Carols work
200 – 5%
Total for part 3 – 50%
Assignment total 100%
Appendix A:
Edward Blake Ltd
Income statements
for the years ended 30th September:
2012
2013
2013
Actual
Budget
Draft
£000
£000
£000
Turnover
6,850
7,200
7,000
Manufacturing costs
(4,380)
(4,320)
(4,200)
GROSS PROFIT:
2,470
2,880
2,800
Distribution costs
(500)
(436)
(390)
Administrative expenses
(740)
(644)
(1,165)
OPERATING PROFIT:
1,230
1,800
1,245
Interest and similar charges
(100)
(220)
(180)
PROFIT BEFORE TAX:
1,130
1,580
1,065
Taxation
(300)
(470)
(235)
PROFIT AFTER TAX:
830
1,110
830
Edward Blake Ltd
Statement of financial position
as at 30th September:
2012
2013
2013
Actual
Budget
Draft
£000
£000
£000
Fixed assets
3,420
4,800
4,600
Inventory
420
470
725
Accounts receivable
600
690
780
Bank and cash
100
200
Total current assets:
1,120
1,360
1,505
Accounts payable
460
530
660
Interest
25
40
45
Taxation
75
100
70
Bank overdrafts
120
Total current liabilities:
(560)
(670)
(895)
Net current assets:
560
690
610
Total assets less current liabilities:
3,980
5,490
5,210
Long -term debt
(1,200)
(2,200)
(1,500)
Net assets:
2,780
3,290
3,710
Shareholders funds (Appendix B)
2,780
3,290
3,710
Appendix B:
Reconciliation of Shareholders Funds
2012
2013
2013
Actual
Budget
Draft
Reconciliation of shareholders funds:
£000
£000
£000
Ordinary share capital (£1 ordinary shares)
2,000
2,500
3,500
Revaluation reserve (land)
100
100
Retained profits B/fwd:
700
780
780
Add profit after tax
830
1,110
830
Dividends (paid and proposed)
(750)
(1,200)
(1,500)
Retained profits c/fwd:
780
690
110
Shareholders funds c/fwd:
2,780
3,290
3,710
Appendix C:
Condor & Viper (Financial analysis)
Industry average
Power generation – manufacturing
as at 31st December 2011
Gross profit margin
37.50%
Net profit margin (operating profit)
20.00%
ROCE (total capital employed)
25.00%
Interest cover
9 times
EPS
35p
Dividend per share
40p
Average receivable (days)
35 days
Average payable (days)
40 days
Average inventory turnover (days in stock)
40 days
END of ASSIGNMENT