Analytical procedures (finance auditing) explained

Analytical procedures are one of many financial audit procedures which help an auditor understand an entity's business and changes in the business, and to identify potential risk areas to plan other audit procedures. It can also be an audit substantive test involving the evaluation of financial information made by a study of plausible relationships among both financial and non-financial data. Analytical procedures also encompass such investigation as is necessary of identified fluctuations or relationships that are inconsistent with other relevant information or that differ from expected values by a significant amount.[1]

Use and stage

Analytical procedures are performed at three stages of the audit: at the start, in the middle and at the end of the audit. These three stages are risk assessment procedures, substantive analytical procedures, and final analytical procedures.[2]

Evidence

Analytical procedures include comparison of financial information (data in financial statement) with prior periods, budgets, forecasts, similar industries and so on. It also includes consideration of predictable relationships, such as gross profit to sales, payroll costs to employees, and financial information and non-financial information, for examples the CEO's reports and the industry news. Possible sources of information about the client include interim financial information, budgets, management accounts, non-financial information, bank and cash records, VAT returns, board minutes, and discussion or correspondence with the client at the year-end.

Substantive analytical procedures

When designing and performing substantive analytical procedures, the auditor:[1]

If the difference between the expectation and the amount recorded by the entity exceeds the threshold, then the auditor investigates such differences.[1]

Auditing Standards

Current proposals

In June 2024, the PCAOB proposed a new AS 2305, Designing and Performing Substantive Analytical Procedures, to better align with the auditor’s risk assessment and to address the increasing use of technology tools in performing these procedures.[4]

See also

External resources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Comparison of proposed AS 2305 with ISA 520 and AU-C 520. PCAOB. 26 August 2024.
  2. Web site: Financial Reporting Council. May 2022. ISA (UK) 520 Analytical Procedures. 8 August 2024.
  3. Web site: AS 2305 Substantive analytical procedures. PCAOB.
  4. Web site: Substantive analaytical procedures. PCAOB. 26 August 2024.