Accounting and Auditing Services
Stockholders, creditors, and private investors often need assurance that the financial
statements accurately represent the true financial position of a company.
Your stockholders, creditors, or private investors have different levels of risk
tolerance, so we provide three levels of assurance to meet your needs.
Audit - Highest Level of Assurance
An audit provides the highest level of assurance. An audit is a methodical review
and objective examination of the financial statements, including the verification
of specific information as determined by the auditor or as established by general
practice.
Our work includes a review of internal controls, testing of selected transactions,
and communication with third parties. Based on our findings, we issue a report on
whether the financial statements are fairly stated and free of material misstatements.
An Audit allows you to...
- Satisfy stakeholders such as employees, customers, suppliers and pressure groups,
as well as the investing community, as to the credibility of published information.
- Facilitate the payment of corporate tax, goods and services tax, and other taxes
on-time and accurately, thereby avoiding interest, penalties, and investigations.
- Comply with banking covenants.
- Help deter and detect material fraud and error.
- Facilitate the purchase and sale of businesses.
Here's what you get...
You get the highest level of assurance because we go outside your company to obtain
more information. Typically, we'll have written communication with:
- Your customers, to check outstanding receivable balances,
- Your banks, to
confirm cash or debt balances and terms,
- Your vendors, to verify outstanding payable balances, and
- Your attorneys, for information on pending or threatened legal action.
We also perform physical inspections by observing your inventory counting methods
and perform test counts. We document and test each operating cycle, including sales
and cash receipts, expenses and cash disbursements, and payroll. Our audit papers
include a detailed work program to document the examinations and testing performed,
as well as the client's supporting work papers.
Audits Not Just for Public Entities
All public companies are required to have an annual audit, but some nonpublic entities
must undergo an annual audit as well. These include local governments, not-for-profit
agencies and other organizations receiving government grants.
Moreover, some financial institutions require audits of nonpublic companies based
on the financing amount and/or the bank's assessment of the company's risk. Also,
companies with absentee ownership (such as those owned by investment firms, or individuals
who no longer run the business) may order audits as checks of their management teams.
Review - Limited Assurance
Less extensive than an audit, but more involved than a compilation, a review engagement
consists primarily of analytical procedures we apply to the financial statements,
and various inquiries we make of your company's management team. If the financial
statements or supporting information appear inconsistent or otherwise questionable,
we may need to perform additional procedures.
A review doesn't require us to study and evaluate your company's internal controls
or verify data with third parties or physically inspect assets. Rather, a review
report expresses limited assurance in the form of the statement: "We are not
aware of any material modifications" for the financial statements to be in
conformity with the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). Reviewed financial
statements must include all required footnotes and other disclosures.
Why might a business request a review engagement? It can be a good middle ground,
providing the advantages of a CPA's technical expertise without the work and expense
of an audit.
Compilation - Lowest Level of Assurance
In compiling financial statements for a client, we present information that is the
"representation of management" and expresses no opinion or assurance on
the statements. Compilations don't require inquiries of management or analytical
procedures. Instead, we rely on our knowledge of accounting principles and a general
understanding of your business.
Banks often require compilations from an independent CPA as part of their lending
covenants.
Which Report Should You Use?
Each type of financial statement report may suit specific circumstances, depending
on requirements from your client's bank or other parties, as well as meet budgetary
needs.
Understanding each report's unique strengths and weaknesses can help you choose
the most appropriate one. Please call if you have questions about which type of
report is right for you.
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