The COVID-19 pandemic has created novel challenges for the audit profession that could have lingering impacts on the quality and reliability of independent accounting firm’s work if not carefully addressed. The increased reliance on remote auditing needs to be carefully managed particularly for auditors with clients in areas like China and Europe, where travel restrictions limit site visits compared to domestic locations that can be visited with COVID protocols in place. Management, audit committees, and investors all need to be aware of the limitations that auditors are operating under and the steps that can be taken to ensure that audit quality remains robust during this period.
Typically, audit field work provides a critical foundation for forming an audit opinion. There are certain key audit functions, such as inventory counts, verification of real estate holdings, and inspection of critical assets, which are extremely challenging to perform in a virtual manner. For this reason, the scope of an audit would in normal times entail spending a number of days or even weeks at the client location with an audit team working under the supervision of the audit partner.
In addition to those routine tasks, time onsite provides the invaluable opportunity for an auditor to ask questions and exercise the professional skepticism that is an essential part of the role of an independent accounting firm. In face-to-face meetings, senior management is more likely to open up about business issues and concerns they might hesitate to disclose in an email or phone call. There are opportunities to speak with employees at multiple levels of the organization to see if responses are consistent or if there are issues that require further testing and verification. Original documents and key operations can be scrutinized with a gimlet eye. This type of on-the-ground intelligence is invaluable as a comparison point for financial and operational data produced by the company and confirmations from third parties.
But today’s COVID-related travel restrictions have disrupted this model. As of today, most of Asia, the European Union, Canada, Mexico, and even the Bahamas have restricted travel from the U.S. Until the rates of COVID-19 infection change dramatically or a vaccine is developed, it is not practical to fly in a team of auditors to engage in field work and the associated activities that go along with that.
The risks of reduced access are particularly acute in geographic regions that have historically had lower levels of transparency, less mature financial and regulatory systems, and higher risk of potential corruption. In these parts of the world, the ability of local managers to find willing counterparties to produce fraudulent confirmations and falsify financial transactions is much higher. For this reason, on-the-ground diligence with a proper level of professional skepticism and use of non-traditional audit techniques may be required to issue a reliable audit opinion. Simply comparing documents from multiple sources for internal consistency is prone to failure. Recent discussion of the lack of inspections by the PCAOB of local member firms auditing U.S.-listed companies, including major multi-national corporations, has heightened the attention on the risks of inconsistent audit standards across jurisdictions. While ensuring consistent application of audit principles and gathering reliable evidence in countries such as China has always been a challenge, firms without audit partners on the ground to supervise the work now face a much higher risk of missing critical information.
For foreign issuers listed on U.S. stock markets, a higher level of education and ongoing reinforcement of the importance of internal controls, identification of conflicts of interest, and financial transparency is required part of the auditor’s job. Establishing a strong working relationship with the Audit Committee of the Board is particularly important in these jurisdictions, since some board members may not fully understand their responsibility to provide independent oversight of the auditor’s work and key accounting policies adopted by the company. Vigorous independence may be viewed as contrary to the values of founder-centered business culture in countries like China and other emerging markets. Such nuanced relationships are very challenging to develop in the absence of in-person meetings, though once established can potentially be sustained through the use of secure virtual meeting technology.
Open and effective communication with management is more critical than ever during a period of severe economic disruption, such as the current pandemic, since management is required to make critical accounting estimates for conditions that lack comparable historical data. The auditor needs to be willing and able to probe the assumptions behind these estimates to determine if they have a reasonable basis and are not being employed to manipulate accrual accounting. In addition, travel restrictions and budget cuts may erode the effectiveness company’s own internal controls for financial reporting. In order to play a constructive role in the review of quarterly financial statements, as well as the annual audit, the independent accounting firm needs to have confidence in the integrity and reasonableness of the information management is providing.
In the worst case, limitations on essential audit work could result in a scope limitation to the audit opinion. If those limitations are deemed to be material to the assurance of the financial results, then the auditor would need to express a “qualified opinion,” which could be damaging to investor confidence. If on the other hand, those limitations are both material and “pervasive,” the consequences could be even more severe.
In this event, the auditor would need to express a “disclaimer of opinion,” meaning that it can provide no assurance that the financial results can be relied upon. Pervasive limitations are those that exist due to the auditor’s inability to collect appropriate audit evidence and could result in potential misstatements that are not confined to specific elements or accounts of the financial statements, could represent a substantial portion of the financial statements, or are fundamental to users’ understanding of the financial statements.
Typically, a disclaimer of opinion would be issued only in the most severe circumstances when management has refused to provide the auditor access to evidence that is required to express even a qualified opinion. But if the pandemic were to cause similar material and pervasive lacunae in evidence to support an opinion, the result would be the same.
How should companies and auditors avoid these undesirable outcomes?
Like any crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic will expose the flaws in unsound methods and create opportunities for unscrupulous operators to take advantage of diminished visibility that the virus has imposed. But as Winston Churchill noted, “We should never let a good crisis go to waste.” For the accounting profession, the COVID-19 pandemic presents the opportunity to reinvent the role of the independent audit to focus on what is essential to our success and what can be usefully reimagined to be more effective and efficient in the future.