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The PCAOB oversees public company auditors to protect investors' interests and ensure informative, fair audit reports. Adopting standards and responding to public perception, PCAOB ensures financial reporting reliability.
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Public Company Accounting Oversight Board www.pcaobus.org
Mission • The PCAOB is a private-sector, non-profit corporation, created by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, to oversee the auditors of public companies in order to protect the interests of investors and further the public interest in the preparation of informative, fair, and independent audit reports. PCAOB
Charge from Sarbanes-Oxley • To oversee the audit of public companies that are subject to the securities laws, and related matters, in order to protect the interests of investors and further the public interest in the preparation of informative accurate and independent audit reports for companies the securities of which are sold to, and held by and for, public investors. PCAOB
Charge from Sarbanes-Oxley • the Act removed from auditors the ability to exclusively interpret their role in society • that task is now in the hands of the PCAOB • the Board’s charge effectively requires it to be responsive to the public perception of the assurance that society needs and reasonably expects from an audit PCAOB
Auditing Standards • April 2003 • adopted existing 101 SASs • December 2003 • Issued Auditing Standard No. 1 • References in Auditors' Reports to the Standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board • Approved by SEC May 2004 PCAOB
Auditing Standards • March 2004 • Issued Auditing Standard No. 2 • An Audit of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting Performed in Conjunction with An Audit of Financial Statements • Approved by SEC June 2004 PCAOB
Auditing Standards • June 2004 • Issued Auditing Standard No. 3 • Audit Documentation • Approved by SEC August 2004 PCAOB
Auditing Standards • February 2006 • Issued Auditing Standard No. 4 • Reporting on Whether a Previously Reported Material Weakness Continues to Exist • Approved by SEC February 2006 PCAOB
Auditing Standards • the reference to generally accepted standards (GAAS) implied that the legitimacy of the standards dependedon their general acceptance by auditors, i.e., a consensus of the accounting profession • that is no longer the case PCAOB
Auditing Standards • the audit report reference to the audit being made in accordance with PCAOB standards is much more than a change in the identification of the source of the standards • when the SEC approved the standards, they became Federal law PCAOB
Auditing Standards • Standard No. 2 from the PCAOB • audits of internal control over financial reporting • This standard is related to Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act • requires management to assess and report annually on internal control over financial reporting PCAOB
Auditing Standards • Under the PCAOB’s new standard, the audit of a public company is now an audit of the company’s financial reporting process, not just the financial statements PCAOB
Auditing Standards • Comments by Douglas Carmichael , Chief Auditor and Director of Professional Standards at PCAOB • the annual and quarterly financial statements are the primary outputs of the process, but internal control over financial reporting provides discipline and safeguards over the process that produces those financial reports as well as other timely releases of financial information PCAOB
Auditing Standards • the ultimate objective of this new audit of a public company is to meet society’s need for reliable outputs of the financial reporting process • investors need and want assurance that the public company’s releases of financial information during the period between audited annual financial statements are reliable PCAOB
Auditing Standards • Should there be two sets of auditing standards? • one for public companies and one for private companies? PCAOB
Auditing Standards • is the perception of users of private company financial statements that auditors of such financial statements inspire a distinctly different level of confidence in the effectiveness of the audit? • it is difficult to see how that would be in the public interest PCAOB