By Jackson G. Johnson, President, JGA
Last week I attended the AICPA National Conference on Current SEC and PCAOB Developments in Washington, D.C. It was refreshing and rejuvenating to meet new like-minded professionals and catch up with some peers, colleagues, and dear friends. The 3-day, 23-session event covered a lot of ground. Here are some of the key PCAOB-related topics that were discussed by the Board, its staff, and others on emerging PCAOB matters.
PCAOB Concept Release
The PCAOB is holding a public meeting on December 17, 2019 to approve and issue a concept release that would consider amendments to the quality controls standards. This is related to the new Board’s comments over the last several months of their intent to allocate more time to inspecting the effectiveness of quality controls at firms over audits, and that effective quality controls at firms will result in effective audits. Board member Duane DesParte remarked that “Strong QC at the firms leads to consistently higher audit quality.”
Given the are also significant changes to QC standards happening on the international front at the IAASB, these PCAOB initiatives will help keep up with the pace of international reform. There will definitely be more to come on this front and we will be eager to discuss the key points of the concept release and the effect it may have with each of our clients.
As part of this effort, the Board staff is undertaking a project with a dedicated and new Quality Control Team to review and reaffirm its understanding of the quality control systems at each of the six largest global network firms. The evaluation will include each of the firms’ quality control objectives, procedures, and how the firms view QC risks. Interestingly, this is the first time that the same individuals in this team will do this on all six of these firms.
Update on Inspection Program
DesParte noted another new team was established for the first time to look at specific topics in the inspection process. This evergreen “Target Team” will examine certain areas of an audit at a cross-section of firms, including all of the Global Network Firms. The Team’s latest initiative was to examine firms’ methods around group and multi-location audits. This team selected 24 multi-location engagements and examined how the methodology in place at each firm was applied. I believe this work will provide insightful data for the standard-setting and post-implementation review processes.
The Board noted there is room for improvement on the inspections program from a consistency perspective. The PCAOB is performing an internal evaluation of consistency on inspections.
One interesting highlight is the Board is committed to identifying and sharing “good practices” to celebrate what firms are doing well. If you recall, previous Board and inspection leadership were hesitant to say a particular practice was a “best practice” or even a “good practice.” I suspect inspectors gather positive audit quality indicators and this data is significant even though we haven’t heard much about it. It will be great to see the sharing of some of this information to better inform firms what they could do to improve in certain areas.
Expect continued focus on the areas that result in frequent inspection issues – these should be no surprise to you and they are areas I and other JGA professional continue to spend our time on with our clients: Revenue, ICFR, Independence, and implementation of new standards (e.g. leases, CECL, and CAMs). Revenue under FASB ASC 606 will still be a consideration for new standard implementation for those triennially inspected-firms that have not been inspected when 606 was adopted.
Inspection Reporting
The Board announced a new section of the report: Part I.B. Given all of Part I is the public portion of the report, I expect this new section will be public. Per the Board member discussion at the conference, this section will report on non-compliance with standards in an audit even though the audit opinion was supported. The Board gave examples such as non-compliance with AS 1215, Audit Documentation, or AS 1301 Communications with Audit Committees.
There’s been a bit of conflicting information on exactly which firms will receive their next report under this new format first, but, for sure, it is limited to annually-inspected firms. None have been released yet so we will keep you posted when we can review the first batch of these. We also need to understand the implications on the remediation process since some of the items that were previously private – and remain so subject to successful remedial actions implemented by the firm within one year -- will now be public at the outset. At least a description of the finding will be public at the outset.
Conclusion
Chairman Duhnke indicated that they are moving ahead on items that the Board members can agree on. This isn’t always easy when an entirely new Board each bring fresh and different perspectives to the table with their varying legal, auditing, and legislative backgrounds. It will be a busy year for the PCAOB, and in turn, auditors, as the new Board continues to find their way and their staff carry out these new initiatives. Please don’t hesitate to reach out to me or another JGA professional to discuss any of these matters more and how they affect you.
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