Abstract

In financial auditing the auditor can accept a new engagement or not, based on the client’s background, with a major impact on the audit risk. This study aims to indentify and analyze the influence of the background factors that lead the auditor to the clients’ acceptance. For obtaining the research result, in the study a sample of 100 companies was considered. These companies were the first 100 multinationals included in top 500 Fortune, from 2011, and which were audited by Big 4 audit companies. The study develops three work hypotheses regarding the influence of some financial and non-financial factors to the auditor’s acceptance of a new audit engagement. For testing the hypotheses, there were proposed as factors some financial variables (return ratios, financial leverage) and non-financial variables (activity field, auditor). The research results were obtained by using quantitative methods for data analysis. In the study the data were processed with the statistical software, SPSS 19.0. The research results show that the auditor’s decision regarding the acceptance of the audit engagement is significantly influenced by the client’s prestige, reflected through the position occupied in Top 500 Fortune, the specialization of the auditor in a specific activity field and by the client’s financial performance and his ability to continue as a going concern in a predictable horizon of time.

Highlights

  • The great financial scandals before and post Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) attracted the attention of the public opinion and on the audit companies, being found responsible to the same extent, as the companies which have defrauded, for the financial losses registered either at the national level, or at the global level (Ball, 2009)

  • The research results show that the auditor’s decision regarding the acceptance of the audit engagement is significantly influenced by the client’s prestige, reflected through the position occupied in Top 500 Fortune, the specialization of the auditor in a specific activity field and by the client’s financial performance and his ability to continue as a going concern in a predictable horizon of time

  • Within the study for achieving the research objectives, through the validation of work hypotheses, we propose the use of some data analysis methods, among which: the ratios technique (RT), the multiple correspondences analysis (MCA), the discriminant analysis (DA) and the logistical regression analysis (LRA)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The great financial scandals before and post Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) attracted the attention of the public opinion and on the audit companies, being found responsible to the same extent, as the companies which have defrauded, for the financial losses (and ) registered either at the national level, or at the global level (Ball, 2009). After these unfortunate events, some audit companies were brought before court, being compelled to pay considerable indemnifications or were even destroyed. The auditor must analyze as well the evolution of the business environment where the company is integrated, the eventual financial problems that the company is confronted with, the suspicions regarding the occurrence of errors and of financial frauds, changes from the financialaccounting, information and internal control system (Porter et al, 2003)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call