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or for an unqualified shared report involving other <strong>audit</strong>ors. More than three paragraphs<br />

indicates some type of qualification or required explanation.<br />

An additional paragraph is added before the opinion for a qualified opinion, an<br />

adverse opinion, and a disclaimer of opinion for a scope limitation. This results in a<br />

four-paragraph report, except for the disclaimer of opinion for a scope limitation.<br />

A disclaimer due to a scope limitation results in a three-paragraph report because<br />

the scope paragraph is omitted. A disclaimer due to a lack of independence is a oneparagraph<br />

report.<br />

When an unqualified opinion with explanatory paragraph is issued, an explanatory<br />

paragraph usually follows the opinion. No explanatory paragraph is required for<br />

an unqualified shared report involving other <strong>audit</strong>ors, but the wording in all three<br />

paragraphs is modified.<br />

Table 3-3 (p. 64) summarizes the types of <strong>reports</strong> issued for the <strong>audit</strong> of financial<br />

statements, the number of paragraphs for each type, the standard wording paragraphs<br />

modified, and the location of the additional paragraph. The table excludes a disclaimer<br />

for a lack of independence, which is a special, one-paragraph report.<br />

IMPACT OF E-COMMERCE ON AUDIT REPORTING<br />

Most public companies provide access to financial information through their home<br />

Web page. Visitors to a company’s Web site can view the company’s most recent <strong>audit</strong>ed<br />

financial statements, including the <strong>audit</strong>or’s report. In addition, it is common for the<br />

company to include such information as un<strong>audit</strong>ed quarterly financial statements,<br />

other selected financial information, and press releases often labeled as “About the<br />

Company” or “Investor Relations” on its Web site.<br />

Even before the widespread use of the Internet, companies often published documents<br />

that contained information in addition to <strong>audit</strong>ed financial statements and the<br />

independent <strong>audit</strong>or’s report. The most common example was and still is the company’s<br />

annual report. Under <strong>audit</strong>ing standards, the <strong>audit</strong>or has no obligation to perform<br />

any procedures to corroborate the other information. The <strong>audit</strong>or is, however,<br />

responsible for reading the other information to determine whether it is materially<br />

inconsistent with information in the <strong>audit</strong>ed financial statements.<br />

However, under current <strong>audit</strong>ing standards, <strong>audit</strong>ors are not required to read<br />

information contained in electronic sites, such as the company’s Web site, that also<br />

contain the company’s <strong>audit</strong>ed financial statements and the <strong>audit</strong>or’s report. Auditing<br />

standards note that electronic sites are a means of distributing information and are not<br />

considered “documents,” as that term is used in <strong>audit</strong>ing standards.<br />

OBJECTIVE 3-9<br />

Discuss the impact of<br />

e-commerce on <strong>audit</strong> reporting.<br />

SUMMARY<br />

This chapter described the <strong>audit</strong>or’s standard unqualified <strong>audit</strong> report, as well as combined<br />

<strong>reports</strong> on the financial statements and internal control over financial reporting under<br />

Section 404 of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act. The four categories of <strong>audit</strong> <strong>reports</strong> and the<br />

<strong>audit</strong>or’s decision process in choosing the appropriate <strong>audit</strong> report to issue were then<br />

discussed. In some circumstances, an explanatory paragraph or modification of the<br />

unqualified report is required. When there is a material departure from GAAP or a material<br />

limitation on the scope of the <strong>audit</strong>, an unqualified report cannot be issued. The<br />

appropriate report to issue in these circumstances depends on whether the situation<br />

involves a GAAP departure or a scope limitation, as well as the level of materiality.<br />

CHAPTER 3 / AUDIT REPORTS 65

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