This Auditing Standard deals with the auditor’s responsibilities relating to opening balances in an initial audit engagement.
Compilation Details
Auditing Standard ASA 510 Initial Audit Engagements‑Opening Balances (as Amended)
This compilation takes into account amendments made up to and including 15 March 2023 and was prepared on 22 March 2023 by the Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (AUASB).
This compilation is not a separate Auditing Standard made by the AUASB. Instead, it is a representation of ASA 510 (October 2009) as amended by other Auditing Standards which are listed in the Table below.
Table of Standards
Standard |
Date made |
Operative Date |
ASA 510 |
Financial reporting periods commencing on or after 1 January 2010 |
|
1 December 2015 |
Financial reporting periods ending on or after 15 December 2016 |
|
ASA 2020-2 |
30 June 2020 |
Financial reporting periods ending on or after 15 July 2020 |
ASA 2020-1 | 3 March 2020 | Financial reporting periods commencing on or after 15 December 2021* |
ASA 2023-1 | 15 March 2023 | Financial reporting periods commencing on or after 1 January 2023 |
Legislation History
Standard |
Registration Number |
Registration Date |
Commencement Date |
ASA 510 |
F2009L04089 |
16 November 2009 |
17 November 2009 |
ASA 2015‑1 |
F2015L02032 |
16 December 2015 |
17 December 2015 |
ASA 2020-2 |
F2020L00885 |
7 July 2020 |
8 July 2020 |
ASA 2020-1 |
F2020L00252 |
13 March 2020 |
14 March 2020 |
ASA 2023-1 |
F2023L00295 |
21 March 2023 |
22 March 2023 |
Table of Amendments
Paragraph affected |
How affected |
By … [paragraph] |
A8(b) |
Amended |
ASA 2015-1 [148] |
Appendix 1 |
Amended |
ASA 2015-1 [149] |
Appendix 1 |
Amended |
ASA 2020-2 [37] to [40] |
9 Footnote 4 |
Amended | ASA 2020-1 [8] |
Appendix 1 | Amended | ASA 2023-1 [18] to [19] |
* Early adoption, in conjunction with ASA 315 Identifying and Assessing the Risks of Material Misstatement, permitted.
Preamble
Authority Statement
Auditing Standard ASA 510 Initial Audit Engagements‑Opening Balances (as amended to 15 March 2023) is set out in paragraphs Aus 0.1 to A9 and Appendix 1.
This Auditing Standard is to be read in conjunction with ASA 101 Preamble to AUASB Standards, which sets out how AUASB Standards are to be understood, interpreted and applied. This Auditing Standard is to be read also in conjunction with ASA 200 Overall Objectives of the Independent Auditor and the Conduct of an Audit in Accordance with Australian Auditing Standards.
Conformity with International Standards on Auditing
This Auditing Standard conforms with International Standard on Auditing ISA 510 Initial Audit Engagements‑Opening Balances issued by the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB), an independent standard‑setting board of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC).
Paragraphs that have been added to this Auditing Standard (and do not appear in the text of the equivalent ISA) are identified with the prefix “Aus”.
Compliance with this Auditing Standard enables compliance with ISA 510.
AUDITING STANDARD ASA 510
The Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (AUASB) made Auditing Standard ASA 510 Initial Audit Engagements‑Opening Balances pursuant to section 227B of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 and section 336 of the Corporations Act 2001, on 27 October 2009.
This compiled version of ASA 510 incorporates subsequent amendments contained in other Auditing Standards made by the AUASB up to and including 15 March 2023 (see Compilation Details).
Application
Aus 0.1
This Auditing Standard applies to:
- an audit of a financial report for a financial year, or an audit of a financial report for a half‑year, in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001; and
- an audit of a financial report, or a complete set of financial statements, for any other purpose.
Aus 0.2
This Auditing Standard also applies, as appropriate, to an audit of other historical financial information.
Introduction
Scope of this Auditing Standard
1
This Auditing Standard deals with the auditor’s responsibilities relating to opening balances in an initial audit engagement. In addition to financial statement amounts, opening balances include matters requiring disclosure that existed at the beginning of the period, such as contingencies and commitments. When the financial report includes comparative financial information, the requirements and guidance in ASA 710[1] also apply. ASA 300[2] includes additional requirements and guidance regarding activities prior to starting an initial audit.
Effective Date
2
[Deleted by the AUASB. Refer Aus 0.3]
See ASA 710 Comparative Information—Corresponding Figures and Comparative Financial Reports.
See ASA 300 Planning an Audit of a Financial Report.
Objective
3
In conducting an initial audit engagement, the objective of the auditor is to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence about whether:
- Opening balances contain misstatements that materially affect the current period’s financial report; and
- Appropriate accounting policies reflected in the opening balances have been consistently applied in the current period’s financial report, or changes thereto are appropriately accounted for and adequately presented and disclosed in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework.
Definitions
4
For the purposes of this Auditing Standard, the following terms have the meanings attributed below:
4(a)
Initial audit engagement means an engagement in which either:
- The financial report for the prior period was not audited; or
- The financial report for the prior period was audited by a predecessor auditor.
4(b)
Opening balances means those account balances that exist at the beginning of the period. Opening balances are based upon the closing balances of the prior period and reflect the effects of transactions and events of prior periods and accounting policies applied in the prior period. Opening balances also include matters requiring disclosure that existed at the beginning of the period, such as contingencies and commitments.
4(c)
Predecessor auditor means the auditor from a different audit firm, who audited the financial report of an entity in the prior period and who has been replaced by the current auditor.
Requirements
Audit Procedures
Opening Balances
5
The auditor shall read the most recent financial report, if any, and the predecessor auditor’s report thereon, if any, for information relevant to opening balances, including disclosures.
6
The auditor shall obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence about whether the opening balances contain misstatements that materially affect the current period’s financial report by: (Ref: Para. A1‑A2)
- Determining whether the prior period’s closing balances have been correctly brought forward to the current period or, when appropriate, have been restated;
- Determining whether the opening balances reflect the application of appropriate accounting policies; and
- Performing one or more of the following: (Ref: Para. A3‑A7)
- Where the prior year financial report was audited, reviewing the predecessor auditor’s working papers to obtain evidence regarding the opening balances;
- Evaluating whether audit procedures performed in the current period provide evidence relevant to the opening balances; or
- Performing specific audit procedures to obtain evidence regarding the opening balances.
7
If the auditor obtains audit evidence that the opening balances contain misstatements that could materially affect the current period’s financial report, the auditor shall perform such additional audit procedures as are appropriate in the circumstances to determine the effect on the current period’s financial report. If the auditor concludes that such misstatements exist in the current period’s financial report, the auditor shall communicate the misstatements with the appropriate level of management and those charged with governance in accordance with ASA 450.[3]
Consistency of Accounting Policies
8
The auditor shall obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence about whether the accounting policies reflected in the opening balances have been consistently applied in the current period’s financial report, and whether changes in the accounting policies have been appropriately accounted for and adequately presented and disclosed in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework.
Relevant Information in the Predecessor Auditor’s Report
9
If the prior period’s financial report was audited by a predecessor auditor and there was a modification to the opinion, the auditor shall evaluate the effect of the matter giving rise to the modification in assessing the risks of material misstatement in the current period’s financial report in accordance with ASA 315.[4]
Audit Conclusions and Reporting
Opening Balances
10
If the auditor is unable to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence regarding the opening balances, the auditor shall express a qualified opinion or disclaim an opinion on the financial report, as appropriate, in accordance with ASA 705.[5] (Ref: Para. A8)
11
If the auditor concludes that the opening balances contain a misstatement that materially affects the current period’s financial report, and the effect of the misstatement is not appropriately accounted for or not adequately presented or disclosed, the auditor shall express a qualified opinion or an adverse opinion, as appropriate, in accordance with ASA 705.
Consistency of Accounting Policies
12
If the auditor concludes that:
- the current period’s accounting policies are not consistently applied in relation to opening balances in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework; or
- a change in accounting policies is not appropriately accounted for or not adequately presented or disclosed in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework, the auditor shall express a qualified opinion or an adverse opinion as appropriate in accordance with ASA 705.
Modification to the Opinion in the Predecessor Auditor’s Report
13
If the predecessor auditor’s opinion regarding the prior period’s financial report included a modification to the auditor’s opinion that remains relevant and material to the current period’s financial report, the auditor shall modify the auditor’s opinion on the current period’s financial report in accordance with ASA 705 and ASA 710. (Ref: Para. A9)
See ASA 315 Identifying and Assessing the Risks of Material Misstatement.
See ASA 705 Modifications to the Opinion in the Independent Auditor’s Report.
Application and Other Explanatory Material
Audit Procedures
Considerations Specific to Public Sector Entities (Ref: Para. 6)
A1
In the public sector, there may be legal or regulatory limitations on the information that the current auditor can obtain from a predecessor auditor. For example, if a public sector entity that has previously been audited by a statutorily appointed auditor (for example, an Auditor‑General, or other suitably qualified person appointed on behalf of the Auditor‑General) is privatised, the amount of access to working papers or other information that the statutorily appointed auditor can provide a newly appointed auditor that is in the private sector may be constrained by privacy laws or regulations. In situations where such communications are constrained, audit evidence may need to be obtained through other means and, if sufficient appropriate audit evidence cannot be obtained, consideration given to the effect on the auditor’s opinion.
A2
If the statutorily appointed auditor outsources an audit of a public sector entity to a private sector audit firm, and the statutorily appointed auditor appoints an audit firm other than the firm that audited the financial report of the public sector entity in the prior period, this is not usually regarded as a change in auditors for the statutorily appointed auditor. Depending on the nature of the outsourcing arrangement, however, the audit engagement may be considered an initial audit engagement from the perspective of the private sector auditor in fulfilling their responsibilities, and therefore this Auditing Standard applies.
Opening Balances (Ref: Para. 6(c))
A3
The nature and extent of audit procedures necessary to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence regarding opening balances depend on such matters as:
- The accounting policies followed by the entity.
- The nature of the account balances, classes of transactions and disclosures and the risks of material misstatement in the current period’s financial report.
- The significance of the opening balances relative to the current period’s financial report.
- Whether the prior period’s financial report was audited and, if so, whether the predecessor auditor’s opinion was modified.
A4
If the prior period’s financial report was audited by a predecessor auditor, the auditor may be able to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence regarding the opening balances by reviewing the predecessor auditor’s working papers. Whether such a review provides sufficient appropriate audit evidence is influenced by the professional competence and independence of the predecessor auditor.
A5
Relevant ethical and professional requirements[*] guide the current auditor’s communications with the predecessor auditor.
A6
For current assets and liabilities, some audit evidence about opening balances may be obtained as part of the current period’s audit procedures. For example, the collection (payment) of opening accounts receivable (accounts payable) during the current period will provide some audit evidence of their existence, rights and obligations, completeness and valuation at the beginning of the period. In the case of inventories, however, the current period’s audit procedures on the closing inventory balance provide little audit evidence regarding inventory on hand at the beginning of the period. Therefore, additional audit procedures may be necessary, and one or more of the following may provide sufficient appropriate audit evidence:
- Observing a current physical inventory count and reconciling it to the opening inventory quantities.
- Performing audit procedures on the valuation of the opening inventory items.
- Performing audit procedures on gross profit and cut‑off.
A7
For non‑current assets and liabilities, such as property, plant and equipment, investments and long‑term debt, some audit evidence may be obtained by examining the accounting records and other information underlying the opening balances. In certain cases, the auditor may be able to obtain some audit evidence regarding opening balances through confirmation with third parties, for example, for long‑term debt and investments. In other cases, the auditor may need to carry out additional audit procedures.
Audit Conclusions and Reporting
Opening Balances (Ref: Para. 10-11)
A8
ASA 705 establishes requirements and provides guidance on circumstances that may result in a modification to the auditor’s opinion on the financial report, the type of opinion appropriate in the circumstances, and the content of the auditor’s report when the auditor’s opinion is modified. The inability of the auditor to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence regarding opening balances may result in the following modifications to the opinion in the auditor’s report:
- A qualified opinion or a disclaimer of opinion, as is appropriate in the circumstances.
- [Deleted by the AUASB. Refer [Aus] Illustration 2A]
Appendix 1 includes illustrative auditors’ reports.
Modification to the Opinion in the Predecessor Auditor’s Report (Ref: Para. 13)
A9
In some situations, a modification to the predecessor auditor’s opinion may not be relevant and material to the opinion on the current period’s financial report. This may be the case where, for example, there was a scope limitation in the prior period, but the matter giving rise to the scope limitation has been resolved in the current period.
See ASA 102 Compliance with Ethical Requirements when Performing Audits, Reviews and Other Assurance Engagements.
Illustrations of Auditors’ Reports with Modified Opinions
Appendix 1