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Audited Year initially means the 14-month period following the Closing Date (the First Audited Year), and subsequently means the 12-month period beginning on the 15th month after the Closing Date, and ending on the 26th month after the Closing Date (the Second Audited Year).
The purpose of an audit is to form a view on whether the information presented in the financial report, taken as a whole, reflects the financial position of the organisation at a given date, for example: Are details of what is owned and what the organisation owes properly recorded in the balance sheet?
The auditor has a responsibility to plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether caused by error or fraud.
Audit procedures are the techniques, processes, and methods that auditors use to obtain reliable audit evidence, which enables them to gain a sound judgment about an organizations financial status. Audit procedures are conducted to help determine whether or not a companys financial statement is credible and factual.
Main Objective: The main objective of the auditing is to find reliability of financial position and profit and loss statements. The objective is to ensure that the accounts reveal a true and fair view of the business and its transactions.
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In all, there are 35 of these Auditing and Assurance Standards (AAS) as of now. Browse more Topics under Concept Of Auditing. 1] Review of all Systems. 2] Review of the Internal Controls. 3] Arithmetical Accuracy. 4] Accounting Principles. 5] Verification of Assets. 6] Verification of Liabilities. 7] Vouching.

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