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Audit and Risk Management An Integrated Approach

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Title: Audit and Risk Management An Integrated Approach


1
Audit and Risk ManagementAn Integrated Approach
  • Prepared by
  • Erich Schumann
  • Global Atlantic Partners LLC
  • www.globalatlanticpartners.com
  • May 2009

2
Audit and Risk Management Agenda
  •  Effective Enterprise Risk Management
  • Internal Audits role in ERM
  • The Corporate Governance Cycle
  • Integrating Strategy into Risk Management based
    audit
  • Risk Assessment on a business level
  • Risk Assessment quantification techniques
  • Case study risk assessment Close the books

3
Audit and Risk ManagementEffective Enterprise
Risk Management
  • COSO Definition
  • Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) is a process,
    effected by an entitys board of directors,
    management, and other personnel, applied in
    strategic setting and across the enterprise,
    designed to identify potential events that may
    effect the entity and manage risks to be within
    its risk appetite, to provide reasonable
    assurance regarding the achievement of an entity
    objectives

4
Audit and Risk ManagementEffective Enterprise
Risk Management
  • Effective ERM
  • Is an ongoing, entity wide process to identify,
    evaluate, analyze, respond to, monitor, and
    communicate on risks
  • Is effected by people at all levels
  • Occurs in strategic setting
  • Applies to every unit
  • Provides reasonable assurance
  • Enables continuous improvement in decision making
  • Helps achieve objectives

5
Audit and Risk ManagementFundamental Audit
Characteristics
  • IIA Standards for the Professional Practice of
    Internal Auditing
  • Attribute Standards
  • Purpose, authority and responsibility
  • Independence and objectivity
  • Proficiency and due professional care
  • Quality assurance and improvement program
  • Performance Standards
  • Managing the internal audit activity
  • Control and governance
  • Engagement planning, performing of the engagement
  • Communicate results, monitoring progress
  • Managements acceptance of risks

6
Audit and Risk ManagementAudit Process Evolution
  • Generation one Control Based Auditing with
    focus on
  • Compliance with laws and regulations
  • Financial accuracy of account balances
  • Operations of specific controls or procedures
  • Generation two Process Based Auditing to
    determine the efficiency and effectiveness of key
    operational processes
  • Generation three Risk Based Auditing
  • Generation four Risk Management Based
    Auditing

7
Audit and Risk ManagementAudit Process Evolution
8
Audit and Risk ManagementAudit Process Evolution
9
Audit and Risk ManagementInternal Auditings
Value to ERM
  • Core internal audit role
  • Give assurance on the risk management process
  • Give assurance that risks are correctly evaluated
  • Evaluate risk management processes
  • Evaluate the reporting of key risks
  • Review the management of key risks
  • IIA publication, May 2007 A holistic view of
    risk

10
Audit and Risk ManagementInternal Auditings
Value to ERM
  • Legitimate internal audit roles with safeguards
  • Facilitate identification and evaluation of risks
  • Coaching management in responding to risks
  • Coordinating ERM activities
  • Consolidate reporting of risks
  • Maintain and develop the ERM framework
  • Championing establishment of ERM
  • Developing ERM strategy for board approval
  • IIA publication, May 2007 A holistic view of
    risk

11
Audit and Risk ManagementInternal Auditings
Value to ERM
  • Roles internal audit should NOT undertake
  • Setting the risk appetite
  • Imposing risk management process
  • Management assurance on risks
  • Taking decisions on risk responses
  • Implementing risk responses on managements
    behalf
  • Accountability for risk management
  • IIA publication, May 2007 A holistic view of
    risk

12
Audit and Risk ManagementDefinition of Risk
  • Risk is the possibility that an event will occur
    and adversely affect the achievement of an
    objective
  • Risk begins with the strategy
  • Risk does not represent a single point of
    estimate, it is a range of possible outcomes
  • Risk encompasses both, opportunities and threats
    (upside and downside)

13
Audit and Risk ManagementThe Corporate
Governance Cycle
14
Audit and Risk Management The Corporate
Governance Cycle
  • Boards responsibilities
  • Identify and understand the stakeholders needs
  • Determine and evaluate possible outcome of
    business activities
  • Be aware and concur with the companys risk
    appetite
  • Define level of tolerance relative to potential
    adverse outcome
  • Delegate authority to management
  • Establish information and communication
    requirements

15
Audit and Risk Management The Corporate
Governance Cycle
  • Senior Managements responsibilities
  • Identify critical processes and activities
  • Identify threshold of risk monitoring justifying
    delegation
  • Delegate responsibility, authority and
    accountability to appropriate risk owners
  • Establish information and communication
    requirements for risk owners

16
Audit and Risk Management The Corporate
Governance Cycle
  • Risk owners responsibilities
  • Risk management activities are designed
    effectively to manage the related risks within
    the tolerances specified
  • Ensure risk management functions as expected
  • Monitor risk management activities to identify,
    on a timely basis, any anomalies and divergences
    from expected outcome
  • Communicate all results timely to senior
    management

17
Audit and Risk Management The Corporate
Governance Cycle
  • Auditors responsibilities
  • Evaluate whether risk management activities are
    designed effectively
  • Determine if risk management activities are
    operating as designed
  • Evaluate whether risk owners assertions to
    senior management re risk management are
    accurate
  • Evaluate whether senior managements information
    to the board is complete and accurate
  • Identify any governance or risk areas that
    currently are not covered by the ERM process

18
Audit and Risk Management The ERM Funnel
19
Audit and Risk Management Risk Assessment Stages
  • Companys culture and organizational structure
    form the final input into the ERM process,
    however, there are three basic stages
  • Identifying techniques for identifying events
    that are indicative of risks
  • What are the risks that might affect the success
    of the business?
  • Assessing importance of risk
  • What impact would each of these risks have on the
    company?
  • How likely is it that the risk will occur?
  • How much tolerance does the company have for
    allowing that risk to occur?
  • Filtering filter risks down to small, manageable
    number of key risks

20
Audit and Risk Management Risk Analysis Stage
  • Risk sources Where does the risk occur?
    (External to the organization or internal within
    one of the businesses, locations, processes,
    etc.)
  • Risk drivers What causes the risk to occur and
    why?
  • Risk measurements How can the risk be measured,
    how will the company know the risk is occurring
    and to what extent?

21
Audit and Risk Management Risk Strategy Stage
  • Having identified the key risks and the key
    drivers of those risks, it is time to identify
    and evaluate risk strategies
  • Avoid the risk divesting, prohibiting
  • Transfer the risk insuring, securitizing,
    hedging, outsourcing
  • Reduce the risk establishing controls, setting
    transaction limits
  • Accept the risk self insurance, monitoring,
    reaction techniques
  • Exploit the risk assume higher risks by adding
    volume, arbitrage opportunities, etc.

22
Audit and Risk Management Risk Infrastructure
Stage
  • Once a decision is made which strategies to
    pursue for a given risk, it is time to focus the
    design and operation of risk management
    activities on the selected strategies
  • Infrastructure capabilities, such as
  • Risk management strategies (philosophy and
    strategy), processes, people, technology,
    information
  • Understand development stages of ERM
  • Ad hoc stage (no structure, fire drills)
  • Repeatable stage (some structure, capabilities
    are not flexible)
  • Defined stage (capabilities are well defined and
    documented, great reliance on people)
  • Managed stage (key performance indicators exist,
    consistent performance of designed capabilities)
  • Optimized stage (continued evaluation and
    improvement of ERM)

23
Audit and Risk Management The ERM Funnel An
Ongoing Process
  • Enterprise risk management is not a one-time or
    static process
  • It is a continuous, real time process that must
    remain alive within the organization
  • It is a culture change

24
Audit and Risk ManagementStrategy For Risk
Management Based Auditing
  • Using the organizations strategy as a base for
    the audit planning
  • If organization does not have strategy auditors
    must THINK strategic
  • Auditors must consider strategy on three
    different levels
  • Strategic objectives
  • Operational objectives
  • Value objectives

25
Audit and Risk ManagementStrategy For Risk
Management Based Auditing
  • Strategic Objectives
  • Align with the companys strategy and are forward
    looking key questions/issues are
  • If I had unlimited resources, what initiatives
    would your area (business) undertake to help the
    company to achieve each of its strategic
    objectives?
  • Recognizing that no area has unlimited resources,
    discuss what barriers currently exist
  • Customize each initiative to options that may be
    more realistic to implement
  • Evaluate the value derived from, and eas of,
    implementing each option
  • Focus on the most valuable options as short term
    objectives

26
Audit and Risk ManagementStrategy For Risk
Management Based Auditing
  • Operational Objectives
  • Expresses the key responsibilities of the area
    Operational objectives tend to
  • Be focused on current activities, as opposed to
    future initiatives
  • Depict key operational tasks, such as processing
    or recording transactions
  • Have an element of accuracy, completeness and/or
    timeliness involved in the task
  • Support multiple areas of an organization
  • Lend themselves to detailed performance
    measurement
  • Include compliance or other corporate
    requirements

27
Audit and Risk ManagementStrategy For Risk
Management Based Auditing
  • Operational Objectives
  • Key questions to be asked
  • At the end of the day/month/year, what gives you
    a sense of accomplishment with your job?
  • What accomplishments in your job tend to get you
    recognized by your management or internal
    customers?
  • If you had more time/resources, what would you do
    differently in your job? Why?

28
Audit and Risk ManagementStrategy For Risk
Management Based Auditing
  • Value objectives
  • Connect how people in the area are expected to
    act to the companys overall values understand
    and links company values with the areas value
    objectives key questions/tasks
  • Can you provide an example of how you exhibit
    each of the companys value?
  • What types of actions do management tend to
    recognize or reward?
  • How would you expect others in the organization
    to act when working with you? (e.g. in
    demonstrating the companys values)

29
Audit and Risk ManagementStrategy For Risk
Management Based Auditing
  • Failure to obtain a good understanding of a
    companys strategy will result in the auditor
    making assumptions and ad hoc guesses when
    deciding where to devote audit resources.
  • Understanding what represents success for the
    company, what the barriers are to achieving that
    success, how the company manages those barriers,
    and whether the barriers are managed to the
    desired levels helps the auditor determine the
    most value-added approach and appropriate
    projects and demonstrates relevance to management

30
Audit and Risk ManagementRisk Assessment On
Business Level
  • Understand how management monitors risk and
    understand their key risk indicators
  • Good Key risk indicators are
  • Relevant
  • Measurable
  • Address each key objective
  • Available on time
  • Clear and widely articulated

31
Audit and Risk ManagementCapturing Risk
Assessment Results
32
Audit and Risk ManagementCapturing Risk
Assessment Results
  • Classifying Risks
  • Primary risks are those in 7,8 and 9 boxes
  • Represent risks with highest priority
  • Requires shorter audit cycles
  • Secondary risks are those in 4,5 and 6 boxes
  • Represents risks which might require attention,
    often times related to primary risks
  • Eventually requires less frequent audit cycle
  • Minor risks are those in the 1,2 and 3 boxes
  • Represent risks which most likely do not require
    any attention
  • Can be disregarded for the audit cycle (or longer
    audit cycle)

33
Audit and Risk ManagementSummary
  • Create a risk universe that identifies key
    barriers to the companys success
  • Understanding the different characteristics of
    risks, including how close they are to the core
    of the companys strategy
  • Assess and prioritize risks based on impact,
    likelihood and tolerance to the risk
  • Determine risk management actions and potential
    audit projects, frequency and scope of different
    audits planned

34
Audit and Risk ManagementCase Study Close The
Books - Background
  • Background info
  • For G/L purposes company is organized in four
    region
  • Corporate Controller has ultimate responsibility
    for closing process
  • Company uses of the shelf G/L system
  • Company has disclosure committee which meet
    quarterly prior to publishing financials,
    corporate controller is one of the members

35
Audit and Risk ManagementCase Study Close The
Books Key risks
  • Key risk indicator
  • Authorization all transactions executed must by
    properly authorized
  • Completeness and Accuracy all and only those
    transactions occurring during the period must be
    recorded timely and accurately
  • Presentation and disclosure items in the
    financials and related disclosure are presented
    to provide appropriate transparency
  • Timeliness closing process must be completed
    according to schedule to ensure timely external
    reporting
  • Valuation all valuations are valued in
    accordance with GAAP
  • Based on the above the audit team discusses
    tolerance levels with the Controller

36
Audit and Risk ManagementCase Study Close The
Books Risk Identification
  • During the brain storming session the audit team
    identified the following as the primary risks
  • - Accuracy risk - Performance Meas. risk
  • - Disclosure risk - Policies/ procedures risk
  • - Human resource risk - Reconciliation risk
  • - Integrity risk - Technology risk
  • - Organizational risk - Timeliness risk
  • - Performance Incentive risk

37
Audit and Risk ManagementCase Study Close The
Books Risk Assessment
38
Audit and Risk ManagementCase Study Close The
Books Audit finding
  • Finding no evidence of supervisory review of
    topside entries
  • Potential impact Failure to consistently
    document and approve all topside entries may
    result in inappropriate amounts recorded
  • Root cause In the rush of the closing this
    appears to be an oversight by the individual
  • Recommendation Reinforce the policy to document
    formal review and approval of topside entries
  • Management comment
  • Conclusion
  • Owner
  • Target date

39
Audit and Risk ManagementSummary
  • Internal Auditors are giving independent
    assurance that the risk management activities are
    effective and the communications are accurate
  • Risk management based audit requires strategic
    and operational business knowledge
  • Risk management based audit has the following
    characteristics
  • Objective
  • Approach
  • Focus
  • Testing approach
  • Recommendations

40
Audit and Risk ManagementThe End
  • Questions?
  • Please contact
  • Erich Schumann, CIA, CFE
  • Global Atlantic Partners LLC
  • Boston, MA
  • Phone 617 345 0222
  • eschumann_at_globalatlanticpartners.com
  • www.globalatlanticpartners.com
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