Question
Project 1. (25 points) Northern Frontier Park: Assume that you are an audit senior employed by a highly reputable public accounting firm. On May 1,
Project 1. (25 points) Northern Frontier Park:
Assume that you are an audit senior employed by a highly reputable public accounting firm. On May 1, 2019, Ms. Benice, a partner in the firm, invites you to her office to discuss a special engagement that you will be supervising. To ensure the engagement runs smoothly, she has asked you to summarize in a written planning memorandum--all important risks and factors to be considered when conducting the engagement.
The client for the special engagement is Northern Frontier Park (NFP), aprivately held company that operates a safari-style wildlife park in the northern U.S. Until late last year, NFP had been owned and managed by Mr. Kramer, founder and chief executive officer (CEO). Upon Mr. Kramer's death in 2018, all shares in the company were distributed to his family. Because no one in Kramer's family wants to take over the business, the family will sell 100 percent of the NFP shares at the end of the current fiscal year to Newman, the current controller and chief financial officer (CFO) of NFP. Because NFP is a private company, a market price for the shares is not readily available. Instead, the purchase/sale price will be based on a multiple of the income earned from "ongoing operations" for the year ended May 31, 2019 (Fiscal 2019), calculated using U.S. GAAP. To ensure NFP's reported net income is appropriate, the Kramer family has engaged your firm to provide assurance that the year-end financial statements are reliable and are representative of ongoing operations. In past years, NFP's financial statements always have been prepared by the CFO without audit or review.
Similar to wildlife safari parks in Africa, visitors drive through NFP's 3,200-acre park, which is home to over 100 species of native animals, birds and fish. Although hunting is not allowed in the park, fishing is permitted from man-made lakes that NFP constructed and began stocking with fish two years ago. The NFP park has become a popular year-round tourist attraction, with the number of vehicle admissions increasing from 40,000 in 1990 when the park opened to over 55,000 in the 2018 fiscal year. Most of NFP's revenues are earned through park admission and hotel accommodation fees. Each vehicle admitted to the park is charged a $20 entrance fee and approximately one-third of all park visitors stay in NFP's 85-room hotel. With an average nightly rate of $110, hotel occupancy rates typically average 60 percent each year. Most purchases and payments relate to animal and fish acquisition, feeding and medical care, as well as to hotel administration and operations.
To assist you in preparing the planning memorandum, Ms. Benice has provided you with unaudited financial statements prepared by the CFO (exhibits 1a and 1b) and other relevant client information (exhibit 2). Upon reviewing this information, you recognize that, because today's date (May 1) precedes NFP's year-end (May 31), only 11 months of operations are included presently in NFP's income statement. Ms. Benice's discussions with the CFO indicate that although the balances on the 12-month income statement will be larger, their relative percentage of revenues (as shown) is unlikely to change.
Required:
1. Complete the questions for Part A of this assignment (attached), working individually.
2. For Part B, you will work either individually or as a team of no more than three (3) members to prepare the memo for Ms. Benice described in the case
EXHIBIT 1a: Excerpts from the Northern Frontier Park Unaudited Statements of Income and Retained Earnings (000s omitted)
4/30/19...%'19...5/31/18...%'18
Revenues-park admission$1,028 33.3 $1,120 33.9
-hotel rentals 1,907 61.7 2,080 63.0
-animal sales 156 5.0 102 3.1
$3,091 $3,302
Hotel operating costs $1,328 43.0 $1,451 43.9
Animal feed and care 992 32.1 1,129 34.2
Interest expense 198 6.4 89 2.7
Cost of animal sales 72 2.3 31 0.9
Depreciation & fish write-offs 71 2.3 29 0.9
Restoration and other costs 162 5.2 10 0.3
$2,823 $2,746
Income before income taxes $2688.7 $563 17.1
Income taxes (80)(2.6) (167)(5.1)
Net income 188 6.1 396 12.0
Dividends (173) -- (280) -
Retained earnings, beginning 264 -- 148 -
Retained earnings, end $279-- $264 --
EXHIBIT 1b: Excerpts from the Northern Frontier Park Unaudited Balance Sheet and Notes to the Financial Statements (000s omitted)
4/30/19 5/31/18
Assets
Cash $251 $120
Hotel customer A/R 403 460
Allowance for doubtful acct (70) (40)
animal and fish stock 659 714
capital assets 1,956 1,942
accumulated amort. (271) (235)
$2,928 $2,961
Liabilities
A/P $537 $629
Accrued liability 308 155
long-term debt 1,802 1,911
$2,647 $2,695
Equity
share capital $2 $2
Retained Earnings 279 264
$281 $266
LIABILITIES & EQUITY = $2,928 $2,961
Other Client Information:
Beginning the day NFP was founded, Mr. Kramer carefully controlled every aspect of NFP's operations, using his extensive knowledge of veterinary care, marketing, and federal laws and regulations. As CEO, Mr. Kramer was respected by everyone--not only NFP's employees and customers, but also concerned environmental and animal-rights activists. On the financial side, Mr. Kramer worked closely with Newman, Controller and CFO, to design and implement a strong accounting system. All purchases of fish and animals for the park were approved by Mr. Kramer; hotel profitability was reviewed by Mr. Kramer and Newman on a monthly basis; and park admission revenues and cash receipts were compared daily to vehicle counts obtained from monitors installed at the admission gates. A perpetual inventory system was introduced to monitor quantities of fish and animals.
The perpetual inventory system was implemented in the current fiscal year to track quantities of fish and animal stock present on the NFP park grounds: NFP personnel easily can track the number of fish released into the man-made lakes, as well as the number of fish caught and removed. Unfortunately, the number of fish births and mortalities are more difficult to track. NFP estimates these numbers based on its prior experience, allowing for possible changes in environmental conditions. Newman has described December 2018 as an unusually harsh winter month and, accordingly, has had to "override" the perpetual system by writing-off significant quantities of fish stock. The writeoff resulted in 20 percent of the December 2018 fish stock balance being charged as an expense on the income statement.
In contrast to fish stock, animal stock apparently survived the harsh weather with much greater success. In fact, Newman mentioned that 30 newborn animals survived in 2019, as compared to only 20 in each of the prior three years. Many of these newborn animals were sold to private zoos and other animal parks in 2019; consequently, animal sales revenues have increased in the current year.
The growth in successful animal births also has led Newman to reconsider the accounting policy used to record and update animal stock costs. The animal stock account primarily includes costs for adult animal purchases, although some birth-related medical care costs also are included. In the past, these animal costs were assigned to each individual animal using the specific identification inventory method. Newman apparently found that method overly cumbersome, and decided to change to an average cost method for all animals in January 2019. Consequently, when newborn animals now are sold, the average cost of animal stock at the time of sale is used to determine the cost of animal sales to be expensed on the income statement.
PART A:
- Who is buying NFP?
- Who is selling NFP?
- How will the sale price be determined?
- How does NFP account for the cost of animal sales in 2018 and 2019?
- What was gross profit on animal sales in 2018 and 2019?
- What was interest expense in 2018 and what is it to date for 2019?
- What were hotel revenues and park admission revenues in 2018 and what are they projected to be in 2019? What were Accounts Receivable and the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts in 2018 and 2019?
- How do they account for Fish and Animal Stock in 2018 and 2019?
- What policy changed during 2019 regarding Capital Assets? How did it change?
- What makes up the large increase in the Accrued Liabilities from 2018 to 2019?
PART B:
Required:
- Using all of the information available to you about the Northern Frontier Park engagement in the preceding case, consider the eight (8) audit areas listed below. Identify any areas where additional audit effort will need to be focused to ensure that audit objectives are met. You'll want to highlight any areas that are at greater risk of containing material misstatements or that will require additional audit evidence to ensure that the financial statements conform to GAAP.
- Your task is to submit a brief memo (three pages or less) that summarizes key risks in the audit areas listed below. If possible, try to quantify any differences between what the client has recorded versus what you'd expect based on your knowledge of the client. Your analysis should indicate whether you believe the area/account(s) is likely to contain a misstatement and what the potential misstatement is that causes concern. This is a risk-assessment and audit planning exercise, and you don't have perfect knowledge of the engagement at this stage (nor would an actual auditor!). Your memo should be addressed to the engagement partner on the audit, and assist in identifying areas of concern. Hint: Not all areas may present concerns. Use your judgment and communication skills to help plan an effective audit of this unusual client.
- Audit areas:
- Hotel revenue
- Park admission revenue
- Accounts receivable & allowance for doubtful accounts
- Fish stock
- Animal stock
- Capital assets & accumulated amortization
- Accrued liabilities
- Interest expense
I really need help on this project.
For part A: I mostly need help to see any formulas used to calculate the amounts, or where the numbers came from on the exhibits given.
For part B: I don't know how to start off a memo like this. Also I am not sure what to really look for with the Audit areas given; nothing really popped out as a key risk to me when I read it, so I don't even know what to write about.
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