Negative confirmation definition
/What is a Negative Confirmation?
A negative confirmation is a document issued by an auditor to the customers of a client company. The letter asks the customers to respond to the auditor only if they find a discrepancy between their records and the information about the client company's financial records that are supplied by the auditor. It is sometimes used when an auditor is confirming the accounts receivable or accounts payable of a client.
Example of a Negative Confirmation
For example, a confirmation letter tells a customer that the client company's records at year-end show an ending accounts receivable balance for that customer of $500,000. If the customer agrees with this number, it does not have to contact the auditor to confirm the supplied information. The auditor will then assume that the customer agrees with the information presented to it in the confirmation. In fact, the customer finds that its records show an ending receivable balance of $490,000, and elects to send this information to the auditor. The auditor then follows up in regard to this disparity.
When to Use a Negative Confirmation
An auditor should consider issuing negative confirmations when the following key factors are present:
Large number of small, homogeneous balances. When individual account balances are similar in nature and relatively low in value.
Low assessed risk of material misstatement. When inherent and control risks for the accounts are evaluated as low.
Strong internal controls. When the client’s internal control system is reliable and effective.
High likelihood of recipient response if an error exists. When recipients are likely to reply only if they find discrepancies.
No conditions requiring positive confirmations. When there are no legal, regulatory, or contractual requirements for positive confirmation.
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Disadvantages of a Negative Confirmation
A key concern with issuing negative confirmations is that the auditor has no idea if the confirmation was sent to the correct address, since no attempt is made to follow up with the recipient. This means that a problem might never be found, due to the nature of the confirmation.
FAQs
What is the difference between a negative and positive confirmation?
A positive confirmation requests the recipient to respond directly to the auditor whether they agree or disagree with the stated information, providing stronger audit evidence. A negative confirmation asks the recipient to respond only if they disagree. Positive confirmations are more reliable; negative confirmations involve higher detection risk.
How do negative confirmations affect detection risk?
Negative confirmations increase detection risk because auditors assume nonresponses indicate agreement, even though recipients may ignore the request. Since no follow-up is required for nonresponses, misstatements can remain undetected. Accordingly, they are appropriate only when inherent and control risks are low and balances are immaterial.