Misstatement Tracker
for Logistics
Accumulate misstatements across freight revenue recognition, fleet depreciation and impairment, fuel hedging, and intercompany charges for multi-jurisdictional logistics operations.
Materiality thresholds
Enter the materiality levels from your planning documentation. The clearly trivial threshold auto-suggests at 5% of performance materiality.
Misstatements
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ISA 450.5: The auditor shall accumulate misstatements identified during the audit, other than those that are clearly trivial.
ISA 450.10: The auditor shall communicate on a timely basis all misstatements accumulated during the audit with the appropriate level of management.
ISA 450.11: The auditor shall determine whether uncorrected misstatements are material, individually or in aggregate.
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ISA 450 misstatement evaluation for Logistics
Logistics companies process high volumes of transactions with individually low values, which means sampling drives the audit approach and projected misstatements dominate the ISA 450 schedule. A mid-market freight forwarder might process 50,000 shipments per year, each with a revenue recognition point that depends on the applicable Incoterms, the number of performance obligations in the contract, and whether the company acts as principal or agent. ISA 530.14 requires the auditor to project misstatements found in the sample across the untested population, and in logistics, even a small error rate produces a large projected misstatement given the transaction volume. The tracker handles stratified projections so you can separate domestic from international shipments, full-truckload from less-than-truckload, and warehousing from transport.
The principal-versus-agent assessment under IFRS 15.B34 is the single most common source of revenue misstatement in logistics. When a freight forwarder books space on a shipping line and resells it to a customer, the question is whether the forwarder controls the service before it is transferred to the customer. If the forwarder acts as principal, revenue is the gross amount billed to the customer. If the forwarder acts as agent, revenue is only the commission or margin. The difference between gross and net presentation can be an order of magnitude. A forwarder recognising €80M of gross revenue might only have €12M of net revenue if the agent assessment applies. Management's assessment of the principal-agent question for each service line determines the revenue figure, and the auditor needs to evaluate whether that assessment is correct under IFRS 15.B35-B37. If the auditor disagrees on even one service line, the misstatement is the gross-to-net difference for all transactions in that line.
Fleet assets (trucks, trailers, containers, aircraft) create misstatement risks around useful life estimates, residual values, and impairment triggers. IAS 16.51 requires entities to review useful lives and residual values at least annually. Logistics companies operating in competitive markets with rapid fleet turnover often have outdated residual value assumptions that overstate the carrying value of older vehicles. When the auditor compares the residual value assumptions to recent disposal proceeds and finds a consistent shortfall, the aggregate depreciation understatement across the fleet is a judgmental misstatement. For a company with €25M of fleet assets and residual values overstated by 8%, the misstatement is €2M in the balance sheet and a corresponding understatement of depreciation expense. IFRS 16 right-of-use assets for leased fleet also require impairment assessment under IAS 36 if indicators exist.
Multi-leg shipments create revenue and cost accrual misstatements at period end. A shipment that starts on 28 December and arrives on 5 January involves costs and revenue that span two reporting periods. Under IFRS 15, revenue is recognised when the performance obligation is satisfied, which for a freight service is typically when the goods are delivered. If the performance obligation is satisfied over time (because the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefit), revenue should be recognised over the transit period based on progress. Costs incurred but not yet invoiced by subcontractors at period end need to be accrued. Logistics companies with thousands of shipments in transit at year-end often rely on automated accrual systems that use estimated transit times and cost rates. Differences between these estimates and actual outcomes produce misstatements. Test the accrual by comparing estimates to actual invoices received in the subsequent period and record the difference.