Score the financial, operating and other indicators in SA 570 (Revised) Appendix A. Get opinion-form routing — EOM / Material Uncertainty / Adverse — and CARO 2020 clause (xix) impact.
SA 570 (Revised) — applicable to audits of financial statements for periods beginning on or after 1 April 2017 — requires the auditor to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence regarding, and conclude on, the appropriateness of management’s use of the going concern basis. The standard sets out four possible outcomes: (a) use of going concern is appropriate and no material uncertainty; (b) appropriate but material uncertainty exists; (c) management unwilling to make or extend its assessment; or (d) use of going concern is inappropriate.
CARO 2020 clause (xix) requires reporting on whether — based on the financial ratios, ageing and expected dates of realisation of financial assets and payment of financial liabilities, other information accompanying the financial statements, and the auditor’s knowledge of the board meetings and management plans — the auditor is of the opinion that no material uncertainty exists as on the date of the audit report that company is capable of meeting its liabilities existing at the date of balance sheet as and when they fall due within a period of one year.
SA 570 (Revised) — "Going Concern" — requires the auditor to evaluate management's assessment of the entity's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from the date of the financial statements. The going concern basis is fundamental to the preparation of financial statements; if the basis is inappropriate, assets and liabilities are recognised at realisable / settlement values, which can materially change the picture.
The standard provides illustrative indicators in Appendix A across three buckets — financial (net liability position, covenant breaches, negative cash flows, inability to pay creditors), operating (loss of key management or market, labour issues, supply shortages), and other (non-compliance with capital requirements, pending litigation, regulatory changes). The auditor identifies which indicators are present, evaluates management's mitigating actions, and concludes on whether a material uncertainty exists.
Four outcomes are possible: (1) use of going concern basis is appropriate and no material uncertainty exists; (2) it is appropriate but a material uncertainty exists — a "Material Uncertainty Related to Going Concern" paragraph is required; (3) management is unwilling to make / extend its assessment — qualified or disclaimer of opinion; (4) use of going concern basis is inappropriate — adverse opinion if the financial statements are nonetheless prepared on that basis.
A mid-sized manufacturing entity has breached its debt-service coverage ratio covenant. The bank has not yet called the loan but reserves the right to do so. Operating cash flows are positive but declining. Management is negotiating refinancing.