FINANCE
Part 1 - General Managers Basic Audit of the
Accounting Department
The main objective
of the GM’s basic accounting department audit is to identify that controls
are in place and operating both effectively and consistently in order to
ensure that: management is effectively monitoring the performance and
financial position of the hotel and is being supplied with reliable
information on a timely basis;
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1. GENERAL
LEDGER MAINTENANCE
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1.1 Review recent
copies of the monthly reporting to Head Office and ensure that it is
submitted on a timely basis.
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1.2 For a recent
period-end review the nature and content of significant balance sheet
accounts with the Financial Controller.
Pay particular attention to other debtors, other creditors, accrual
and provision accounts (i.e. accounts that accept manual journals that may be
used to disguise problems with the profit & loss account). Were any problems noted? Was the Financial Controller able to
explain all balances? You should
report any unusual balances including excessive accrual reserve or
un-collectable amounts.
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1.3 Inspect ledger
reconciliations for major balance sheet accounts and ensure that
reconciliations are being completed on a timely basis. These should include a reconciliation from
the nominal ledger to the following:
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·
Guest ledger control;
·
City/sales ledger control;
·
Purchase ledger;
·
Cash accounts (see also treasury work);
·
Analysis of all sundry debtors and creditors;
·
Fixed asset sub-ledger; and
·
Inventory listings.
Were any problems noted?
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2. TIMELINESS AND QUALITY OF MANAGEMENT
REPORTING
The management accounts should include
comparisons to budgets, forecasts and prior year results. The accounts should also include key
performance indicators such as average room rate, yield on rooms, occupancy
%, payroll %, headcount, food & beverage cost of sale %, etc.
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Obtain a copy of the most recent management accounts
prepared by the hotel. Are management
accounts complete, prepared with prominent key performance indicators,
comparatives, adequate detail and on a timely basis?
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3. CHECKING THE GENERAL CASHIER PROCEDURES
You should identify that controls
are in place and operating both effectively and consistently to ensure:
a. cash takings received by the hotel are
physically safeguarded;
b. cash takings received by the hotel are
completely and accurately processed;
c. recorded cash on hand and in banks exists,
and is properly recorded and disclosed;
d. cash accounts are reconciled monthly to the
general ledger and any discrepancy is investigated on a timely basis; and
e. cash maintained at the property is at an
optimal level.
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GENERAL
CASHIER PROCEDURES
The General
Cashier is essentially the banker to the hotel. The duties of the General Cashier include:
·
collecting and recording cash takings on a daily
basis;
·
preparing hotel banking; and
·
Holding and distributing floats for
individual cashiers.
Meet with the
General Cashier and discuss the control procedures in the general cashiering
function. Determine if the following
controls are present and effectively working (or not applicable).
1. Is
the General Cashier’s office physically secure and is access is restricted to
only the General Cashier?
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2. Is
a key register used to monitor the issuance and return of floats, cellar and
bar keys, etc.?
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3. The
General Cashier will have a fixed float with the hotel. Is the size of the General Cashier float
recorded in writing and signed by both the General Cashier and the Financial
Controller?
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4. Does
a member of the accounts department verify the General Cashier float at least
once a month by physical counting?
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5. When
cashiers lodge their cash takings into the drop safe, is this witnessed and
recorded in a logbook? Ensure that when the General Cashier collects the
takings from the drop safe, the entries are recorded as collected in the
logbook.
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6. Discuss
with the General Cashier the completion of the General Cashier’s summary or
equivalent used by the hotel (the General Cashier’s summary will record cash
takings by outlet, deductions for petty cash or paid outs to give the net
banking for the day). Ensure this document
is prepared independently by the General Cashier based upon the physical cash
receipts, petty cash vouchers, paid out slips etc. The summary should be
reconciled by the revenue audit function to the FOS and Revenue journal. Were any problems noted in the steps
followed by the General Cashier to complete the General Cashier’s summary?
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7. Does
the General Cashier maintain a record of over/shorts takings presented by the
cashiers? Are these investigated and
actioned promptly?
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8. Are
end of day data transfer slips (credit card machine daily reports) retained
and reconciled to credit and debit card sales per FOS?
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9. Does
the hotel ensure deposits to the bank are made on a timely basis (usually
daily) to prevent excess quantities of cash being held at the hotel?
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10. Is
there adequate security for depositing cash at the bank (e.g. collection by a
security firm)?
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11. Does
an individual other than the General Cashier monitor deposits to the bank
account to ensure cash takings recorded on the General Cashier’s summary are
actually banked?
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12. Does
an individual independent of the general cashiering and accounts receivable
function receive and open all mail from debtors and record cheque receipts
into a logbook?
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4. PETTY
CASH
The General
Cashier commonly acts as the Petty Cashier for the hotel. Petty cash should only be used for small
incidental items. It should be
recognized that often petty cash is used as a means to circumvent the
controls in place in the expenditure cycle with respect to authorization of expenditure.
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Discuss with the Financial Controller and
General Cashier the controls used with respect to petty cash. Common controls include:
·
vouchers stamped as paid;
·
requirement that all vouchers are authorized by the
Financial Controller or other department head (the General Cashier should not
be allowed to approve petty cash transactions);
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·
a set maximum value of individual
petty cash transactions; and
·
Requirement to lodge original
documentation to substantiate the claim.
·
Are control procedures adequate?
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5. CITY/SALES
LEDGER MAINTENANCE
OBJECTIVES
To identify that controls are in place and
operating both effectively and consistently to ensure:
a. receivables are valid claims and properly
supported;
b. receivables are reconciled on a daily and
monthly basis (as appropriate);
c. credit has been granted in accordance with
a formally approved credit policy and prudent business practices and the
collection of receivables is reasonable and forthcoming; and
d. a reserve for doubtful accounts has been
established and the reserve is reasonable.
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BACKGROUND
The debtors balance of a hotel is split
into two different subsidiary ledgers:
Guest ledger - contains all
the charges accumulated by guests that are currently staying in house and
have not checked out. This ledger is
normally maintained on the FOS; and
city/sales ledger - captures all charges accumulated by guests who have checked out and are to settle their account by a debtor account, advance deposits paid by guests (may appear on guest ledger) and amounts owed by credit card companies. This ledger is usually maintained on the ‘back office system’. |
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GUEST LEDGER MAINTENANCE
Check there are
controls over the validity of charges recorded onto the guest ledger,
movement of charges out of the guest ledger to the city/sales ledger and
monitoring of the individual charges accumulated in the ledger to ascertain
if a credit exposure exists.
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For the latest
month-end, obtain the Guest Ledger Control Account Reconciliation.
A permanent folio does not represent a
guest room; rather it represents an account opened on the guest ledger to
collate rebates, adjustments, management folios, etc. The entries recorded in a permanent folio
are likely to result in revenue being adjusted out of the profit and loss
account or an expense being recognised.
Hence it is important that permanent folios are monitored and cleared
on a timely basis.
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1.1
Identify all permanent folios used
by the hotel (from review of the guest ledger) and ensure sufficient controls
exist for reviewing and clearing the revenue or expenses associated with the
folios on a timely basis.
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1.2
For master folios maintained for
groups ensure these are being posted on a timely basis to the city ledger
following the departure of a group (the slow posting of groups is a common
means of ensuring a favourable debtors ageing profile). Note that outstanding balances on the
paymaster could indicate breach of credit policy. Were any exceptions noted?
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1.3
Ensure that the guest ledger is
reviewed for excessive balances, credit limits, outstanding balances of
departed guests, etc. by credit control staff on a regular basis.
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CITY/SALES LEDGER MAINTENANCE
The following
items represent the common postings made to the city/sales ledger:
·
Guests who have checked out and will settle the
balance owing to the hotel by debtor account;
·
balances owing by credit card companies (e.g. American
Express, Diners Club, JCB);
·
advance deposits received from guests ahead of their
stay in the hotel (may be posted to the guest ledger);
·
banquet and conference customers who will settle the
balance they owe the hotel by a debtor account; and
·
Cash collections from debtors.
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2.1 Obtain the latest
month-end aged city/sales ledger report. Review the city/sales ledger to the
general ledger control reconciliation at month-end. Ensure all reconciling items are current
and bona fide.
2.2 Review material
unidentified remittances and check that action is being taken to follow them
up and allocate them. Review other
credit balances and check that these are deposits for future
events/prepayments.
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Debtor Postings
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2.3 For two days
posting into the city ledger agree the posting to the city ledger to that
tested in the income audit (FOS). Were
any exceptions noted?
2.4 Discuss the
procedures used by the hotel to ensure invoices are raised and posted to
debtors on a timely basis. Are
procedures adequate to ensure an accurate invoice is raised and mailed to
each debtor on a timely basis?
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Posting of cash receipts
In the treasury
cycle work programme work was performed to ensure the segregation of duties
exists between handling cheques received from debtors and the responsibility
for applying those cash receipts against individual debtors in the city
ledger. The treasury work programme
should be referred to prior to completing this section.
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2.5 Discuss the
procedures employed in applying payments against the debtor’s ledger. Controls include:
- using the remittance advice to apply the
receipt to specific invoices and not to the oldest invoice outstanding;
-
using the cheque log as the basis of input; and
- using batch controls to ensure receipts applied
to the city ledger agree to the cheque log.
Are
procedures adequate?
CONTINUE ----------
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