Browse Accounting

Audit, Fraud, and Reporting Quality

Accounting terms for creative accounting, accounting fraud, restatements, financial statement audits, and reporting oversight.

Audit, Fraud, and Reporting Quality covers creative accounting, accounting fraud, restatements, financial statement audits, and reporting oversight.

Use these pages when controls or reporting classifications change confidence in expenses, revenue, profit, margins, run rates, or performance interpretation. It sits inside Reporting and Controls, so readers can move up when the broader accounting context matters.

Use the table below to choose the narrower accounting branch before applying a term to a statement line, model input, audit trail, tax schedule, covenant test, or management report.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Accounting FraudDeliberate manipulation of financial statements or accounting records to mislead investors, creditors, auditors, or regulators.
Cooking the BooksCooking the books means manipulating accounting records or estimates to misstate reported performance, position, or cash flows.
Creative AccountingAggressive or misleading accounting choices that make reported performance appear stronger than the economics support.
RestatementA restatement revises previously issued financial statements to correct errors, misapplications, or material reporting problems.

What to Check

  • Control account, reconciliation, approval trail, expense account, revenue schedule, variance report, and reporting package.
  • Whether the issue affects cut-off, classification, completeness, occurrence, authorization, or reporting quality.
  • Effect on margins, operating expenses, profit, cash flow, forecast quality, fraud risk, and covenant or KPI reporting.
  • Audit evidence, internal-control finding, management adjustment, restatement, or policy disclosure when relevant.
  • Comparability across periods, segments, systems, and management reporting definitions.

Common Mistakes

  • Treating internal reports as audited external statements.
  • Ignoring control weaknesses, restatements, cut-off issues, and reclassifications.
  • Mixing operating, administrative, direct, indirect, fixed, and overhead costs.
  • Using run-rate or adjusted metrics without checking normalization choices.

Reporting and controls content is educational and does not provide accounting, audit, tax, legal, compliance, management, investment, or valuation advice.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Accounting Fraud

Deliberate manipulation of financial statements or accounting records to mislead investors, creditors, auditors, or regulators.

Cooking the Books

Cooking the books means manipulating accounting records or estimates to misstate reported performance, position, or cash flows.

Creative Accounting

Aggressive or misleading accounting choices that make reported performance appear stronger than the economics support.

Restatement

A restatement revises previously issued financial statements to correct errors, misapplications, or material reporting problems.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026