Examing Your Bookkeeper’s Trust
Account Bank Reconciliation
By Emmet R. Wood, Director, Audits and
Investigations
What are some of the things that a
Broker-in-Charge can do to check the bank reconciliation performed by your
company’s trust account bookkeeper? Reconciling the ending balance shown on
your trust account bank statement to the corresponding balance on the trust
account journal or check stubs (bank reconciliation) is a procedure required by
the Commission. You need the following items:
• Current month’s bank statement
• Journal showing the currents month’s
transactions
• Last month’s bank reconciliation
The most important procedure that you can
do is to have each bank statement delivered directly to you not the bookkeeper. Open
that bank statement and examine the checks for valid payors
and valid endorsements. Look for online banking transfers to unfamiliar bank
accounts. Then, give the bank statement to the bookkeeper. Just receiving the
bank statement before the bookkeeper is an internal accounting control that
will help to deter a trust account embezzlement.
Next, perform the following procedures:
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Compare
the trust account ending bank statement balance to the beginning balance on
the current month’s bank reconciliation. They should agree. Place the mark
“@” to show that you have compared the two balances and that they agree. |
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Check
the math on the current month’s reconciliation and, if it is correct, mark it
with “@”. |
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Verify
that the deposits-in-transit shown on the prior month’s bank reconciliation
cleared on the current month’s trust account bank statement. If someone
has taken trust money out of the trust account, they may try to hide the
embezzlement by recording false deposits-in-transit and thus inflating the
cash on the bank reconciliation. |
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Verify
that the deposits-in-transit shown on the current month’s bank reconciliation
appear on the Journal near the end of the month but not on the bank
statement. If you have a deposit in transit that is dated more than
three days before the end of the month, some trust monies may not have been
deposited within the time frame required by the Commission. |
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Compare
the debits/withdrawals on the bank statement to the outstanding checks on the
prior month’s bank reconciliation and the current month’s journal. Show that
each debit/withdrawal on the bank statement agrees in amount and check # (if
applicable) with the corresponding disbursement shown on the journal by
marking each disbursement on the journal with “t”. The disbursements not marked
with a “t” should agree with the check #s and amounts on the outstanding
checks on the current month’s reconciliation. If there is a
debit/withdrawal on the bank statement that also appears on the current
month’s bank reconciliation as an outstanding check, the books may not be in
balance with the bank. If there are
unmarked disbursements on the journal
that do not appear as outstanding checks on the current month’s bank reconciliation,
cash on the bank reconciliation has been inflated and there may be an
embezzlement. |
Just by checking the bank reconciliation on a monthly basis, you
are putting into place some internal controls to help safeguard the funds in
your trust account. If you are not comfortable checking the bank
reconciliation, consider hiring an accountant outside your company to assist
you with the process.