1 / 53

SAS 99: Detecting Fraud Using Benford’s Law FAE/NYSSCPA TECHNOLOGY ASSURANCE COMMITTEE March 13, 2003 Christopher J. Ros

SAS 99: Detecting Fraud Using Benford’s Law FAE/NYSSCPA TECHNOLOGY ASSURANCE COMMITTEE March 13, 2003 Christopher J. Rosetti, CPA, CFE, DABFA KPMG. 2. 3. 3. 8. 8. 1. 6. 1. 3. 1. 5. 3. 3. 6. 7. 8. 3. 7. 1. 5. 6. 1. 5. 3. 4. 7. 1. 5. 7. 9. 8. 8. 5. 5. 5. 8.

Patman
Télécharger la présentation

SAS 99: Detecting Fraud Using Benford’s Law FAE/NYSSCPA TECHNOLOGY ASSURANCE COMMITTEE March 13, 2003 Christopher J. Ros

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SAS 99: Detecting Fraud Using Benford’s Law FAE/NYSSCPA TECHNOLOGY ASSURANCE COMMITTEE March 13, 2003 Christopher J. Rosetti, CPA, CFE, DABFA KPMG

  2. 2 3 3 8 8 1 6 1 3 1 5 3 3 6 7 8 3 7 1 5 6 1 5 3 4 7 1 5 7 9 8 8 5 5 5 8 9 8 2 9 2 2 8 9 8 3 3 9 2 5 8 4 5 8 9 3 5 3 9 8 9 9 7 1 9 4 8 2 3 5 5 4 8 7 9 7 4 6 5 2 5 1 7 9 9 1 9 6 5 3 2 7 5 2 8 3 6 1 9 6 1 4 2 2 4 9 4 7 1 3 6 4 9 5 8 3 4 1 8 1 1 8 1 5 6 8 3 8 9 2 4 1 1 3 3 8 5 2 3 9 8 7 4 7 8 7 4 6 3 8 3 1 5 9 4 1 2 9 2 9 6 3 4 6 3 8 5 BENFORD’S LAW

  3. 3 Benford’s Law 1 6 1 7 8 3 2 9 2 7 1 8 5 3 1 6 5 9 9 2 4 9 1 Simon Newcomb 7 9 1 3 4 8 1 6 1 4 3

  4. Benford’s Law Number Log Formula 10 1.0000 LOG(10) 11 1.0414 LOG(11) 12 1.0792 LOG(12) 13 1.1139 LOG(13) 14 1.1461 LOG(14) 15 1.1761 LOG(15) 16 1.2041 LOG(16) 17 1.2304 LOG(17) 18 1.2553 LOG(18) 19 1.2788 LOG(19) 20 1.3010 LOG(20)

  5. Logarithm Example Multiply 320 by 417(Answer 133,440) Log(320) =2.50515 Log(417) =2.620136 Log (320) + Log (417) =5.125286 10^5.5125286 =133,440

  6. Note on the Frequency of Use of the Different Digits in Natural Numbers Theory: “A multi-digit number is more likely to begin with ‘1’ than any other number.” In other words, these are probably the most faded numbers on our calculators.

  7. Newcomb’s Shortcoming He failed to provide a reason why his theory and formula worked!!!!!

  8. Frank Benford

  9. Frank Benford Noted the same phenomena as Newcomb in the same exact manner in the late 1920’s, and theorized that unless his friends had a predilection for low digit numbers, there must be a reason to explain this phenomena.

  10. Benford Tests Analyzed 20,229 sets of numbers, including, areas of rivers, baseball averages, numbers in magazine articles, atomic weights of atoms, electricity bills on the Solomon Islands, etc.

  11. Benford’s Conclusion • Multi digit numbers beginning with 1, 2 or 3 appear more frequently than multi digit numbers beginning with 4, 5, 6, etc. • The frequency of which these digits appear in nature was published in “The Law of Anomalous Numbers”

  12. Percentages Percentages Digit - Position in Number • 1st 2nd 3rd1. 301 .113 .1013 • 2. 176 .108 .1009 • . 124 .104 .1005 • . 096 .100 .1001 • . 079 .096 .0997 • 6 .066 .093 .0994

  13. Percentages First Digit First Digit First Digit 1 2 3 Area Rivers 31 16.4 10.7 Populations 33.9 20.4 14.2 Newpapers 30 18 12 Pressure 29.6 18.3 12.8 Mol. Weight 26.7 25.2 15.4 Atomic Weight 47.2 18.7 5.5 X-Ray Volts 27.9 17.5 14.4 Batting Averages 32.7 17.6 12.6 Death Rate 27 18.6 15.7 Average 30.6 18.5 12.4 Probable Error 0.8 0.4 0.4

  14. Conclusion Cont. • The number 1 predominates every step of most progressions. • Stock Market example: Assume 20% annual return on a $1,000 investment. It takes 4 years for the stock to go from $1,000 to $2,000, approximately 3 years to go from $2,000 to $3,000, approximately 2 years to go from $3,000 to $4,000. Before long you start over at 1 or $10,000.

  15. Conclusion Cont. Months in which Investment ranged between: $1,000 and $1,999 41 29.50% $2,000 and $2,999 25 17.99% $3,000 and $3,999 17 12.23% $4,000 and $4,999 14 10.07% $5,000 and $5,999 11 7.91% $6,000 and $6,999 9 6.47% $7,000 and $7,999 8 5.76% $8,000 and $8,999 7 5.04% $9,000 and $9,999 7 5.04%

  16. Stock Market Example • Sample of 12,00 stock market quotes from the Wall Street Journal.

  17. Stock Market Example Actual Expected Actual Expected Frequency Frequency Frequency Frequency Difference Digit 1 3364 3619 27.98% 30.10% -2.12% Digit 2 1554 2116 12.93% 17.60% -4.67% Digit 3 1182 1502 9.83% 12.49% -2.66% Digit 4 1240 1165 10.31% 9.69% 0.62% Digit 5 1026 952 8.53% 7.92% 0.61% Digit 6 1103 804 9.17% 6.69% 2.48% Digit 7 897 697 7.46% 5.80% 1.66% Digit 8 820 616 6.82% 5.12% 1.70% Digit 9 836 551 6.95% 4.58% 2.37% 12,022

  18. Newcomb vs. Benford • Benford also did not have an explanation for this phenomena, however, at least he had evidence that demonstrated the laws ubiquity. • The theory remained unchallenged, but failed to generate any publicity.

  19. 1961 • Research conducted revealed that Benford’s probabilities are scale invariant, therefore, it doesn't’t matter if the numbers are denominated in dollars, yens, marks, pesos, rubbles, etc.

  20. Betting • Other than proving the financial reasonableness of forecasts, the main use for Benford’s Law was used for making money by betting with unsuspecting friends.

  21. Mark Nigrini • In 1992, Nigrini published a thesis noting that Benford’s Law could be used to detect fraud.

  22. How Does this help us? • Because human choices are not random, invented numbers are unlikely to follow Benford’s Law, I.e., when people invent numbers, their digit patterns (which have been artificially added to a list of true numbers) will cause the data set to appear unnatural. Source: Mark Nigrini

  23. Five Major Digit Tests. • 1st digit test • 2nd digit test • First two digits • First three digits • Last two digits Source: Mark Nigrini

  24. First Digit Test • High Level Test • Will only identify the blinding glimpse of the obvious • Should not be used to select audit samples, as the sample size will be too large. Sourec: Mark Nigrini

  25. Second Digit Test • Also a high level test • Used to identify conformity • Should not be used to select audit samples Source: Mark Nigrini

  26. First Two Digits Test • More focused • Identifies manifested deviations for further review • Can be used to select audit targets for preliminary review Source: Mark Nigrini

  27. First Three Digits Test • Highly Focused • Used to select audit samples • Tends to identify number duplication Source: Mark Nigrini

  28. Last Two Digits Test • Used to identify Invented (overused) and rounded numbers • Expected proportion of all possible last two digit combinations is .01 Source: Mark Nigrini

  29. Not all Data Conforms!!!!!!!!! • The data set should describe similar data (populations of towns) • Artificial limits should not exist (no minimum sale amount) • The data can’t consist or pre-arranged numbers (SSN, Tel Numbers) • The data should consist of more small items than large items

  30. Not all Data Conforms • The data should not be a subset of a set • Does not work if data has been aggregated, I.e. daily deposits are combined and recorded weekly • Data should relate to s specific period • The data population should be large enough so that the proportions can manifest themselves

  31. Fraud Cases • What will you generally see: • Fraudster starts out small then increases the dollar amount. The amounts will be just below a limit that requires further review. The numbers will not follow a digital pattern. The amounts will not be rounded, and certain digit patterns will be repeated. Source: Mark Nigrini

  32. Example • Examined over 1,000 cash disbursements (entire population) during the year (amounts over $500 required 2 signatures and amounts over $5,000 required competitive bids). • Sample is on next slide

  33. Example Amount Description Check. No. $225.95 SEIU - LU 82 ED ASSES FUND 6/98. 4001 $1,212.97 SCHINDLER ELEV CORP JUN 98. 4002 $4,999.50 YORK INT CORP - 7/98-9/98. 4003 $339.13 US FOODSERVICE 10/29/98. 4004 $473.98 VIRGINIA DEPT OF TAXATION JUNE '98 4005 $250.81 W W GRAINGER INC - SUPPLIES 4006 $504.00 LJC LIGHTING SUPPLY - LIGHT BULBS. 4007 $171.70 CLERK, DC SUPERIOR COURT 12/25/98. 4008 $225.15 SEIU - SEIU LU 82 ED ASSES FD 9/98. 4009 $477.26 VIRGINIA DEPT OF TAXATION -1998. 4010

  34. Expected First Digit Frequency

  35. Actual First Digit Frequency

  36. Expected First and Second Digit Frequency

  37. Actual First and Second Digit Frequency

  38. Actual First and Second Digit Frequency 13 87 30 47 - 50 93 77

  39. Actual First and Second Digit Frequency Regular payroll garnishment.. Kay Grogan Food/Bev. Company uses ARAMARK. 13 Monthly supply contract for $303. 87 Possible structuring to avoid authorization thresholds. 30 Pest Control. 47 - 50 93 Maint. Contract. 77

  40. Applying Benford’s Law • Income tax agencies. • Audits of Accounts Payable (I/A, Ext. Auditors, Fraud Examiners, etc). • Expenses reimbursements.

  41. Who Uses This • US West, Sprint, Colgate, P&G, Nortel, American Airlines, United Airlines, Ameritech, Lockheed Martin, KPMG, ARCO, State of Texas. Source: Mark Nigrini

  42. Cost of Data Analysis Software • $245 for 13 programs which run on Excel 97 or Excel 2000. • $795 for all programs. Works with ACL and Idea. Source: Mark Nigrini

  43. Caution • Does not work with Lottery • May not work for certain types of expenses in which documentation is not required for expenses under a certain category. • Authorization Levels.

  44. Caution CAUTION • It only works with natural numbers (those numbers that are not ordered in a particular numbering scheme, I.e., telephone numbers, social security numbers.

  45. Caution CAUTION • The sample should be large enough so that the predicted proportions can assert themselves, and they should be free of artificial limits. I.E., don’t analyze the prices of 10 different types of beer, as the sample is small and the prices are forced by competition to stay within a narrow range.

  46. Summary STOP • Benford’s Law provides a data analysis method that can help alert us to possible errors, biases, potential fraud, costly processing inefficiencies or other irregularities.

  47. Articles STOP • Journal of Accountancy (5/99) • New Scientist (7/99) • Internal Auditor (2/99) • Inside Fraud Bulletin (3/99) • Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory (Fall of 1997)

  48. Articles Continued STOP • White Paper (4/94) • White Paper (9/99) • New York Times (8/4/98) • Information Technology (9/97)

  49. Web Sites STOP • www.doc.ic.ac.uk • www.maximag.co.uk/bull701.htm • www.Nigrini.com/Benford’s_law

  50. Web Sites STOP • Benford’s Law • Digital Analysis • Fraud Detection • Analytical Procedures

More Related