Simply No. The external auditor reports on whether the published financial statements give a true and fair view, or not (or give a fair presentation in all material respects, or not). This is different from certifying whether they are correct or not.
For example, the financial statements may contain a figure (such as the valuation of a property) that is an estimate and where it is impossible to say precisely what the correct figure is. As long the auditor agrees that the estimate is reasonable, then the auditor can report that the financial statements give a true and fair view. He would be unable to give an opinion on whether the figures are ‘correct’ because absolute precision is impossible for many accounting values, e.g. the lives of non-current assets, the amounts necessary to write damaged inventories down to their net realisable value, possible losses from lawsuits in progress, etc.