accounting
two functions of financial accounting
1. how is the business activity being measured 2. how is it being communicated
4 primary financial statements
1. income statement 2. statement of stockholders equity 3. balance sheet 4. statement of cash flow
three categories of cash flow
1. operating 2. investing 3. finacning
measurement process
1. prepaid asset 2. supplies on account 3. depreciation 4. unearned revenue 5. accrued expenses 6. accrued revenues
liabilities examples
accounts payable, salaries payable
provides better info/timely info our investors because you record them as they happen
accrual accounting
we record revenues when we earn them and we record expenses with related revenues
accrual-basis accoutning
when the balance of the unearned revenue account decreases during an accounting period
accrual-basis revenues exceed cash collections from customers
expense incurred before cash is paid
accrued expense
when a company has a cost but hasn't yet paid cash or recorded an obligation to pay for that cost, it still should record the cost as an expense and also a liability for the amount owed
accrued expense
when a company has earned revenue but hasn't yet received cash or recorded an amount receivable, it still should record the revenue and an asset for the amount expected to be received
accrued revenue
we received cash after (service is performed, we earned the revenue and before payment is recorded, an asset is received)
accrued revenues
record events that have occurred but that we have not yet recorded
adjusting entries
things that have happened internally
adjustments
economic resource that will be a benefit to the future
asset
on sept. 30 MFP Co paid employee salaries of $7,000 including $1,000 it owed to its employees last month. What are the effects of this transaction on the accounting equation
assets decreased, liabilities decreased and expenses increased
financial statement that presents the financial position of the company on a particular date
balance sheet
equals its original cost less accumulated depreciation
book value
cost-accumulated depriciation
booking value/caring value
putting the assets you buy on your balance sheet
capitalizing assets
a company paid $900 to workers during May. Of this amount, $600 was for work performed in April, while the other $300 was for work performed during May. What would the impact of this transaction be during May on each of the following three items?
cash balance - decrease cash-basis net income - decrease accrual-basis net income - decrease
when cash payments are made to stockholders, what is the effect on the company's accounts
cash decreases and dividends increase
asset examples
cash, equipment, building, supplies
record revenues at the time we receive cash and expenses at the time we pay cash
cash-basis accounting
owners equity
common stock and retained earnings
stockholders equity examples
common stock and retained earnings
two primary components of stockholders equity
common stock and retained earnings
account with a balance that is opposite to that of its related accounts
contra account
make decisions related to lending money to the company
creditors
resources or benefits within the year
current assets/liabilities
allocate cost over time in contra account (contra account goes against)
depreciation
process of allocating the cost of an asset, such as equipment, to expense over the assets useful life
depreciation
cash payments to stockholders
dividends
payment to shareholders, decrease retained earnings
dividends
costs of providing products and service
expenses
resources used
expenses
transactions the firm conducts with a separate economic entity
external transactions
Suppose Simeon Company beings the year with $1,000 in supplies, purchases an additional $5,500 of supplies during the year, and ends the year with $700 in supplies. The year-end adjusting entry includes Supplies Expense of $5,800
false
measuring business activities and communicating them to external parties
financial accounting
periods reports published by the company for the purpose of providing information to external users
financial statements
financial statement that reports the company's revenues and expenses over an interval of time
income statement
two methods of cash flows
indirect and direct
want to make good decisions related to buying and selling the company's stock
investors
obligation and amounts owed to creditors
liabilites
companies typically report expenses in the same period as the revenues they help to generate
matching principle
recognizes expenses along with those revenues that are generated from those expenses, described as cause and effect
matching principle
measure the difference between revenues and expenses
net income
what is the best reflection of what will happen in the future
net income
what cash flow activity is different between the 2 methods
operating
cash flows proceeds the benefit (rent realize benefit as month goes on)
prepaid asset
making insurance payments in advance is an example of
prepaid expense
goal of statement of cash flow
reconcile accrual versus cash basis
represents the cumulative amount of net income, earned over the life of a company, that has been kept in the business rather than distributed to stockholders as dividends
retained earnings
when you receive a dividend it comes out of
retained earnings
matching principle dictates:
revenue recognition and expense recognition
amounts earned from selling products or services to customers
revenues
income statement
revenues - expenses = net income/loss
three major captions in the income statement
revenues, expenses, net income
financial statement that measures activities involving cash receipts and cash payments over an interval of time
statement of cash flow
financial statement that summarizes the changes in stockholders' equity over an interval of time
statement of stockholders equity
owners claims to resources
stockholders equity
obtain now, pay later and update balance based on usage
supplies on account
Unearned revenues occur when cash is received before the revenue is earned
true
adjusting entries are needed because we use accrual-basis accounting
true
if the beginning of retained earnings equals $10,000, net income for the year equals $6,000, and dividends for the year equal $2,000, then the ending balance of retained earnings equals $14,000
true
cash is received before service is performed
unearned revenue
A company provided $1,500 of services to customers during the month of May. The customers paid in June. What would the impact of these transactions be during May on each of the following three items?
Cash balance - no effect cash basis net income - no effect accrual-basis net income - increase