ACT210 Final Exam CSU
Stockholder's Equity
-Common Stock -Retained Earnings
Long-term assets
-Land -Land improvements -Buildings -Equipment -Accumulated Depreciation -Natural Resources -patents -copyrights -trademarks -franchises
Current assets
-cash -accounts receivable -notes receivable if due within the year -interest receivable -supplies -inventory -prepaid advertising insurance, rent investments
Accounting Cycle Steps
1. Capture and evaluate the economic event 2. Make the journal entry for the economic event 3. Post the original journal entry to the ledger 4. Create the unadjusted trial balance 5. Make the adjusting journal entries and post them to the ledger 6. Create the adjusted trial balance 7. Make the closing journal entries and post them to the ledger 8. Create the income statement 9. Create the Statement of Stockholders' Equity 10. Create the Balance Sheet 11. Create the statement of cash flows 12. Create the post closing trial balance --at least i think
Sole Proprietorship
A business owned by one person
internal controls
A company's plans to (1) safeguard the company's assets and (2) improve the accuracy and reliability of accounting information
Verifiability
A consensus among different measurers
Balance Sheet
A financial statement that presents the financial position of the company on a particular date
income statement
A financial statement that reports a company's revenues and expenses over an interval of time
Accounting
A system of maintaining records of a company's operations and communicating that information to decision makers
relevance
Accounting information that possesses confirmatory value and/or predictive value, and that is material
temporary accounts
All revenue, expense, and dividend accounts; account balances are maintained for a single period and then closed (or zeroed out) and transferred to the balance of the Retained Earnings account at the end of the period.
Liabilities
Amounts owed to creditors
contra account
An account with a balance that is opposite, or "contra," to that of its related accounts.
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
An independent, private body that has primary responsibility for the establishment of GAAP in the United States.
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB)
An international accounting standard-setting body responsible for the convergence of accounting standards worldwide.
average collection period
Approximate number of days the average accounts receivable balance is outstanding. It equals 365 divided by the receivables turnover ratio
classified balance sheet
Balance sheet that groups a company's assets into current assets and long-term assets and that separates liabilities into current liabilities and long-term liabilities.
aging method
Basing the estimate of future bad debts on the various ages of individual accounts receivable, using a higher percentage for "old" accounts than for "new" accounts
Balance Sheet Header
Company Name Balance Sheet December 31, 20XX -Total Assets (current and long-term) on one side, total liabilities (short term and long-term) plus total stockholder's equity. Assets = liabilities + stockholder's equity
Income Statement information
Company Name Income Statement For the year ended December 31, 20XX -Net income or Net loss
The statement of cash flows header
Company Name Statement of Cash Flows For the year ending December 31, 20XX
Statement of Stockholder's Equity Header
Company Name Statement of Stockholders' Equity For the year ended December 31, 20XX -Total ending stockholder's equity
purchase cards
Company-issued debit cards or credit cards that allow authorized employees to make purchases on behalf of the company
cash
Currency, coins, balances in savings and checking accounts, items acceptable for deposit in these accounts (such as checks received from customers), and cash equivalents.
closing entries
Entries that transfer the balances of all temporary accounts (revenues, expenses, and dividends) to the balance of the Retained Earnings account
Accounting Equation
Equation that shows a company's resources (assets) equal creditors' and owners' claims to those resources (liabilities and stockholders' equity).
Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX)
Formally titled the Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act of 2002, this act provides regulation of auditors and the types of services they furnish to clients, increases accountability of corporate executives, addresses conflicts of interest for securities analysts, and provides for stiff criminal penalties for violators.
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Known as the Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act of 2002 and commonly referred to as SOX; the act established a variety of guidelines related to auditor-client relations and internal control procedures
debit
Left side of an account. Indicates an increase to asset, expense, or dividend accounts, and a decrease to liability, stockholders' equity, or revenue accounts.
Liabilities
Payable's
accrual-basis accounting
Record revenues when goods and services are provided to customers, and record expenses with related revenues
allowance method
Recording an adjustment at the end of each period to allow for the possibility of future uncollectible accounts. The adjustment has the effects of reducing assets and increasing expenses.
Assets
Resources of a company
credit
Right side of an account. Indicates a decrease to asset, expense, or dividend accounts, and an increase to liability, stockholders' equity, or revenue accounts.
Stockholders' Equity
Stockholders', or owners', claims to resources, which equal the difference between total assets and total liabilities.
Decision usefulness
The ability of the information to be useful in decision making
Comparability
The ability of users to see similarities and differences between two different business activities
bad debt expense
The amount of the adjustment to the allowance for uncollectible accounts, representing the cost of estimated future bad debts charged to the current period.
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
The standards being developed and promoted by the International Accounting Standards Board.
Auditors
Trained individuals hired by a company as an independent party to express a professional opinion of the conformity of that company's financial statements with GAAP
Understandability
Users must understand the information within the context of the decision they are making
partnership
a business owned by two or more people
journal
a chronological record of all transactions affecting a firm
ethics
a code or moral system that provides criteria for evaluating right and wrong behavior
statement of cash flows
a financial statement that measures activities involving cash receipts and cash payments over an interval of time
statements of stockholders' equity
a financial statement that summarizes the changes in stockholders' equity over an interval of time
adjusted trial balance
a list of accounts and their balances after we have updated balances for adjusting entries
chart of accounts
a list of all account names used to record transactions of a company
post-closing trial balance
a list of all accounts and their balances at a particular date after we have updated account balances for closing entries
trial balance
a list of all accounts and their balances at a particular date, showing that total debits equal total credits
T-account
a simplified form of a general ledger account with space at the top for the account title and two sides for recording debits and credits
general ledger
a single location that provides a list of transactions affecting each account and the account's balance
account
a summary of the effects of all transactions related to particular item over a period of time
Monetary Unit Assumption
a unit or scale of measurement can be used to measure financial statement elements
faithful representation
accounting information that is complete, neutral, and free from error
permanent accounts
all accounts that appear in the balance sheet; account balances are carried forward from period to period
economic entity assumption
all economic events with a particular economic entity can be identified
revenues
amounts recorded when the company sells products or services to customers
book value
an asset's original cost less accumulated depreciation
Corporation
an entity that is legally separate from its owners
Separation of Duties
authorizing transactions, recording transactions, and maintaining control of the related assets should be separated among employees
dividends
cash payments to stockholders
deposits outstanding
cash receipts of the company that have not been added to the bank's record of the company's balance
NSF checks
checks drawn on non sufficient funds, or "bad" checks from customers
checks outstanding
checks the company has written that have not been subtracted from the bank's record of the company's balance
allowance for uncollectible accounts
contra asset account representing the amount of accounts receivable that we do not expect to collect
expenses
cost of providing products and services
retained earnings
cumulative amount of net income earned over the life of the company that has been kept (retained) in the business rather than distributed to stockholders as dividends (not retained)
adjusting entries
entries used to record events that occur during the period but that have not yet been recorded by the end of the period
internal transactions
events that affect the financial position of the company but do not include an exchange with a separate economic entity
Cost constraint
financial accounting information is provided only when the benefits of doing so exceed the costs
accounting cycle
full set of procedures used to accomplish the measurement/communication process of financial accounting
Going Concern Assumption
in the absences of information to the contrary, a business entity will continue to operate indefinitely
timeliness
information being available to users early enough to allow them to use it in the decision process
bank reconciliation
matching the balance of cash in the bank account with the balance of cash in the company's own records
financial accounting
measurement of business activities of a company and communication of those measurements to external parties for decision-making purposes
financial statements
periodic reports published by the company for the purpose of providing information to external users
matching principle
recognize expenses in the same period as the revenues they help to generate
Revenue Recognition Principle
record revenue in the period in which we provide goods and services to customers
revenue rocognition principle
record revenue in the period in which we provide goods and services to customers
cash-basis accounting
record revenues at the time cash is received and expenses at the time cash is paid
cash equivalents
short-term investments that have a maturity date no longer than three months from the date of purchase
petty cash fund
small amount of cash kept on hand to pay for minor purchases
Accounts receivable
the amount of cash owed to the company by its customers from the sale of products or services on account
prepaid expenses
the costs of assets acquired in one period that will be expensed in a future period
net income
the difference between total revenue and total expenses
Periodicity Assumption
the economic life of an enterprise (presumed to be indefinite) can be divided into artificial time periods for financial reporting
journal entry
the format used for recording business transactions
depreciation
the process of allocating the cost of an long-term asset to expense over its useful life
posting
the process of transferring the debit and credit information from the journal to individual accounts in the general ledger
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)
the rules of financial accounting
fraud triangle
the three elements present for every fraud- motive, rationalization, and opportunity
occupational fraud
the use of one's occupation for personal enrichment through the deliberate misuse or misapplication of the employer's resources
Consistency
the use of similar accounting procedures either over time for the same company, or across companies at the same point in time
external transactions
transactions the firm conducts with a separate economic entity
collusion
two to more people acting in coordination to circumvent internal controls
accrued expense
when a company has incurred an expense but hasn't yet paid cash or recorded an obligation to pay
accrued revenue
when a company provides products or services to customers but hasn't yet received cash
deferred revenues
when a company receives cash in advance from a customer for products or services to be provided in the future