MGMT 350 Exam 1 Review
Current liabilities
Accounts payable Notes payable Accrued liabilities Current maturities of long-term debt
earned; incurred
Accrual accounting: Revenue is recognized when _______. Expenses are recognized when ________.
Operating activity
Activity that creates cash inflows or outflows through day-to-day operations.
Financing activity
Activity that creates cash inflows or outflows through the obtaining or repaying of borrowed or invested funds
Investing activity
Activity that creates cash inflows or outflows through the selling or buying of long-term assets
SEC (Security and Exchange Commission)
An agency of the United States government which enforces federal securities laws and regulating thesecurities industry. It requires public companies to adhere to GAAP and has oversight and enforcement authority
Economic entity
An assumption that a company keeps its activity separate from its owners and other businesses
Going concern
An assumption that financial statements statements are prepared with the expectation that a business will remain in operation indefinitely
Monetary unit
An assumption that only those things that can be expressed in money are included in the accounting records
Periodicity
An assumption that the life of a business can be divided into artificial time periods and that useful reports covering those periods can be prepared for the business.
Current assets
Cash Cash equivalents Short-term investments Receivables Inventories Prepayments
received; paid
Cash basis accounting: Revenue is recognized when cash is ____________. Expenses are recognized when cash is ___________.
Current assets, long-term investments, property plant and equipment, intangible assets, and other assets
Classifications of assets on a balance sheet (5)
Capital stock, additional paid-in capital, retained earnings
Classified as owners' equity on balance sheet (3)
Prior period adjustments
Corrections of errors are treated as _____________
FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board)
Current organization generating accounting standards used to prepare financial statements (GAAP). Is an independent, private sector body whose members represent a broad constituency of interest groups
Current assets / Current Liabilities
Current ratio
Comparability, Verifiability, Timeliness, Understandability
Enhancing qualities
b
Gains and losses that bypass net income but affect stockholders' equity are referred to as a. comprehensive income b. other comprehensive income c. prior period income d. unusual gains and losses
Timeliness
Having information available to decision makers before it loses its capacity to influence decisions
Comparability
Information is measured and reported in a similar manner for different companies or different years.
Noncurrent assets
Investments and funds Property, plant, and equipment IntangiblesOther
Current ratio
Measures a company's ability to satisfy its short-term liabilities
Income statement: revenues and gains, expenses and losses
Measures a period of time
Balance sheet: assets, liabilities, owners' equity
Measures at a point-in-time
Investments and funds
Noncurrent assets that are not used in the operations of business
Property, plant, and equipment and intangible assets
Noncurrent assets used in the operations of business
Long-term liabilities
Notes payable Mortgages Bonds payable Pension obligations Lease obligations
Understandability
Quality of information that allows users to comprehend its meaning.
(Cash + short-term investments + current receivables) / current liabilities
Quick ratio
Discontinued operations
Reported when company eliminates the results of operations and cash flows of a component, and when there is no significant continuing involvement in that component. Amount reported "net of tax."
Long-term investments
Securities Fixed assets Special funds Nonconsolidated subsidiaries or affiliated companies
Journalization, posting, trial balance, adjustments, adjusted trial balance, financial statements, closing entries, post-closing trial balance, reversing entries
The accounting cycle
minority/noncontrolling interest
The amount of equity investment made by outside shareholders to consolidated subsidiaries that are not 100% owned by the parent corporation
Fair value
The price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date.
Unusual nature
The underlying event or transaction should possess a high degree of abnormality and be of a type clearly unrelated to, or only incidentally related to, the ordinary and typical activities of the company.
Relevance and faithful representation
Two primary qualities that make accounting information useful for DECISION MAKING purposes
Other comprehensive income
Unrealized holding gain/loss on investments Minimum pension liability adjustment Deferred gain or loss on derivatives Foreign currency translation adjustment
Neutrality, free from error, completeness
What are the ingredients in Faithful Representation?
Materiality, confirmatory value, predictive value
What are the ingredients in Relevance?
Intangible assets, reputation, patents
What economic assets may not be on the balance sheet?
Cash recognizes revenues when received and expenses when paid, accrued recognizes revenues when earned and expenses when incurred
What is the difference between cash basis and accrual basis accounting?
After income from continuing operations
Where are discontinued operations on an income statement?
Seperate section just above "income from continuing operations before income taxes"
Where is unusual gain on an income statement?
To provide a clear and organized representation of a company's financial performance
Why are items separated on the income statement?
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
includes unrealized gains and losses reported in the equity section of the balance sheet that are netted below retained earnings
earnings per share
net income - preferred dividends / weighted average common shares outstanding
Acid-test ratio
provides a more stringent indication of a company's ability to pay its current liabilities
Par value
the amount that an investor pays to purchase a bond and that will be repaid to the investor at maturity
Verifiability
when independent measurers, using the same methods, obtain similar results
Changes in estimates
- Accounted for in the period of change and future periods - Not handled retrospectively - Not considered errors or extraordinary items
Single step income statement
- All revenues - All expenses = Net income - No distinction between operating and non-operating activities - Valued for simplicity
Multiple step income statement
- Separates operating and non-operating activities with intermediate sub-totals - Provides more info for analysis than single step format
Examples of changes in estimates
- Useful lives and salvage values of depreciable assets - Allowance for uncollectible receivables - Inventory obsolescence
Examples of changes in accounting principles
-change from FIFO to average cost. -change from the percentage-of-completion to the completed-contract method