Accounting chapter 1, 2, 3
Temporary Accounts
These get closed: revenues, expenses, dividends and income summary
Deferred Revenue
Unearned revenue, cash is received before revenue is recognized. (first a liability, then revenue when adjusted) Adjustment: debit liability, credit revenue
Example of accrual basis
When buying insurance for 24 months, the expense gets spread out over the entire benefited period. Under cash basis, the entire cost of insurance would be recorded at once
Managerial accounting
provides info to internal users via internal reports
Liabilities
debit - credit +
Assets
debits+ credit -
Full disclosure principle
Requires a company to include all info in financial statements that would impact users decisions
Liability Accounts
Accounts payable, notes payable, unearned revenue, accrued liabilities- amounts owed that are not yet paid.
Time Period Assumption
The life of a business can be divided into distinct time periods, such as months and years
Adjusting accounts
Any changes in accounts balances has to originate in the journal -> ledger. Cash account will never be apart of adjusting journal entry
Statement of Cash Flows
Cash flow from operating, investing and financing activities
Accrued Revenue
Cash is received after revenue is recognized (Your receivables) Adjustment: Debit Asset, credit revenue.. At later date: credit asset, debit cash, credit revenue
Equity Accounts
Common Stock, Revenues, Dividends, RE, Expenses
D.E.A.D
DEBIT- expenses, assets and dividends
Statement of Retained Earnings
Explains changes in retained earning over a period of time.
Generally accepted accounting principles
GAAP
Equity
Owner's claim on assets
PR
Post Reference In journal: account number In ledger: pg # of journal where the entry came from
Adjusted Trial Balance
Prepared after all the adjusting entries are posted to the ledger
Post closing trial balance
Prepared after the closing entries have been posted. Only accounts on here should be assets, liabilities and equity accounts
Financial Accounting Standards Board
Private group that issues GAAP and set both broad and specific principles
Revenue Recognition Principle
Provides guidance on when a company must recognize revenue. Revenue is recorded only when the service is complete.
Financial Accounting
Provides info to external users via financial statements
Matching principle
Record expenses that were incurred to generate the revenues recorded in the accounting period
T-account
Represents a ledger account and is a tool used to understand the effects of one or more transactions
Assets
Resources owned or controlled by a company
Accrual Basis
Revenues are recognized when earned and expenses are recognized when incurred
IASB
Same as FASB but internationally
SEC
Securities and exchange commission (sets GAAP, that is issued by FASB). Establishes reporting requirements and sets GAAP for companies that issue stock
Financial Statements
1. Income statement - period of time 2. Statement of Retained Earnings-period of time 3. Balance Sheet-SPECIFIC DATE 4. Statement of Cash Flows-period of time
The accounting cycle
1.Analyze transactions 2. Journalize 3.Post 4. Prepare unadjusted trial balances 5. Adjust 6. Prepare adjust trial balance 7. Prepare statements 8. Close 9. Prepare post-closing trial balance
Journals
1.Transactions are in chronological order 2. A journal is used to record business transactions 3. In a journal, both the debit and credit side of transaction can be seen
Going-Concern Assumption
Accounting info reflects the presumption that the business will continue operating
Analyzing and Recording Process
1. Analyze each transaction and event from source documents 2. Record relevant transactions and events in a journal 3. Post Journal info to ledger accounts 4. Prepare and analyze the trial balance 5. income statement 6. Statement of Retained Earnings 7. Balance Statement 8. Cash flow statement
Business entity assumption
A business is accounted for separately from its owner or other business entities
Measurement Principle (cost principle)
Accounting info should be based on actual cost
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
Aims at curbing financial abuses by companies that issue stock to the public. Requires that public companies apply both accounting oversight and stringent internal controls to ensure more transparency, accountability and truthfulness in reporting transactions
Adjusting Accounts
An adjusting entry is recorded to bring an asset or liability account balance to its proper amount and ensure that the revenue recognition and matching principle are followed
Accounting Period
Any period of time a company decides to report about. Fiscal- 12 months
Determining Equity
Begin Balance +additional investments +/- net income/loss -dividends
Retained earnings
Beginning Balance +/- net income/loss (Rev-exp) -dividends
Accrued expenses
Cash is paid after expense is recognized (your payables) Adjustment: debit expense , credit liability (payables). At later date: debit liability, debit expense, credit cash
COLR
CREDIT- owners equity, liabilities, revenues
REID
Close your revenue, expenses, income summary and dividends
liabilities
Creditors claim on assets
Classified Balance Sheet
Current assets Non current assets- Long-term investments, Plant assets, intangible assets Current liabilities Noncurrent liabilities Equity
Depreciation (deferred expense)
Depreciation is the process of computing expense by allocating the cost of the plant and equipment over their expected useful lives. (Asset cost-salvage value)/useful life
Balance Sheet
Describes a company's financial position at a point in time. (Assets, liabilities and Equity-common stock/shareholders equity, retained earnings included).
Income Statement
Describes a company's revenues and expenses along with the resulting net income or loss over a period of time due to earnings activities
permanent accounts
Don't get closed: Assets, liabilities, common stock, retained earnings. They roll over to the next accounting period
Retained Earnings
Income not distributed to shareholders Revenue, expenses and dividends
Trial Balance
Lists all account balances in the general ledger. If the books are in balance, the total debits will equal the total credits. Like a balance sheet, it is prepared on a particular date
Cash Basis
Not consistent with GAAP: Revenues are recognized with cash is received and expenses recorded when cash is paid
Ledger
The collection of all accounts for an information system. Asset account starts with 1, liability with 2, equity with 3
Account Balance
The difference between total debits and total credits for an account
Monetary Unity Assumption
Transactions are expressed using "money" as a common denominator
Posting transactions
Transferring from journal to ledger
Current items
With one year or within the company's operating cycle, whichever is longer
Asset Accounts
cash, land, buildings, equipment, prepaid accounts, notes rec., accounts rec., supplies
Equity (common stock-dividends+revenues-expenses)
common stock: debit -, credit + dividends: debit+, credit - Revenues: debit -, credit + Expenses: debit +, credit -
Deferred expenses
pre-paid expenses. cash is paid before expense is recognized. (prepaid insurance, rent. First an asset, then expense when adjusted). Adjustment: credit asset, debit expense.