Chapter 4
process of preparing financial statements
1. prepare a trial balance (analyze for potential adjustments; develop a list of necessary adjusting entries) 2. record adjusting entries in the journal 3. post entries to the ledger 4. prepare the adjusted trial balance from the ledger 5. prepare financial statements from the adjusted trial balance
steps to accounting cycle
1. transactions are recorded in the journal 2. journal entries are posted to appropriate ledger accounts 3. trial balance is constructed 4. adjusting entries are prepared and posted 5. an adjusted trial balance is prepared 6. formal financial statements are produced (worksheet may be used)
worksheet approach
a way to prepare financial statements that takes into account necessary adjustments without actually updating journals and ledgers; used to prepare financial statements at any point in time
nominal accounts
accounts that will be reset to a zero balance with each new accounting period; revenue, expense, and dividend accounts
temporary accounts
accounts that will be reset to a zero balance with each new accounting period; revenue, expense, and dividend accounts (aka nominal accounts)
full disclosure principle
all relevant facts that would influence investors' and creditors' judgments about the company are disclosed in the financial statements or related notes
capital stock
amounts received from investors for the stock of the company; investors become the owners
real account
asset, liability, and equity accounts; balances are carried forward from the end of the period into the beginning of the next period
accounting cycle
captures transaction and event data through an orderly process that produces financial statements
classified assets
cash and those assets that will be converted into cash or consumed within one year of the operating cycle, whichever is longer
current ratio equation
current ratio = current assets / current liabilities
sole proprietorship
equity consists of a single owner's capital account
partnership
equity divided into separate accounts for each partner
current ratio
expresses the relative amount of working capital
full disclosure
financial statements result in a fair presentation, and all relevant facts that would influence investors' and creditors' judgements about the company are dislcosed in the financial statement or related notes
intangible assets
lack physical existence; purchased patents and copyrights, goodwill, etc.
long-term investments
land purchased for speculation, funds set aside for plant expansion, investments in other entities, etc.
property, plant, and equipment
land, buildings, equipment, etc.
quick ratio
more stringent test of liquidity; uses quick assets, which do not include inventory and prepaid expenses
if credits exceed debits in income statements, the company has....
net income (more revenues than expenses)
if debits exceeds credits, the company has....
net loss
income summary
non-financial statement account to facilitate the closing process
current liabilities
obligations that will be liquidated within one year or the operating cycle, whichever is longer
operating cycle
period of time it takes to convert cash back into cash
quick ratio equation
quick ratio = (cash + short term investments + accounts receivable) / (current liabilities)
"zero out" temporary/nominal accounts
resets the accounts for the next period
post-closing trial balance
reveals the balance of accounts after the closing process and consists of balance sheet accounts only; all of the revenue, expense, and dividend accounts were zeroes away via closing and do not appear
liquidity
the ability of a firm to meet its near-term obligations as they come due; inadequate liquidity can spell doom
working capital
the difference between current assets and current liabilities; a negative amount may be a sign of financial stress, but not always
retained earnings
the excess of a corporation's income over its dividends; profit that has been retianed and will be reinvested into the business
closing process
updates the retained earnings account in the ledger to equal the end-of-period balance; revenues, expenses, and dividends do not automatically produce an updating debit/credit to retained earnings