ACC CHAPTER 6 PT 1
A company has beginning inventory for the year of $10,500. During the year, the company purchases inventory for $190,000 and ends the year with $27,000 of inventory. The company will report cost of goods sold equal to:
$173,500
A company has the following inventory transactions: Jan. 1 Beginning inventory 100 units @ $4 each Jan. 15 Purchase 1,100 units @ $5 each Jan. 31 Purchase 2,100 units @ $6 each What would be the cost of goods sold under the FIFO method if 120 units were sold in January?
$500
Given the information below: -Sales revenue $345,000 -Accounts receivable $52,000 -Ending inventory $113,000 -Cost of Goods Sold $242,000 -Sales returns $23,000 What is the gross profit?
$80,000
Manufacturing companies buy the inputs for the products they manufacture. Thus, we classify inventory for a manufacturer into three categories:
1. raw materials 2. work in process 3. finished goods
Accountants often call FIFO the ______: The amount it reports for ending inventory (which appears in the balance sheet) better approximates the current cost of inventory
Balance sheet approach
______ method: ◦Matches physical flow for most companies ◦Ending inventory reflects current cost ◦"Balance-sheet approach"
FIFO
Inventory is the cost of fully assembled but unshipped inventory at the end of the reporting period.
Finished goods
Which of the following inventory accounts consists of items for which the manufacturing process is complete?
Finished goods
It assumes the first units purchased (the first in) are the first ones sold (the first out).
First-in, first-out (FIFO) method
______ equals net revenues (or net sales) minus cost of goods
Gross profit
______ equals operating income plus nonoperating revenues and minus nonoperating expenses
Income before income taxes
Accountants often call LIFO the ______: The amount it reports for cost of goods sold (which appears in the income statement) more realistically matches the current costs of inventory needed to produce current revenues
Income statement approach
Many companies, though, generate revenues by selling ______ rather than a service
Inventory
______ includes items a company intends to sell to customers in the ordinary course of business
Inventory
______ method: ◦Cost of goods sold reflects current cost ◦"Income-statement approach"
LIFO
______ ◦Cost of goods sold reflects current cost ◦"Income-statement approach"
LIFO conformity rule
It assumes that the last units purchased (the last in) are the first ones sold (the first out).
Last-in, first-out (LIFO) method
______ produce the inventories they sell, rather than buying them in finished form from suppliers
Manufacturing companies
______ may assemble, sort, repackage, redistribute, store, refrigerate, deliver, or install the inventory, but they do not manufacture it. They simply serve as intermediaries in the process of moving inventory from the manufacturer to the end user.
Merchandising companies
______ equals all revenues minus all expenses
Net income
Which level of profitability is considered profit from normal operations?
Operating income
______ equals gross profit minus operating expenses
Operating income
Inventory includes the cost of components that will become part of the finished product but have not yet been used in production.
Raw materials
Costs of goods sold is:
Reported in the income statement
______ purchase inventory from manufacturers or wholesalers and then sell this inventory to end users. You probably are more familiar with retail companies because these are the companies from which you buy products.
Retailers
It matches, or identifies, each unit of inventory with its actual cost. It is used primarily by companies selling unique, expensive products with low sales volume.
Specific identification method
The primary benefit of choosing LIFO is ______
Tax savings
It assumes that both cost of goods sold and ending inventory consist of a random mixture of all the goods available for sale.
Weighted-average cost method
______ resell inventory to retail companies or to professional users.
Wholesalers
Inventory refers to the products that have been started in the production process but are not yet complete at the end of the period. The total costs include raw materials, direct labor, and indirect manufacturing costs called overhead.
Work-in-process