Accounting 2 Unit 1 Exam
Research and development
$ spent, new products developed
Quick ratio
(Assets - Inventory)/Liabilities
A/P turnover & days in cycle
365/A/P
A/R turnover & days in cycle
365/A/R
Inventory turnover & days in cycle
365/inventory
An example of operating activities is
A bookcase manufacturer purchases brackets to install on the bookcases in production.
Sole Proprietorship (unlimited liability)
A business entity owned by one person whose possessions are at risk if the business fails.
Corporation
A business entity that is legally separate and desalination from its owners
Partnership
A business owned by two or more individuals whose personal possessions are at risk if the business fails.
Net income
A companies total revenue less its total expenses for a period of time
Manufacturing firm
A company which produces a product from raw materials
Limited partnership
A partnership composed of one or more general partners and one or more limited partners; only the general partners' personal possessions are at risk if the business should fail.
S Corporation
A small business corporation owned by no more than 100 individuals; its profits are taxed at the individual level rather than the corporate level.
Three activity ratios
A/R turnover, Inventory turnover, A/P turnover
Current assets include
Accounts receivable, cash, inventory, prepaid rent
Financing activities
Activities involving obtaining necessary funds to purchase long term assets, repay existing obligations, and provide a return for owners.
Investing Activities
Activities involving the purchase and sale or long term assets as well as other major items used in a business's operation.
Does not appear on the balance sheet
Advertising expense
Revenue
Amounts earned from providing goods and services
Expenses
Amounts incurred in an attempt to generate revenue
Revenue
An amount earned from rendering services or transferring resources to customers.
Expense
An amount incurred from using resources or services in the effort to generate revenue
Current ratio
Assets/liabilities
Accounting equation
Assets= liabilities+owners equity
Performance measurement and management process
Balance scorecard (formulas come in)
Long term liabilities includes
Bond payable (due in 10 years)
Going concern
Business will continue past the current period
Gross margin ratio
Cogs/gross margin
Bank reconciliation
Comparing accounting records of cash to the business books.
Performing phase
Completing the planned business activities and recording the results of those activities
Production time
Considered value added time
External failure (involuntary)
Correcting errors after the customer knows the error occured, includes customer ill will.
Internal failure (involuntary)
Correcting errors before the customer knows the error occured
Finance
Costs of borrowing, benefits expects from using the money
Investing process
Creating the infrastructure to support operating activities
Limited liability means (Corporation)
Creditors of a company can only claim the assets of the firm and not the assets of the owners of the firm.
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
Current rule-making body, standards, concepts,
What are the characteristics of business today
Customer(focused operations), global markets, advanced manufacturing and communications, eBusiness
business organization and strategy process
Determines the plan of action for the companyq
Relatively certain external environment
Efficiency strategy, mechanistic structure
Property plant and equipment includes
Equipment, land, building
Return on sales ratio.
Expenses/revenue
4 perspectives
Financial, internal, customer, learning and growth
Capital resources processes
Financing and investing activities of the company
Appraisal(voluntary types of quality costs)
Finding errors as early in the process as possible. continuous inspection, testing
Relatively uncertain external environment
Flexibility strategy, organic structure
Customer loyalty
Growth, referrals, retention keep current customer instead of get a new one.
Balanced scorecard
Holistic approach to planning and measuring performance
Return on owners equity
How efficient a company is at generating profit. Average of liabilities and charge holders equity
4 basic financial statements and auditors report
Income statement, statement of cash flows, statement of owners equity, balance sheet, Auditors report
Book balance includes
Interest earned, service charges, NSF checks, errors made by the company
Investments includes
Investment in nike stock
Business entity
Keeps business, personal records seperate
Debt to equity ratio
Liabilities/stockholders equity
Monetary unit
Maintain business records in currency
Return on owners equity ratio (ROE)
Net income/stockholders equity
Current liabilities includes
Note payable due in 60 days, accounts payable
Bank balance includes
Outstanding checks, deposits in transit, errors made by the bank
Partnership (unlimited liability)
Owned by 2 or more individuals whose personal possessions are at risk.
Intangible assets includes
Patent
human resources
Pay and fringe benefits, hiring costs
Market share
Percentage of total sales in the market generated by a particular common
3 phases of management cycle
Planning phase, performing phase, evaluating phase
Production and operation
Production costs, actual and budgeted
Operating processes
Profit- making activities of the company
Periodicity
Profits/loses mst be determined periically
5 procedures of internal control
Proper authoritization, separating incomplete duties, Maintains adequate documentation, physically controlling assets and documents, providing independent checks on performance.
Evaluating phase
Providing information to interested users to assess the success of the business activities
Measures used in the financial perspective is
ROI, Quick Ratio, Gross Margin, Current Ratio, Debt to Equity Ratio, Return on sales ratio
Financing process
Raising capital to support operating activities
Prevention (Voluntary types of quality costs)
Reducing the opportunity for error to occur. employee training, product and process design
Owner's Equity
Represent the claims on the business to transfer the residual interest (net assets of the business) to the owners. (Owners worth)
Expenditure process
Resources acquired
Revenue process
Resources provided
Conversion process/manufacturing
Resources used
Stockholders equity
Retained earnings
Return on investment ratio (ROI)
Returns/investments
The 3 basic functions of business
Service, merchandising, manufacturing
Planning phase
Setting goals and objectives for business activities
Customer satisfaction
Surveys
Information systems
Technology
FASB
The body responsible for establishing accounting standards in the US today.
Marketing
The business function designed to determine the wants and needs of consumers
Financing and investing activities
The capital resources process features this pair of activities
liability
The obligation to transfer economic resources to suppliers of goods and services at some point in the future (those you owe)
Business entity concept
The owner of a plumbing business maintains separate checkbooks for his business and his personal affairs.
Assets
The rights to use resources that have expected future economic benefit. (Things you own)
GAAP
The statements of financial accounting standards and other authoritative pronouncements that define what constitutes acceptable accounting practice for financial reporting collectively. Generally accepted accounting principles
Planning, performing, and evaluating
The three phases of business
Employee growth
Training, continuing education
Efficiency strategy
When a company operates in a more certain environment it tends to focus inward and have an
4 business processes
business organization and strategy, operating, capital resources, performance measurement and management