Title: Chapter 2: Financial Statements and the Accounting Process
1Chapter 2 Financial Statements and the
Accounting Process
- I. Financial Statements
- A. Balance Sheet
- B. Statement of Owners Equity
- Statement of Stockholders Equity
- Statement of Retained Earnings
- C. Income Statement
- D. Statement of Cash Flows
- II. Transaction Analysis
2I.A.The Balance Sheet (B/S)
- Based on the relationship
- Assets Sources of Assets
- Assets Claims to Assets
- Assets Liabilities Equity
- For proprietorships
- Assets Liabilities Owners Equity
- A L OE
- For corporations
- Assets Liabilities Stockholders Equity
- A L SE
3A.The B/S Assets
- Assets are
- probable future economic benefits
- obtained or controlled by an entity
- result of past transactions or events.
- On B/S, classified in order of liquidity current
and non-current. - Current assets are expected to be converted to
cash, sold, or used up within the next accounting
period (usually defined as a year).
4A.The B/S Assets
- Current assets
- Cash
- Short-term marketable securities
- Accounts receivable
- Inventory
- Prepaid expenses
- Property, plant, and equipment
- Long-term investments
- Intangible assets
- Patents
- Goodwill
5A. The B/S Liabilities
- Liabilities are claims by creditors against the
assets of a company. - The creditors have a priority claim (before the
owners) to the assets in liquidation. - Liabilities are classified in terms of due dates
current liabilities and non-current liabilities. - Current liabilities will require the use of
current assets or the creation of other current
liabilities at maturity.
6A. The B/S Liabilities
- Current liabilities
- Accounts payable
- Wages payable
- Interest payable
- Short-term notes payable
- Unearned revenues
- Other payables
- Long-term liabilities
- Bonds payable
- Mortgage payable
- Long-term notes payable
7A. The B/S Equity
- Equity represents the claims of the owners
against the assets of a company. - Corporations have a different form of ownership
than proprietorships (individual owner), but the
concept is the same. - Most of the applications in this course will be
for corporations, but some of the early material
deals with proprietorships.
8A. The B/S Equity for Single Owner
(Proprietorship)
- Owners equity account consists of
- contributions by owner
- withdrawals by owner
- earnings of the proprietorship
9A.The B/S Equity for Corporation
- Stockholders equity consists of
- Contributed capital
- Common Stock
- Preferred Stock (see Chapter 9)
- Additional paid in capital (see Chapter 9)
- Retained earnings
- Net income
- Dividends
10B. The Statement of Owners Equity
- Beginning owners equity
- Plus Investments by owners
- Plus Net income
- Less Withdrawals by owners
- Ending owners equity
- OEBegin I NI - W OEEnd
11B. The Statement of Stockholders Equity
- Beginning stockholders equity
- Plus issue of stock
- Plus Net income
- Less Dividends paid to stockholders
- Ending stockholders equity
- SEBegin I NI - D SEEnd
12B.The Statement of Retained Earnings
- Beginning retained earnings balance
- Plus Net income
- Less Dividends
- Ending retained earnings balance
- REBegin NI - D REEnd
- Note that the Statement of Retained Earnings is a
subset of the Statement of Stockholders Equity.
13C.The Income Statement
- Revenues
- inflow of assets or settlement of liabilities
- from delivery of goods or services
- related to a companys central operations.
- Expenses
- outflow or consumption of assets or incurrence of
liabilities - from delivery of goods or services
- related to a companys central operations.
14C.The Income Statement
- Gains
- inflow of net assets
- from activities that are peripheral operations.
- Losses
- outflow of net assets
- from activities that are peripheral operations.
- Note that some items that fall into this category
still have the title revenue or expense.
Examples include interest revenue and interest
expense.
15The Income StatementRevenues - Expenses Net
Income
- Revenue examples
- Sales
- Fees earned
- Other revenues and gains
- Expense examples
- Cost of goods sold
- Wage expense
- Rent expense
- Selling expense
- Depreciation expense
- Other expenses and losses
16D.The Statement of Cash Flows
- Cash flows from operating activities
- Usually cash flows related to income statement
items (e.g., cash inflows from sales, cash
outflows from interest payments). - Cash flow from investing activities
- Usually cash flows related to non-current assets
(e.g., cash outflow from purchase of equipment). - Cash flow from financing activities
- Usually cash flows related to equity items or
non-current liabilities (e.g., sale of stock,
issuance of bonds).
17Relationships Among theFinancial Statements
Ending Balance Sheet
Beginning Balance Sheet
Statement of Cash Flows
Assets (Cash)
Assets (Cash)
Income Statement
Liabilities
Liabilities
Statement of O.E. or Statement of
R.E. or Statement of S.E.
Equity
Equity
18Ex. 2-14
- Indicate CA, PE, OA, CL, LTL, SE
- ___ Cash
- ___ Common Stock
- ___ Notes Payable
- ___ Prepaid Insurance
- ___ Accounts Receivable
- ___ Machinery and Equipment
- ___ Investments
- ___ Patents
CA
SE
CL/LTL
CA/OA
CA
PE
OA
OA
19Ex. 2-14 - continued
- Indicate CA, PE, OA, CL, LTL, SE
- ___ Taxes Payable
- ___ Inventory
- ___ Wages Payable
- ___ Accounts Payable
- ___ Marketable Securities
- ___ Land
- ___ Goodwill
- ___ Interest Payable
CL
CA
CL
CL
CA/OA
PE
OA
CL
20Ex. 2-17 (20X1, 20X2, and 20X3)
- Use the following formulas to solve for the
missing items - A L SE
- SEBegin Issue NI - D SEEnd
21Ex. 2-17 (20X1, in 000s)
- (a) SE, 1/1/X1
- A L SE
- 100 60 SE
- 40 SE
- (b) SE, 12/31/X1
- SEBegin Issue NI - D SEEnd
- 40 18 20 - 20
SEEnd - 58
SEEnd
22Ex. 2-17 (20X2, in 000s)
- (c) Liabilities, 1/1/X2
- A L SE
- 120 L 58
- 62 L
- (d) SE, 1/1/X2 SE,12/31/X1
- 58
- (e) SE, 12/31/X2 SE, 1/1/X3 75,000
23Ex. 2-17 (20X3, in 000s)
- (f) Assets, 1/1/X3
- A L SE
- A 72 75
- 147 72 75
- (g) Income or (loss)
- 57 75 17 (1)
24II. Transaction Analysis
- The foundation of financial accounting.
- Based on the accounting equation
- Assets Liabilities Equity
- Every economic transaction affects at least two
items in the accounting equation. - Illustration Ex. 2-44.
25Ex. 2-44 Worksheet
- Cash Parts A/R A/P
C/S RE - 9/3
- 9/9
- 9/12
- 9/18
- 9/20
- 9/26
- 9/29 _____ _____ _____ _____
_____ _____
15,000
15,000
5,000
5,000
(2,500)
(2,500) exp.
2,200
2,200 rev.
(1,150)
(1,150) exp.
850
(850)
(1,000)
(1,000)
Tot. 12,350 3,850 1,350 4,000
15,000 (1,450)
26Ex. 2-44 Financial Statements
- Income Statement - Month of September
- Revenues ________
- Expenses ________
- Net Income (loss) ________
- Statement of Retained Earnings - September
- RE (beginning) ________
- Net Income (loss) ________
- Dividends ________
- RE (ending) ________
2,200
(3,650)
(1,450)
-0-
(1,450)
-0-
(1,450)
27Ex. 2-44 Financial Statements
- Balance Sheet - at September 30
- Assets
- Cash ________
- Parts ________
- A/R ________
- Total ________
- Liab. and S.E.
- A/P ________
- CS ________
- RE (ending) ________
- Total ________
12,350
3,850
1,350
17,550
4,000
15,000
(1,450)
17,550
28Ex. 2-44 Financial Statements
- Statement of Cash Flows - for September
- Cash flow from operating activities
- Cash collected from customers ________
- Cash paid to suppliers ________
- Cash paid for rent ________
- Cash flow from financing activities
- Cash from issue of stock ________
- Net increase in cash ________
850
(1,000)
(2,500)
15,000
12,350
29Ex. 2-45 Worksheet
- Nov. Cash A/R Supp N/P U.Rev
C/S RE - Bal. 7,500 2,000 2,200 300
3,000 4,000 - 2
- 7
- 11
- 17
- 30 _____ _____ _____ _____
_____ _____ _____
100
100 rev.
150
150 rev.
(200)
(200) exp.
(200)
200 rev.
(500)
(500) exp.
Tot. 7,400 150 1,500 2,200 100
3,000 3,750