财务报表分析(英文版).pdf
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1、A.Measuring Business Income a.explain why financial statements are prepared at the end of the regular accounting period.Major Financial Statements:The balance sheet:provides a snapshot of the firms financial condition.The income statement:reports on the performance of the firm.The statement of cash
2、flows:reports the cash receipts and cash outflows classified according to operating,investment and financing activities.The statement of stockholders equity:reports the amounts and sources of changes in equity from transactions with owners.The footnotes of the financial statements:allow uses to impr
3、ove assessment of the amount,timing and uncertainty of the estimates reported in the financial statements.The most accurate way to measure the results of enterprise activity would be to measure them at the time of the enterprises eventual liquidation.Business,government,investors,and various other u
4、ser groups,however,cannot wait indefinitely for such information.If accountants did not provide financial information periodically,someone else would.The periodicity or time period assumption simply implies that the economic activities of an enterprise can be divided into artificial time periods.The
5、se time periods vary,but the most common are monthly,quarterly,and yearly.The information must be reliable and relevant.This requires that information must be consistent and comparable over time and also be provided on a timely basis.The shorter the time period,the more difficult it becomes to deter
6、mine the proper net income for the period.A months results are usually less reliable than a quarters results,and a quarters results are likely to be less reliable than a years results.Investors desire and demand that information be quickly processed and disseminated;yet the quicker the information i
7、s released,the more it is subject to error.This phenomenon provides an interesting example of the trade-off between relevance and reliability in preparing financial data.In practice,financial reporting is done at the end of the accounting period.Accounting periods can be any length in time.Firms typ
8、ically use the year as the primary accounting period.The 12-month accounting period is referred to as the fiscal year.Firms also report for periods less than a year(e.g.quarterly)on an interim basis.Accounting period must be of equal length.Financial statements are prepared at the end of the regular
9、 accounting period to allow comparison across time.User Comments Posted by Jeanette 2003-10-25 14:15:45.same period-allow comparision basic assumption in preparing financial statements is-the firm will continue in operation,-going concern,assigning revenue-expenses-base on matching principle Posted
10、by GiGi 2004-01-29 06:25:01.remember that there are 4 types of financial statements b.explain why the accounts must be adjusted at the end of each period.Why?Most external transactions are recorded when they occur.The employment of an accrual system means that numerous adjustments are necessary befo
11、re financial statements are prepared because certain accounts are not accurately stated.Some external transactions might not even seem like transactions and are recognized only at the end of the accounting period.Examples include unrecorded revenues and credit purchase.Some economic activities do no
12、t occur as the result of external transactions.Examples include depreciation and the expiration of prepaid expenses.Timing:Often a transaction affects the revenue or expenses of two or more accounting periods.The related cash inflow or outflow does not always coincide with the period in which these
13、revenue or expense items are recorded.Thus,the need for adjusting entries results from timing differences between the receipt or disbursement of cash and the recording of revenue or expenses.For example,if we handle transactions on a cash basis,only cash transactions during the year are recorded.Con
14、sequently,if a companys employees are paid every two weeks and the end of an accounting period occurs in the middle of these two weeks,neither liability nor expense has been recorded for the last week.To bring the accounts up to date for the preparation of financial statements,both the wage expense
15、and the wage liability accounts need to be increased.A necessary step in the accounting process,then,is the adjustment of all accounts to an accrual basis and their subsequent posting to the general ledger.Adjusting entries are therefore necessary to achieve a proper matching of revenues and expense
16、s in the determination of net income for the current period and to achieve an accurate statement of the assets and equities existing at the end of the period.Adjustment principles The revenue recognition principle The matching principle What to adjust?Each adjusting entry affects both a real account
17、(assets,liability,or owners equity)and a nominal or income statement account(revenue or expense).The four basic types of adjusting entries are:1.deferred expenses that benefits more than one period:for example,prepaid expenses(e.g.prepaid insurance,rent)are expenses paid in advance and recorded as a
18、ssets before they are used or consumed.When these assets are consumed,expenses should be recognized:a debit to an expense account and a credit to an asset account.Another example is depreciation.The cost of a long-term asset is allocated as an expense over its useful life.At the end of each period d
19、epreciation expense is recorded through an adjusting entry:a debit to a depreciation expense account and a credit to an accumulated depreciation account(a contra account used to total the past depreciation expenses on specific long-term assets).2.accrued expenses that incurred but not yet paid or re
20、corded:examples are employee salaries and interest on borrowed money.At the end of the accounting period,the accrued expense is recorded through an adjusting entry:a debit to an expense account(i.e.Salaries Expense)and a credit to a liability account(i.e.Salaries Payable).3.accrued revenues that ear
21、ned but not yet received or recorded:also called unrecorded revenues.Examples include interest revenues,rent revenues,etc.Such revenues accumulate with the passing of time,but the firm may have not received the payment or billed the client.An adjusting entry should be:a debit to an asset account(i.e
22、.Accounts Receivable)and a credit to a revenue account(i.e.Interest Revenue).4.unearned revenues that are revenues received in cash before delivery of goods/services:examples are magazine subscription fees,customer deposits for services.These revenues are not earned yet and thus should be recorded a
23、s liabilities.An adjusting entry should be:a debit to a liability account(i.e.Unearned Revenue)and a credit to a revenue account(i.e.Revenue).User Comments Posted by GiGi 2004-01-29 06:26:22.accrual system!definition Posted by Gina 2004-02-03 22:17:33.accrual based accounting recognizes the impact o
24、f a business event as it occurs,regardless of whether transaction affected cash Posted by Gina 2004-02-03 22:20:20.Revenue Principle:basis for recording revenues(ie tells when to record revenue and the amounts).Matching Principle:basis for recording expensis(ie direction to ID all expenses during th
25、e period,measure them,and match them against the revenues earned in that period).c.explain why the accrual basis of accounting produces more useful income statements and balance sheets than the cash basis.Revenue is something earned through the sale of goods or services.Not all cash receipts are rev
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