Intermediate Accounting II – Professor Iskander Chapter 21 – Statement of Cash Flows Revisited Exercise 21-15 Preparing a Complete Statement of Cash Flows Sunnyvale Corporation prepared the following balance sheet data for 2013 and 2012: Dec. 31‚ 2013 Dec. 31‚ 2012 Cash and cash equivalents . . . . . . . . . . $ 518‚500 $ 675‚000 Accounts receivable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360‚000 345‚000 Merchandise inventory . . . . . . . . . . . . 750
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also be classified in operating activtiies if the company wishes. h) Operating activities - add back depreciation 67‚000 i) Operating activities - deduct gain on sale (3‚000) Investing activities - sold capital asset 13‚000 Requirement 3 a) Investing activities - cash paid for capital asset (no change from above) (18‚000) b) Financing activities - borrowed money (no change from above) 46‚000 c) None; non-cash transaction (no change from above) d) Financing activities - repaid
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ChaNoel A. Torres Acevedo Intermediate Accounting I Homework: Exercise 3-1: Apr. | 2 | Cash | 30‚000 | | | | Equipment | 14‚000 | | | | Christine Ewing‚ Capital | | 44‚000 | | | | | | | 2 | No entry—not a transaction. | | | | | | | | | 3 | Supplies | 700 | | | | Accounts Payable | | 700 | | | | | | | 7 | Rent Expense | 600 | | | | Cash | | 600 | | | | | | | 11 | Accounts Receivable
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CHAPTER 1 THE CANADIAN FINANCIAL REPORTING ENVIRONMENT Multiple Choice—Conceptual Answer No. Description d 1. Accounting characteristics. a 2. Nature of financial accounting. c 3. Definition of financial accounting. a 4. Financial reporting entity. d 5. Efficient use of resources. d 6. Capital allocation process. c 7. Assessing management stewardship. c 8. Objectives of financial reporting. a 9. Role of AcSB. c 10. Body responsible for setting GAAP. b 11. Preparation of biased information
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searching for these objectives‚ it was stated that there was a superseding of the amendment. The addition stated “comparability and consistency in accounting for transferred financial assets will also be improved through clarifications of the requirements for isolation and limitations on portions of financial assets that are eligible for sale accounting.” In other words‚ financial statements will become more accurate and less fraudulently represented to users and the objective is not to double count
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HW 10% MT 45% Final 45% HW is submitted electronically on the following Tuesday Financial accounting: (1) Investor—outside the company (2) Creditor—outside the company (3) Management—inside the company Different points of view (1)-–whether the investment is worthwhile (2)—whether they can get the money back (3)—prepare the financial statement and would not want to share every information with investors/creditors; but investors and creditors want to know the truth—accurate financial data
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BRIEF EXERCISE 4-1 STARR CO. | Income Statement | For the Year 2012 | Revenues | | | Sales revenue | | $540‚000 | | | | Expenses | | | Cost of goods sold | | $330‚000 | Salaries and wages expense | | 120‚000 | Other operating expenses | | 10‚000 | Income tax expense | | 25‚000 | Total expenses | | 485‚000 | | | | Net income | | $55‚000 | | | | Earnings per share | |
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2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Conceptual framework– general. Objectives of financial reporting. Qualitative characteristics of accounting. Elements of financial statements. Basic assumptions. Basic principles: a. Measurement. b. Revenue recognition. c. Expense recognition. d. Full disclosure. Accounting principles– comprehensive. Constraints. Assumptions‚ principles‚ and constraints. 28‚ 29‚ 30 10 11 Questions 1‚ 7 2 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 6‚ 8 9‚ 10‚ 11 12‚ 13‚ 14 15‚ 16‚ 17‚ 18 19‚ 20‚ 21‚ 22‚ 23 24 25‚ 26‚ 27 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4 6
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Chapter 3 continued... Every acct on adj trial bal is used only once in creating first 3 financial stmts. Point of closing is to bring RE up to date - in doing that‚ we zero out temp accts. 4 kinds of closing entries: 1) close out Revenue - debit Rev CR Income Summ (normal credit bal) (only exists long enough for closing entries) - companies may be closing hundreds of rev or exp accts 2) close out Expense accts - list every single acct DR Income Summ CR Exp accts 3) DR Income Summ
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Accounting 371 CA1-6 pg 26 Accounting quantifies operations‚ summarizing information‚ giving people the ability to see a situation from different perspectives. It ’s one thing to look at sales numbers for the year‚ but when you combine that with expenses‚ you can derive many issues‚ such as if the expenses are too high for sales or if payroll is unusually low‚ you can make certain decisions about those areas. Accounting numbers help in making sound decisions based on real data and not
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