978-0078025600 Chapter 3 Lecture Note Part 1

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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter 03
Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial statements
Student Learning Objectives and Related Assignment Materials*
Student Learning Objectives
Discussion
Questions
Quick
Studies
Exercises
Problems
(A &B set)**
Beyond the
Numbers
Conceptual objectives:
C1. Explain the importance of
periodic reporting and the time
period principle.
3, 4, 20
3-3, 3-5
3-2
RIA, EC,
TTN, GD,
HTR
C2. Explain accrual accounting and
how it improves financial
statements.
1, 2, 7, 8, 23
3-9
RIA, EC,
GD
C3. Identify steps in the accounting
cycle.
3-20
3-11
C4. Explain and prepare a classified
balance sheet.
23, 26, 27,
28
3-21
3-12
3-6, 3-8
Analytical objectives:
A1. Explain how accounting
adjustments link to financial
statements.
9, 10, 11, 12
3-4, 3-5, 3-6,
3-7, 3-10
3-4, 3-5, 3-6
3-2, 3-3, 3-4,
3-5
RIA, EC,
TIA
A2. Compute profit margin and
describe its use in analyzing
company performance.
3-11
3-7
3-5, 3-8
RIA, CA,
TTN, ED,
GD
A3. Compute the current ratio and
describe what it reveals about a
company’s financial condition.
3-22
3-13, 3-14
3-8
CA, GD
Procedural objectives:
P1. Prepare and explain adjusting
entries.
5, 6
3-1, 3-2, 3-3,
3-4, 3-5, 3-8,
3-14, 3-15,
3-16, 3-17,
3-18, 3-19
3-1, 3-2, 3-5
3-1, 3-2, 3-3,
3-4 3-7
TIA
P2. Explain and prepare an adjusted
trial balance.
3-9
3-3, 3-4, 3-7
P3. Prepare financial statements
from an adjusted trial balance.
3-13
3-6, 3-10,
3-11
3-3, 3-4, 3-5,
3-7, 3-8
P4. Describe and prepare closing
entries.
13, 14, 15,
16, 29
3-23
3-16
3-7, 3-8
RIA, CIP
Grid continues on next page.
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
a website, in whole or part. 3-2
Student Learning Objectives and Related Assignment Materials, continued
Student Learning Objectives
Questions
Quick
Studies
Exercises
Problems
(A &B set)*
P5. Explain and prepare a post-
closing trial balance.
17
3-24
3-7
P6. Explain the alternatives in
accounting for prepaids.
(Appendix 3A)
3-12
3-8, 3-9
P7. Prepare a work sheet and
explain its usefulness.
(Appendix 3B)
18, 19
3-25
3-17
P8. Prepare reversing entries and
explain their purpose.
(Appendix 3C)
24, 25
3-26
3-15
* Assignment materials that can be completed by students using:
Sage 50 and QuickBooks Pro 2013 templates Problem 3-8A and the Serial Problem for
Success Systems, which covers numerous learning objectives. (The serial problem, which
began in chapter 1, continues in most of the chapters. Even if previous segments were not
assigned, students can begin the segment of the serial problem that is included in this chapter.)
Excel templates Problems 3-3A and 3-4A and 3-7A.
Synopsis of Chapter Revisions
ash&dans: NEW opener with new entrepreneurial assignment
New layout for the types of adjustments
New example of unearned revenues using USA Today
Enhanced and emphasized the innovative three-step process for adjusting accounts
Updated IFRS and FASB revenue recognition convergence
Added six new Quick Studies to directly apply the three-step adjustment process
Expanded explanation of temporary and permanent accounts
Revised visual display of four-step closing process
Enhanced display of general ledger for ease in learning
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
PowerPoint® Slides
Chapter Learning Objective
PowerPoint® Slides
C1
7
C2
8-11
P1
11-24
A1
25
P2
26-28
P3
29-31
C3
32
P4
33-40
P5
41
C3
42
C4
43-46
A2
47
A3
48
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
I. Timing and Reporting
A. The Accounting Period
To provide timely information, accounting systems prepare
periodic reports at regular intervals.
1. The time-period principle assumes that an organization’s
activities can be divided into specific time periods such as a
month, a three-month quarter, a six-month interval, or a year.
Reports covering a one-year period are known as annual
financial statements. Interim financial statements cover
one, three, or six months of activity.
2. Annual reporting period:
a. Calendar yearJanuary 1 to December 31.
b. Fiscal yearany twelve consecutive months used to base
annual financial reports on.
c. Natural business yeara fiscal year that ends when a
company's sales activities are at their lowest level for the
year.
B. Accrual Basis versus Cash Basis
1. Accounts are adjusted at the end of a period to record internal
transactions and events that are not yet recorded.
2. Accrual basis accountinguses the adjusting process to
recognize revenue when earned and to match expenses with
revenues. This means the economic effects of revenues and
expenses are recorded when earned or incurred, not when cash
is received or paid. Accrual basis is consistent with GAAP.
3. Cash basis accountingrevenues are recognized when cash
is received and expenses are recognized when cash is paid.
The cash basis is not consistent with GAAP or IFRS.
4. Accrual accounting also increases the comparability of
financial statements from one period to another.
C. Recognizing Revenues and Expenses
1. The revenue recognition principle requires revenue be
recorded when earned, not before and not after.
2. The expense recognition (matching principle) requires
expenses be recorded in the same period as the revenues
earned as a result of these expenses.
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
II. Adjusting Accounts
Adjusting accounts is a 3-step process: (1) Determine the current
account balance, (2) Determine what the current account balance should
be, and (3) Record adjusting entry to get from step 1to step 2.
A. Framework for Adjustments
Adjustments are necessary for transactions and events that
extend over more than one period. Adjusting entries are
necessary so that revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities are
correctly reported. Each adjusting entry affects one or more
income statement accounts and one or more balance sheet
accounts (but never the cash account).
B. Prepaid (Deferred) Expenses
1. Prepaid Expenses are items paid for in advance of receiving
their benefits. Prepaid expenses are assets. When the assets are
used, their costs become expenses.
2. Common prepaid items are prepaid insurance, supplies, prepaid
rent, and other prepaid expenses.
3. Adjusting entries for prepaids involve increasing (debiting)
expenses and decreasing (crediting) assets (with the exception
of depreciation on plant and equipment assets).
4. A special category of prepaid expenses is plant assets. Plant
assets are long-term tangible assets used to produce and sell
products and services; they are expected to provide benefits for
more than one period.
5. Depreciation is the process of allocating the cost of plant and
equipment assets over their expected useful lives. Straight-line
depreciation allocates equal amounts of the assets’ net cost to
depreciation during its useful life.
6. Adjusting entries for depreciation expense involve increasing
(debiting) expenses and increasing (crediting) a special account
called Accumulated Depreciation. Accumulated depreciation is
a contra asset account. A contra account is an account linked
with another account, and having an opposite normal balance.
7. Accumulated depreciation is reported as a subtraction from the
related plant asset account balance in the balance sheet. This
account includes total depreciation expense for all prior periods
for which the asset was used.
8. Book value is a term used to describe the asset’s cost less its
contra-asset (accumulated depreciation).
C. Unearned (Deferred) Revenues
1. Unearned Revenues are liabilities created by cash received in
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
advance of providing products or services. The company has an
obligation to provide the service or product. As they are
provided unearned revenues (liabilities) become earned
revenues (revenues).
2. Adjusting entries for unearned revenues involve increasing
(crediting) revenues and decreasing (debiting) unearned
revenues.
D. Accrued Expenses
1. Accrued expenses refer to costs that are incurred in a period
but are both unpaid and unrecorded.
2. Common accrued expenses are salaries, interest, rent, and taxes.
3. Adjusting entries for recording accrued expenses involve
increasing (debiting) expenses and increasing (crediting)
liabilities. (The liability is a payable.)
4. Future payment of accrued expenses results in cash payments in
the next period. Debit the payable for amount accrued and
credit cash for the full amount paid. If the amount paid exceeds
the amount accrued, the difference is an expense in the current
period.
E. Accrued Revenues
1. Accrued revenues refer to revenues earned in a period that are
both unrecorded and not yet received in cash (or other assets).
2. Accrued revenues commonly result from services, products,
interest, and rent.
3. Adjusting entries for recording accrued revenues involve
increasing (debit) assets and increasing (credit) revenues. (The
asset is a receivable.)
4. Future receipt of accrued revenue results in cash receipts in a
future period. Debit cash for the full amount received and credit
the receivable for the amount accrued. If the amount received
exceeds the amount accrued, the difference is an additional
amount earned to be credited to revenue.
F. Links to Financial Statements
The process of adjusting accounts is intended to bring an asset or
liability account balance to its correct amount. It also updates a
related expense or revenue account. Each adjusting entry affects
one or more income statement accounts and one or more balance
sheet accounts, but never cash. Failure to make a necessary
adjustment will result in misstatements of amounts on each of the
financial statements. (See Exhibit 3-12 for a summary of
adjustments.)
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
G. Adjusted Trial Balance
An unadjusted trial balance is a list of accounts and balances
prepared before adjustments are recorded. An adjusted trial
balance is a list of accounts and balances prepared after adjusting
entries have been recorded and posted to the ledger.
III. Preparing Financial Statements
Financial statements are prepared directly from information in the
adjusted trial balance. Each trial balance amount is used in only one
financial statement.
A. Revenue and expense balances are transferred from the adjusted
trial balance to the income statement.
B. The net income, retained earnings, and dividends are then used to
prepare the statement of retained earnings.
C. Asset, liability, and common stock balances on the adjusted trial
balance are transferred to the balance sheet; the ending retained
earnings is determined on the statement of retained earnings and
transferred to the balance sheet.
D. Financial statements are usually prepared in the following order:
income statement, statement of retained earnings, balance sheet,
and statement of cash flows.
IV. Closing Process
The closing process is an important step at the end of the accounting
period after financial statements have been completed. It prepares
accounts for recording the transactions and the events of the next
period.
A Steps in closing process:
1. Identify accounts for closing.
2. Record and post closing entries.
3. Prepare a post-closing trial balance.
B. Purpose of closing process:
1. Resets revenue, expense, and dividend account balances to
zero at the end of each period so that these accounts can
properly measure income and dividends for the next period.
2. Helps in summarizing a period's revenues and expenses.
C. Temporary and Permanent Accounts
1. Temporary (or nominal) accounts accumulate data related to
one accounting period; they include all income statement
accounts, the dividends account, and the Income Summary
account. The closing process applies only to temporary
accounts.
2. Permanent (or real) accounts report on activities related to
one or more future accounting periods. They carry their
ending
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
balances into the next period and consist of balance sheet
accounts. Real accounts are not closed.
D. Recording Closing Entries
1. To record and post closing entries is to transfer the end-of-
period balances in revenue, expense, and dividends accounts
to retained earnings.
2. To close these accounts, transfer their balances first to a
temporary account (used only for the closing process) called
Income Summary. Its balance equals net income or net loss
and is transferred to Retained Earnings.
3. The four steps necessary to close temporary accounts are:
Step 1: Close credit balances in revenue (and gain) accounts
to Income Summary; bring accounts with credit balances to
zero by debiting them.
Step 2: Close debit balances in expense (and loss) accounts to
Income Summary; bring accounts with debit balances to zero
by crediting them.
Step 3: Close the Income Summary account to the Retained
Earnings account; after the first two steps, the balance of the
Income Summary account is equal to the period’s net income.
If a net loss occurred, the third entry is reversed: debit
Retained Earnings and credit Income Summary.
Step 4: Close the Dividends account to the Retained Earnings
account; bring the Dividends account, which has a debit
balance, to zero by crediting it.
E. Post-Closing Trial Balance.
1. A post-closing trial balance is a list of permanent accounts
and their balances from the ledger after all closing entries have
been journalized and posted.
2. Verify that total debits equal total credits for permanent
accounts, and all temporary accounts have zero balances.
F. Accounting Cycle Summary
The term accounting cycle refers to the steps in preparing
financial statements; it is a cycle because all steps are repeated
each reporting period. Exhibit 3.19 shows the ten steps in the
cycle:
1. Analyze transactions
2. Journalize
3. Post
4. Prepare unadjusted trial balance
5. Adjust
6. Prepare adjusted trial balance
7. Prepare statements
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
a website, in whole or part. 3-9
Chapter Outline
Notes
8. Close
9. Prepare post-closing trial balance
10. Reverse (optional; explained in Appendix 3C).
V. Classified Balance Sheetorganizes assets and liabilities into
subgroups that provide more useful information to decision makers:
A. Classification Structure
1. One of the more important classifications is the separation
between current and noncurrent assets and liabilities. Only
assets and liabilities are classified as current or noncurrent.
2. Current items are expected to come due (both collected and
owed) within one year or the company’s operating cycle,
whichever is longer.
3. The operating cycle is the time span from when cash is used
to acquire goods and services until cash is received from their
sale. Most operating cycles are less than one year; a few
companies have an operating cycle longer than one year.
B. Classification Categories
1. Current Assetscash or other assets that are expected to be
sold, collected, or used within one year or the company’s
operating cycle, whichever is longer. Examples: cash,
short-term investments, accounts receivable, short-term notes
receivable, goods for sale (called merchandise or inventory),
and prepaid expenses.
2. Long-Term Investmentsassets that are expected to be held
for more than the longer of one year or the operating cycle.
Examples: notes receivable, investments in stocks, and land
held for future expansion.
3. Plant Assetstangible, long-lived assets that are both long-
lived and used to produce or sell products and services.
Examples: equipment, machinery, buildings, and land that are
used to produce or sell products and services.
4. Intangible Assetslong-term resources that benefit business
operations. They usually lack physical form and have
uncertain benefits. Examples: patents, trademarks, copyrights,
franchises, and goodwill.
5. Current Liabilitiesobligations due to be paid or settled
within one year or the operating cycle, whichever is longer.
Examples: accounts payable, notes payable, wages payable,
taxes payable, interest payable, and unearned revenues. Any
portion of a long-term liability due to be paid within one year
or the operating cycle, whichever is longer, is a current
liability.
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
6. Long-Term Liabilitiesobligations not due within one year
or the operating cycle, whichever is longer. Examples: notes
payable, mortgages payable, bonds payable, and lease
obligations.
7. Equity—owners’ claim on assets; divided into two main
subsections: common stock and retained earnings.
VI. Global View
A. Adjusting Accounts and the Closing Process Both GAAP and
IFRS include broad and similar guidance for adjusting accounts. All
of the adjustments in this chapter are accounted for identically under
the two systems. The closing process is also identical under both
systems.
B. Preparing Financial Statements Both GAAP and IFRS prepare
the same four financial statements following the same process
discussed in this chapter. GAAP balance sheets report assets in order
of liquidity and liabilities are listed from nearest maturity to furthest.
IFRS balance sheets present noncurrent items first and equity before
liabilities, but this is not a requirement.
C. Reporting Assets and Liabilities
1. The definition of an asset is similar under both systems and
involve three basic criteria: the company owns or controls the right
to use the item; the right arises from a past transaction or event;
and the item can be reliably measured. Both define the initial asset
value as historical cost. After acquisition, one of two asset
measurement systems are applied: historical cost or fair value.
GAAP defines fair value as the amount to be received in an
orderly sale. IFRS defines fair value as exchange value either
replacement cost or selling price.
2. The definition of a liability is similar under GAAP and IFRS and
involves three basic criteria: the item is a present obligation
requiring a probably future resource outlay; the obligation arises
from a past transaction or event, and the obligation can be reliably
measured. Both systems apply one of two measurement systems
to specific liabilities: historical cost or fair value.
3. IASB and FASB have proposed reorganizing the balance sheet to
show assets and liabilities classified as operating, investing or
financing.
4. Closing Process. The closing process is identical under both
systems.
VII. Decision AnalysisProfit Margin and Current Ratio
A. Profit Margin
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
Chapter Outline
Notes
1. Profit margin (also called return on sales) is a useful measure
of a company’s operating results.
2. It is calculated as net income divided by net sales.
3. It is interpreted as reflecting the portion of profit in each dollar
of sales.
B. Current Ratio
1. The current ratio is an important measure of a company’s
ability to pay its short-term obligations.
2. It is calculated as total current assets divided by total current
liabilities.
VIII. Alternative Accounting for Prepayments (Appendix 3A)
A. Recording Prepayment of Expenses in Expense Accounts
Prepaid expenses may originally be recorded with debits to
expense accounts (instead of to asset accounts). If so, then
adjusting entries must transfer the cost of the unused portions from
expense accounts to prepaid expense (asset) accounts.
B. Recording Prepayment of Revenues in Revenue Accounts
Unearned revenues may originally be recorded with credits to
revenue accounts (instead of to liability accounts). If so, then
adjusting entries must transfer the unearned portions from revenue
accounts to unearned revenue (liability) accounts.
C. The financial statements are identical under either procedure, but
the adjusting entries are different.
IX. Work Sheet as a Tool (Appendix 3B)
A. Working papers are internal documents. One widely used working
paper is the work sheet, which is a useful tool for preparers in
working with accounting information. It is usually not available to
external decision makers.
B. Use of a Worksheet. Preparing a worksheet has five steps:
1. Enter the unadjusted trial balance in the first two columns.
2. Enter the adjustments in the third and fourth columns. Total
columns to verify debit adjustments equal credit adjustments.
3. Prepare the Adjusted Trial Balance. This is done by combining
the unadjusted trial balance and adjustment columns. Total
Adjusted Trial Balance columns to verify debits equal credits.
4. Sort the adjusted trial balance amounts to the appropriate
financial statement columns.
5. Total statement columns, compute net income or loss, and
balance the columns by adding net income or loss.
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Chapter 03 - Adjusting Accounts and Preparing Financial Statements
a website, in whole or part. 3-12
Chapter Outline
Notes
X. Reversing Entries (Appendix 3C)
A. Reversing entries are optional; they are recorded in response to
accrued assets and accrued liabilities that were created by
adjusting entries at the end of a reporting period.
B. Accounting without Reversing Entriesthe disadvantage of this
approach is the slightly more complex entry required when the
cash subsequently changes hands (i.e., when cash is received for
the asset that was originally accrued or when cash is paid for the
liability that was originally accrued).
C. Accounting with Reversing Entries
1. A reversing entry is the exact opposite of an adjusting entry.
2. Reversing entries are prepared after closing entries and dated
the first day of the new period.
5. Procedure is to transfer accrued asset and liability account
balances to related revenue and expense accounts creating
abnormal balances in these accounts.
6. The full subsequent cash receipts (and payments) are recorded
as increases in revenue (and expense) accounts creating a net
balance equal to the amount earned or incurred in that period.

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