A.
TERMS, THEORIES AND DEFINITIONS
Prepareation of the accounts
The accounting process starts with
inputs, and these are things such as sales documents (e.g. invoices),
purchasing documents (e.g. receipts), payroll records, bank records, travel and
entertainment records. The data in these inputs is then processed by a
specialized software:
1. Entries are
recorded chronologically into “journals”.
2. Information
from the journals is posted/transferred into “ledger”, where it accumulates in
specific categories (e.g. cash account, sales account, or account for one
particular customer).
3. A “trial
balance” is prepared at the end of each accounting period: this is a summary of
the ledger information to check whether the figures are accurate. It is used
directly to prepare the main financial statements (income statement, balance
sheet and cash flow statement).
The financial statements of large
companies have to be checked by a external firm of auditors, who “sign off
on the accounts” (officially declare the accounts are correct). They are publicly available, and appear in the company’s annual report. Users of financial statements include: shareholders, potential shareholders, creditors (lenders, e.g. banks), customers, suppliers, journalists, financial analysts, government agencies, etc.
on the accounts” (officially declare the accounts are correct). They are publicly available, and appear in the company’s annual report. Users of financial statements include: shareholders, potential shareholders, creditors (lenders, e.g. banks), customers, suppliers, journalists, financial analysts, government agencies, etc.
Profit and Loss Account
The profit and loss account
(P&L, = income statement) summarizes business activity over a period of
time. It begins with total sales/revenue generated during a month, quarter or
year. Subsequent lines then deduct/subtract all of the costs related to
producing that revenue.
Balance Sheet
The balance sheet reports the
company’s financial condition on a specific date. The basic equation that has
to balance is: Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders’ Equity.
- An “asset” is
anything of value owned by business.
- A “liability”
is any amount owed to a creditor.
- Shareholders’
equity/owners’ equity is what remains from the assets after all ceditors have
theoretically been paid. It is made up of two elements: share capital
(presenting the original investment in the business when shares were first
issued) plus any retained profit (=reserve) that has accumulated over time.
Note the order in which items are
listed:
- Assets are
listed according to how easily they can be turned into cash, with “current
assets” being more liquid than “fixed assets”.
- Liabilities
are listed according to how quickly creditors have to be paid, with “current
liabilites” (bank debt, owed to suppliers, unpaid salaries and bills) being paid
before “long – term liabilities”.
Cash Flow Statement
Companies need a separate record of
cash receipts and cash payments. Why is this? Firstly for the reason given
above – it shows the real cash that is available to keep the business running
day to day (profits are only on paper until the money actually comes in).
Secondly, there are many sophisticated techniques that accountants can use to
manipulate profit, whereas cash is real money. It’s cash that pays the bills,
not profits.
There are many reasons why
companies can have a problem with cash flow, even if the business is doing
well. Among them are:
- Unexpected
late payments and non – payments (bad debts).
- Unforeseen
costs: a larger than expected tax bill, a strikes, etc.
- An unexpected
drop in demand.
- Investing too
much in fixed assets.
Solutions might include:
- Credit
control: chasing overdue accounts.
- Stock control:
keeping low levels of stock, minimizing work – in – progress, delivering to
customers more quickly.
- Expenditure
control: delaying spending on capital equipment.
- A sales
promotion to generate cash quickly.
- Using an
outside company to recover a debt (called “factoring”).
Vocabulary in financial statements
is suprisingly non – standard, with many companies using a mixture of US and
Europe terms.
Profit and Loss Account (Income Statement)
Revenue
(= income / turnover / sales / the top line)
Cost
of good sold (= direct costs) includes manufacturing costs, salaries
of manual (blue – collar) workers etc.
Operating
expenses (= indirect costs / overhead) include salaries of sales and
office staff, marketing costs, utility bills etc.
Non
– operating income includes profits from investments in other
companies.
EBIT
stands for Ernings before Interest and Tax
EBITDA
stands for Ernings before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortization.
Depreciation
and Amortization are very
similar, and are often used in the same way. However, ‘depreciation’ can refer
to the loss in value of a tangible asset (e.g. a vehicle), and ‘amortization’
to the loss in value of an intangible asset (e.g. the purchase of a license or
trademark). This loss over time is treated as a cost and written of (=
subtracted from the profit) over several years.
Interest
refers to money paid to the bank for loans (or received from the
bank for cash balances).
Dividends
are money paid to shareholders.
Retained
profit is transferred to the Balance Sheet, where it joins the
amounts from previous years.
Balance Sheet
Accounts
receivable is the amount owed to the business by customers ( =
creditors)
Inventory
is the vaule of raw materials and stock.
Marketable
securities are securities intended for disposal within one year.
Accounts
payable is the money owed to suppliers.
Mortgage
is a long – term bank loan to buy a property.
Share
capital (= common stock, AmE) is amount raised at initial flotation
on the stock market.
Retained
profit (= reserves / retained ernings) is transferred from the
income statement as mentioned.
Cash flow statement
B.
VOCABULARY EXERCISES
1. Put the words into the correct
column
accounts
payable cost of goods sold ledger
shareholders’ equity EBTDA trial balance invoices
operating expenses current assets
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||
Preparation of
accounts
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Profit and loss
account
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Balance sheet
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2. Fill in the missing letters
a. On a balance sheet, ‘assets’ are
what you ow_ and ‘liabilities’ are what
you ow_.
b. The loss in value of a tangible
asset over time is called ‘d_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _n’. This loss is ‘w_ _ _ _en o_
_’ in the accounts over several years. The loss in value of an intangible asset
is called ‘am_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _n’.
c. The term ‘debtor’ is now often
replaced with ‘accounts _ _ _ _ _ _able’
and ‘creditor’is often replaced with ‘accounts _ _ _able’.
d. The total value of raw materials
+ work – in – progress + finished goods is called ‘in_ _ _ _ _ _ _’
e. Expenses that have been incurred
but are not yet paid are called ‘acc_ _ _d
expenses’.
f. The extent to which a firm
relies on debt financing rather than equity financing is called its ‘lev_ _ age’.
3. Underline the correct words from
those in italics
The terms ‘direct costs’ and ‘variable
costs’ are close synonyms. They both refer to things like raw materials costs
and the wages of manual workers. But to emphasize costs which increase in
proportion to any rise in output, say (1) direct costs /
variable costs; to emphasize costs which can be identified with one
particular product, say (2) direct costs /
variable costs.
Similarly, the terms ‘fixed costs’,
‘indirect costs’ and ‘operating costs’ are close synonyms. They all refer to
things like advertising, rent and the salaries of office staff. But to
emphasize costs which stay the same at all levels of output in the short term,
say (3) fixed costs / operating costs;
to emphasize costs which result from the whole business (rent, utilities,
etc.), not any particular products, say (4) indirect costs
/ operating costs, a synonyms here is ‘overhead(s)’; to emphasize
costs resulting from the day – to – day activities of the business (products
and processes), say (5) fixed costs /
operating costs.
C.
READING
Companies are required by law to
give their shareholders certain financial information. Most companies include
three financial statements in their annual reports.
The profit and losst account shows
revenue ans expenditure. It gives figures for total sales or turnover (the
amount of business done by the company during the year), and for costs and
overheads. The first figure should be greater than the second: there should
generally be a profit – a excess of income over expenditure. Part of the profit
is paid to the government in taxation, part is usually distributed to
shareholders as a dividend, and part is retained by the company to finance
further growth, to repay debts, to allow for future lossess, and so on.
The balance sheet shows the
financial situation of the company on a particular date, generally the last of
of its financial year. It lists the company’s assets, its liabilities, and
shareholders’ funds. A business’s assets consists of its cash investments and
property (buildings, machines, and so on), and debtors – amounts of money owed
by customers for goods or services purchased on credit. Liabilities consist of
all the money that a company will have to pay to someone else, such as taxes,
debts, interest and mortgage payments, as well as money owed to suppliers for
purchases made on credit, which are grouped together on the balance sheet as
creditors. Negative items on financial statements such as creditors, taxation,
and dividends paid are ussually printed in brackets thus: (5200).
The basic accounting equation, in
accordance with the priciple of double – entry bookkeeping, is that Assets =
Liabilities + Owners’ Equity. This can of course, also be written as Assets - Liabilities
= Owners’ Equity. An alternative term for Shareholders’ Equity is Net Assets.
This includes share capital (money received from the issue of shares), sometimes
share premium (money realized by selling shares at above their nominal value),
and the company’s reserves, including the year’s retained profits. A company’s
market capitalization – the total value of its shares at any given moment,
equal to the number of shares times their market price – is generally higher
than shareholders’ equity or net assets, because items such as goodwill are not
recorded under net assets.
A third financial statement has
several names: the source and application of funds statement, the sources and
uses of funds statement, the funds flow statement, the cash flow statement, the
movements of funds statements, or in the USA the statement of chages in
financial position. As all these alternative names suggest, this statement
shows the flow of cash in and out of the business between balance sheet dates,
Sources of funds include trading profits, depreciation provisions, borrowing,
the sales of assets, the issuing of shares. Applications of funds include the
purchase of fixed or financial assets, the payment of dividends and the
repayment of loans, and, in a bad year, trading losses.
If a company has a majority
interest in other companies, the balance sheets and profit and loss accounts of
the parent company and the subsidiaries are normally conbined in consolidated
accounts.
D.
READING COMPREHENSION EXERCISES
1. According to the text, are the
following TRUE or FALSE?
a. Company profits are generally
divided three ways.
b. Balance sheets show a company’s
financial situation on 31st December.
c. The totals in balance sheets
generally include sums of money that have not yet been paid.
d. Assets are what you own,
liabilites are what you owe.
e. Ideally, managers would like
financial statements to contain no items in brackets.
f. Limited companies cannot make a
loss because assets always equal shareholders’ equity.
g. A company’s shares are often
worth more than its assets.
h. The two sides of a funds flow
statement show trading profits and losses.
i. Depreciation is a source rather
than a use of funds.
k. A consolidated account is a
combination of a balance sheet and a profit and loss account.
2. Match the following words and
phrases with their synonyms:
1. financial reports
|
a. net assets
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2. total sales
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b. retained
ernings
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3. owners’ equity
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c. sources of funds
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4. flow of cash in
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d. financial
statements
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5. reserves
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e. revenue
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E. GUIDE
1.
a
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b
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c
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d
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e
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f
|
g
|
h
|
i
|
k
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T
|
F
|
T
|
T
|
F
|
F
|
F
|
F
|
T
|
F
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2.
1 – d, 2 – e, 3 – a, 4 – c, 5 – b
F. FURTHER STUDY
1. Watching and reading:
Thanks
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