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Accounting Information System. Major Accounting Bodies. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Financial Accounting Standards Board Government Accounting Standards Board Securities and Exchange Commission. Ethics. The process that individuals use. Ethics.
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Major Accounting Bodies • American Institute of Certified Public Accountants • Financial Accounting Standards Board • Government Accounting Standards Board • Securities and Exchange Commission
Ethics The process that individuals use
Ethics The process that individuals use to evaluate their conduct
Ethics The process that individuals use to evaluate their conduct in light of moral principles and values
Assets • Anything of value held by an organization • Assets have
Assets • Anything of value held by an organization • Assets have • Potential usefulness
Assets • Anything of value held by an organization • Assets have • Potential usefulness • Future usefulness
Assets • Anything of value held by an organization • Assets have • Potential usefulness • Future usefulness • Economic Value
Assets • Cost principle • Going-concern concept • Objectivity principle • Stable dollar concept
Equities • Claims against the total assets of an organization • Liabilities • Claims of nonowners • Owner's Equity • Claims of owners
Retained Earnings • Cumulative total of net income, net loss, and dividends since start of business
Revenues • Inflows of assets that result from performing services or selling goods • Revenues are realized when • the service is performed or
Revenues • Inflows of assets that result from performing services or selling goods • Revenues are realized when • the service is performed or • the goods are delivered
Expenses • Outflows of assets or incurrence of liabilities while earning revenues • A business incurrs expenses to earn revenues
The Accounting Equation • Things of Value = Claims • Assets = Equities • Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity • Assets - Liabilities = Net Assets
Analyzing Transactions • Use accounting equation • Is there a change in assets? • Which asset? • How much was the change? • Is there another change in assets?
Analyzing Transactions • Is there a change in liabilities? • Which liability? • How much was the change? • Is there another change in liabilities? • Is there a change in owners’ equity? • How much was the change?
Four Basic Financial Statements • Income Statement • Statement of Owners’ Equity • Classified Balance Sheet • Statement of Cash Flows
Income Statement • Reports changes in owners’ equity from operating activities • Revenues - Expenses = Net Income(Loss)
Statement of Owners’ Equity • Changes in owners’ interest in assets • Issuances of new stock • Retained earnings • Net income or loss • Dividends
Classified Balance Sheet • Classification - arrangement of financial statement items into groupings that have common basis • Assets • Current • Property, plant, and equipment
Classified Balance Sheet • Liabilities • Current • Long-tern • Owners’ Equity • Common stock • Retained earnings
Statement of Cash Flows • Reports cash flows during period • Categories of activities • Operating activities • Investing activities • Financing activities
Balance Sheet Analysis • Are total assets higher or lower? • What is percent change in total assets? • Is the percent of total liabilities to total liabilities plus owner’s equity increasing or decreasing?
Income Statement Analysis • Are revenues higher or lower? • What is the precentage change in total revenues? • Is the percentage of total expenses to total revenues increasing or decreasing?
Integrative Analysis • Is the business operating efficiently by using the least amount of asset investment to generate a given level of total revenues? • Calculate Total Asset Turnover • Total revenues • divided by • Average total assets