UCSD Econ 4 Terms – Financial Accounting – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Financial accounting
answer
a highly stylized system of information gathering, processing, and reporting
question
GAAP
answer
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
question
SFAS
answer
Statements of Financial Accounting Standards
question
IFRS
answer
International Financial Reporting Standards
question
Accrual Accounting
answer
a conceptual framework for the preparation and auditing of financial statements and accounts.
question
Cost accounting (managerial accounting)
answer
system for tracking the internal allocation and use of money & resources by an enterprise. involves budgeting, pricing, unity cost measurement, process cost measurement and job calculation costs.
question
Tax accounting
answer
applies tax code to calculate taxable income and to asses values for the payent of other taxes -- rules based and formulaic
question
Government accounting
answer
was created for administering contracts and tracking public resources. - used to track expenditures by public entities that receive appropriated funds
question
Financial accounting
answer
includes cash-basis and accrual accounting
question
SEC
answer
Securities and Exchange Commission
question
AICPA
answer
American Institue of Certified Public Accountants
question
APB
answer
Accounting Principles Board
question
FASB
answer
Financial Accounting Standards Board (successor to APB)
question
FAS
answer
Financial Accounting Standards or 'Standards'
question
GOA
answer
Government Accounting Office
question
The Big 4 Accounting Firms
answer
Deloitte & Touche, Ernst & Young, Price-Coopers, KPMG
question
CPA
answer
Certified Public Accountant, licensed by states, only persons permitted to audit a companies financial reports and attest that those reports fairly present the financial position of the entity.
question
CMA
answer
Certified Management Accountant
question
CFA
answer
Certified Fraud Examiner
question
CIA
answer
Certified Internal Auditor
question
EA
answer
Enrolled Agent
question
value proposition
answer
needed to start a business; essentially an arrangement that offers customers a good deal; a desirable product or service at a fair price
question
Real capital
answer
the physical things a company needs to start a business, possibly: office space, retail space, supplies, inventory, printers, etc.
question
Funding Plan
answer
document describing how much money the company needs, what they will do with the money, and what the people that provide that money will get for it
question
underwriting
answer
process of finding money for new companies
question
Basic Accounting Equation
answer
A = L + E (Assets = Liabilities + Equity) OR Assets = Financial Capital
question
Duality principle
answer
everything we own must have a source
question
Assets (made of)
answer
Current Assets + Long-Lived Assets
question
Liabilities (made of)
answer
Current Liabilities + Long-term debt
question
Equity (made of)
answer
Paid-in-capital + retained earnings
question
Assets (definition)
answer
probable future economic benefits
question
Liabilities (definition)
answer
likely future economic sacrifices
question
FF&E
answer
Furniture, Fixtures, & Equipment
question
PP&E
answer
Plant, property, and equipment
question
P-in-K (Pink)
answer
Paid in Capital = initial amount contributed by investors in the early stages of the company and at intial offerings of it's stock
question
Retained Earnings
answer
sum of business's earnings over life of the business that has not been distributed or paid out to investors
question
Balance Sheet
answer
Reports A = L + E at a point in time
question
Income Statement
answer
Revenue/Sales (Expenses) = Net Earnings/Profits or further Revenue (Direct Expenses) = Gross Profit (General Expenses) = Operating Profit (Interest Expense) = Pre-Tax Profit (Tax Expense) = Net Profit
question
Trade credit
answer
delayed payment, like credit cards
question
Loans
answer
Borrowed money
question
Common stock
answer
shares sold to investors
question
Liquidity
answer
allows creditors and investors to undo their transactions
question
Capital Structure
answer
the combination of debt vs equity sold to finance a company
question
Four financial statements
answer
Balance Sheet, Income Statement, Statement of Cash Flows, and Statement of Shareholder's Equity
question
Form 10-K
answer
annual report for a publicly traded company
question
Form 10-Q
answer
quarterly report for a publicly traded company
question
single-step statement
answer
basic income statement that simply reports sales minus expenses
question
Financial Performance
answer
bottom-line measure -- profits / net income
question
Financial Position
answer
assets, liabilities, equity
question
Direct expenses
answer
costs associated directly with revenue such as COGS, Sales commissions, shipping
question
Periodic expenses
answer
costs based on a period of time, e.g. rent, salaries, insurance premiums, interest expense
question
Indirect expenses
answer
other costs required to carry out the sales process but that are neither directly related to sales nor periodic, e.g. utilities, telephone, travel, advertising, training, supplies
question
Operating expenses
answer
expenses related to business model
question
Financing expenses
answer
related to aquiring capital to finance the business (ex: interest expense b/c loans are used to finance)
question
Recurring expenses
answer
regular outflows that aren't related to operating expenses
question
non-recurring expenses
answer
aka Losses, just one time expenses
question
Multi-step income statement
answer
more detailed, separates out direct expenses from direct and periodic, and financing -- Sales (COGS) = Gross Profit (SG&A) = EBITDA (D&A) = EBIT (Interest) + Gains + (Losses) = EBT (Taxes) (+/- for unusual or infrequent items) = Income from Continuing Operations = Net Income
question
SG&A
answer
Selling, General, or Administrative Expenses
question
EBITDA
answer
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization
question
Margin
answer
sales / cost of sales
question
Four fundamental accounting steps
answer
1. Collection 2. Measurement 3. Classification 4. Presentation
question
Five core elements to accounting
answer
Assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, expense
question
Two adjunct elements to accounting
answer
gains, loss
question
Stock elements
answer
Assets, liabilities, equity at a point in time
question
Flow elements
answer
assets, liabilities, equity over a period of time
question
Carrying value
answer
aka book value, because value is carried on the books
question
Costs
answer
must either represent expenses or assets; a business should only incur a cost if it believes that this cost will help generate sales
question
The Matching Principle
answer
trying to match up incurred costs with the revenue they generate e.g. taking client out to lunch lands you a contract
question
M&E
answer
meals and entertainment
question
depreciation
answer
the transfer of a portion of an asset's cost from the balance sheet to sequential income statements
question
cost-recovery process
answer
the expectation that revenue from sales will recover the cost of assets purchased to make sales
question
cash
answer
can be commodity, is liquid, and is money capital (sometimes referred to as excess cash)
question
working accounts
answer
current assets & liabilities, aka current accounts
question
Goodwill
answer
the difference between the purchase price of a business less the fair market value of identifiable assets (basically everything that you can't really put a price tag on for the business)
question
long-term liabilities
answer
obligations that stretch out beyond one year
question
equity
answer
what a business owes it's investors, or the net worth of the business; net worth = net book value = assets - liabilities = equity
question
Two major types of equity
answer
Paid-in-capital (Pink) and retained earnings
question
IPR&D
answer
In-process R&D e.g. student currently getting an education
question
Realization Principle
answer
1) seller & buyer agree on price 2) seller delivers good or service 3) seller has cash price or reasonable expectation of receiving cash price in near future
question
AR
answer
accounts receivable or receivables -- credit sales; money owed to the company from prior period sales, when customers purchase but do not pay in-cash at POS
question
front office activites
answer
transactions that reflect the earnings process, they generate revenue & expenses
question
back office activities
answer
doing what is needed to make selling possible e.g. purchasing inventory, and collecting cash from customers who made purchases on credit, paying bills, etc
question
The Entity Assumption
answer
a business is separate from its owners or other businesses
question
Going Concern Assumption
answer
the business will operate indefinitely
question
Monetary Unity Assumption
answer
transactions will be quantified in nominal dollars or other stable currency, unadjusted for inflation
question
Period Assumption
answer
business activities will be reported over specific periods,
question
The Cost Principle
answer
businesses will report amounts based on acquisition costs, rather than at fair market value
question
FMV
answer
fair market value
question
The Realization Principle or Revenue Principle
answer
that businesses will report revenue only when realized. when the transaction is complete (ie goods have been delivered)
question
Disclosure Principle
answer
not all information relative to financial decision making is quantitative, it might rely on contingencies e.g. a pending lawsuit
question
Objectivity Principle
answer
reported information should be based on objective evidence
question
Materiality Principle
answer
Significance of a reportable item determines how it will be reported, thus small transactions are usually aggregated and reported together
question
Comparability & Consistency Principle
answer
businesses should apply the same accounting choices year after year -- if you change, you have to change past reports so that they can be compared easily
question
Convergence project
answer
the US initiative to move away from GAAP to the IFRS's
question
IBD
answer
Interest bearing debt
question
SCF
answer
Statement of Cash Flows
question
DB
answer
Depreciable Basis
question
Revenue recognition
answer
Determining when a sales activity generates revenue (typically when the product has been delivered, the price is known by both buyer & seller, and the seller has a reasonably high expectation of collecting cash from the buyer)
question
Expense recognition
answer
determines when and what costs should be subtracted from revenue to determine profits in a specific period (guided by the matching principle)
question
Just-in-time-purchasing
answer
when products are bought by the company selling at the same time as they are bought by the customer, so they basically 'miss' the balance sheet because they never get entered into the inventory account
question
Amortization
answer
the process by which accountants recognize the expense of using an asset whose cost has been capitalized and classified as an asset.
question
CAPEX
answer
capital expenditure
question
LIFO
answer
last costs in, first costs out -- this means that the last costs added to inventory during the accounting period are the first costs added to COGS
question
FIFO
answer
first costs in, first costs out
question
Greshman's Law
answer
The bad driving out the good
question
Agency Problem or Agent-Principal conflict
answer
when agent's (people representing the Principal's interests) pursue persona benefits in conflict with the owner/principals objectives
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New