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Financial Accounting Final Exam Review: Key Topics and Learning Objectives

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Financial Accounting Final Exam Review

Overview

This study guide summarizes the main topics and learning objectives for a college-level Financial Accounting course, organized by chapter and topic. It is designed to help students prepare for the final exam by outlining essential concepts, definitions, and applications.

Ch. 1 - Conceptual Framework and Financial Statements

Accounting and Its Principles

  • Definition of Accounting: The process of identifying, measuring, and communicating economic information to permit informed judgments and decisions by users of the information.

  • Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP): The common set of accounting principles, standards, and procedures that companies must follow when they compile their financial statements.

  • Users of Financial Statements: Internal users (management, employees) and external users (investors, creditors, regulators).

The Accounting Equation

  • Basic Equation:

  • Application: Used to analyze and record business transactions.

  • Example: If a company has assets of $100,000 and liabilities of $60,000, owner's equity is $40,000.

Ch. 2 - Recording Business Transactions

Double-Entry System and Journal Entries

  • Double-Entry Accounting: Every transaction affects at least two accounts, maintaining the balance of the accounting equation.

  • Debits and Credits: Debits increase assets and expenses; credits increase liabilities, equity, and revenues.

  • Journal Entry Example: Purchasing supplies for cash: Debit Supplies, Credit Cash.

Posting to the Ledger and Trial Balance

  • Ledger: A collection of accounts that shows the changes made to each account as a result of transactions.

  • Trial Balance: A list of all accounts and their balances at a particular date, used to verify that debits equal credits.

Ch. 3 - Accrual Accounting

Adjusting Entries

  • Purpose: To record revenues and expenses in the period in which they are earned or incurred, regardless of when cash is received or paid.

  • Types: Accruals (revenues earned or expenses incurred before cash changes hands) and deferrals (cash received or paid before revenues are earned or expenses incurred).

  • Example: Accrued revenue: Services performed but not yet billed.

Ch. 4 - Presentation of Financial Statements

Financial Statement Preparation

  • Income Statement: Reports revenues and expenses to show net income or loss for a period.

  • Balance Sheet: Shows assets, liabilities, and equity at a specific point in time.

  • Statement of Owner's Equity: Summarizes changes in equity during a period.

Ch. 5 - Internal Control, Cash, and Receivables

Internal Controls

  • Definition: Procedures and policies implemented to safeguard assets, enhance the reliability of accounting records, and increase efficiency of operations.

  • Examples: Separation of duties, authorization of transactions, physical controls.

Cash and Receivables

  • Bank Reconciliation: The process of comparing the company’s cash records to the bank statement and explaining any differences.

  • Allowance Method for Uncollectible Accounts: Estimating bad debts expense and recording it in the same period as related sales.

Ch. 6 - Inventory and Merchandising Operations

Inventory Systems

  • Perpetual System: Inventory records are updated continuously.

  • Periodic System: Inventory records are updated at the end of the period.

  • Cost Flow Assumptions: FIFO (First-In, First-Out), LIFO (Last-In, First-Out), and Weighted Average.

Ch. 7 - Property, Plant, Equipment (PPE) and Intangibles

Acquisition and Depreciation

  • Capitalization: Recording the cost of an asset, including all expenditures necessary to acquire and prepare it for use.

  • Depreciation Methods: Straight-line, declining balance, and units-of-production.

  • Formula (Straight-Line):

Intangible Assets

  • Examples: Patents, copyrights, trademarks, goodwill.

  • Amortization: Systematic allocation of the cost of an intangible asset over its useful life.

Ch. 8 - Investments and International Operations

Investments

  • Types: Short-term (trading securities) and long-term (available-for-sale, held-to-maturity).

  • Equity Method: Used when an investor has significant influence over the investee (typically 20-50% ownership).

Ch. 9 - Liabilities

Current and Long-Term Liabilities

  • Current Liabilities: Obligations due within one year (e.g., accounts payable, short-term notes).

  • Long-Term Liabilities: Obligations due after one year (e.g., bonds payable, long-term loans).

  • Contingent Liabilities: Potential obligations dependent on a future event.

Ch. 10 - Stockholders' Equity

Equity Transactions

  • Common Stock: Basic ownership interest in a corporation.

  • Preferred Stock: Stock with preferential rights over common stockholders, such as dividends.

  • Treasury Stock: Corporation's own stock that has been reacquired.

Ch. 11 - Cash Flows

Statement of Cash Flows

  • Purpose: To provide information about cash receipts and cash payments during a period.

  • Sections: Operating, investing, and financing activities.

  • Indirect Method: Adjusts net income for changes in balance sheet accounts to calculate cash from operating activities.

Ch. 12 - Financial Statement Analysis

Analytical Tools

  • Horizontal Analysis: Comparison of financial data over time.

  • Vertical Analysis: Expressing each item in a financial statement as a percentage of a base amount.

  • Ratio Analysis: Liquidity, solvency, and profitability ratios.

Appendix: Time Value of Money

Present and Future Value Concepts

  • Present Value (PV): The current value of a future sum of money, discounted at a specific interest rate.

  • Future Value (FV): The value of a current sum of money at a future date, based on a specific interest rate.

  • Formula (Future Value):

  • Formula (Present Value):

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