The Chapter Preview describes the purpose of the chapter and highlights major topics.
If you own a business, how do you determine whether it is making or losing money? How should you finance expansion—should you borrow, should you issue stock, should you use your own funds? How do you convince banks to lend you money or investors to buy your stock? Success in business requires making countless decisions, and decisions require financial information.
The purpose of this chapter is to show you what role accounting plays in providing financial information.
The Feature Story helps you picture how the chapter topic relates to the real world of accounting and business.
Many students who take this course do not plan to be accountants. If you are in that group, you might be thinking, “If I’m not going to be an accountant, why do I need to know accounting?” Well, consider this quote from Harold Geneen, the former chairman of IT&T: “To be good at your business, you have to know the numbers—cold.” In business, accounting financial statements are the means for communicating the numbers. If you don’t know how to read financial statements, you can’t really know your business.
Knowing the numbers is sometimes even a matter of corporate survival. Consider the story of Columbia Sportswear Company, headquartered in Portland, Oregon. Gert Boyle’s family fled Nazi Germany when she was 13 years old and then purchased a small hat company in Oregon, Columbia Hat Company. In 1971, Gert’s husband, who was then running the company, died suddenly. Gert took over the small, struggling company with help from her son Tim, who was then a senior at the University of Oregon. Somehow, they kept the company afloat. Today, Columbia has more than 4,000 employees and annual sales in excess of $1 billion. Its brands include Columbia, Mountain Hardwear, Sorel, and Montrail.
Employers such as Columbia Sportswear generally assume that managers in all areas of the company are “financially literate.” To help prepare you for that, in this text you will learn how to read and prepare financial statements, and how to use key tools to evaluate financial results using basic data analytics.
The Chapter Outline presents the chapter’s topics and subtopics, as well as practice opportunities.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES | REVIEW | PRACTICE |
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LO 1 Identify the forms of business organization and the uses of accounting information. |
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DO IT! 1a Business Organization Forms 1b Using Financial Information |
LO 2 Explain the three principal types of business activity. |
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DO IT! 2 Business Activities |
LO 3 Describe the four financial statements and how they are prepared. |
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DO IT! 3a Financial Statements: Parts 1–4 3b Components of Annual Reports |
Go to the Review and Practice section at the end of the chapter for a targeted summary and practice applications with solutions. Visit Wiley Course Resources for additional tutorials and practice opportunities. |
Suppose you graduate with a business degree and decide you want to start your own business. But what kind of business? You enjoy working with people, especially teaching them new skills. You spend most of your free time outdoors, kayaking, backpacking, skiing, rock climbing, and mountain biking. You think you might successfully combine your teaching skills and outdoor interest by starting an outdoor guide service.
What organizational form should you choose for your business? You have three choices—sole proprietorship, partnership, or corporation.
You might choose the sole proprietorship form for your outdoor guide service.
Small owner-operated businesses such as barber shops, law offices, and auto repair shops are often sole proprietorships, as are farms and small retail stores.
Another possibility is for you to join forces with other individuals to form a partnership.
You and your partners should formalize your duties and contributions in a written partnership agreement. Retail and service-type businesses, including professional practices (lawyers, doctors, architects, and certified public accountants), often organize as partnerships.
As a third alternative, you might organize as a corporation.
Buying stock in a corporation is often more attractive than investing in a partnership because shares of stock are easy to sell (transfer ownership). Selling a proprietorship or partnership interest is much more involved. Also, individuals can become stockholders by investing relatively small amounts of money (see Alternative Terminology).
Alternative Terminology notes present synonymous terms that you may come across in practice.
Therefore, it is easier for corporations to raise funds compared to sole proprietorships or partnerships. Successful corporations often have thousands of stockholders, and their stock is traded on organized stock exchanges like the New York Stock Exchange. Many businesses start as sole proprietorships or partnerships and eventually incorporate.
Other factors to consider in deciding which organizational form to choose are taxes and legal liability. Sole proprietorships or partnerships, generally receive more favorable tax treatment than corporations. However, proprietors and partners are personally liable for all debts and legal obligations of the business; corporate stockholders are not. In other words, corporate stockholders generally pay higher taxes but have no personal legal liability. We will discuss these issues in more depth in a later chapter.
Finally, while sole proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations represent the main types of business organizations, hybrid forms are now allowed in all states.
The combined number of proprietorships and partnerships in the United States far exceeds the number of corporations. However, the revenue produced by corporations is many times greater. Most of the largest businesses in the United States—for example, Apple, Google, Verizon, Visa, and Microsoft—are corporations. Because the majority of U.S. business is done by corporations, the emphasis in this text is on the corporate form of organization.
DO IT! exercises prompt you to stop and review the key points you have just studied. The Action Plan offers you tips about how to approach the problem.
The purpose of financial information is to provide inputs for decision-making.
Internal users of accounting information are managers who plan, organize, and run a business. These include marketing managers, production supervisors, finance directors, and company officers. In running a business, managers must answer many important questions, as shown in Illustration 1.1.
ILLUSTRATION 1.1 Questions that internal users ask
To answer these and other questions, you need detailed information on a timely basis. For internal users, accounting provides internal reports, such as financial comparisons of operating alternatives, projections of income from new sales campaigns, and forecasts of cash needs for the next year. In addition, companies present summarized financial information in the form of financial statements.
Accounting Across the Organization boxes show applications of accounting information in various business functions.
There are several types of external users of accounting information. Investors (owners) use accounting information to make decisions to buy, hold, or sell stock. Creditors, such as suppliers and bankers, use accounting information to evaluate the risks of selling on credit or lending money. Some questions that investors and creditors may ask about a company are shown in Illustration 1.2.
ILLUSTRATION 1.2 Questions that external users ask
The information needs and questions of other external users vary considerably.
For example, Enron, Dynegy, Duke Energy, and other big energy-trading companies reported record profits at the same time as California was paying extremely high prices for energy and suffering from blackouts. This disparity caused regulators to investigate the energy traders to make sure that the profits were earned by legitimate and fair practices.
Accounting software systems collect vast amounts of data about a company’s economic events as well as its suppliers and customers. Business decision-makers take advantage of this wealth of data by using data analytics to gain insights and therefore make more informed business decisions.
Helpful Hints further clarify concepts being discussed.
Illustration 1.3 shows the four most common types of data analytics that help answer questions ranging from what happened and why did it happen, to what is likely to happen and what should we do about it? Analytics range from simple analysis that can be performed using spreadsheets with tools like pivot tables and graphs, to complex statistical software and even artificial intelligence. More complex analysis provides greater value to the business.
ILLUSTRATION 1.3 Four types of data analytics
Insight boxes provide examples of business situations from various perspectives—ethics, investor, international, corporate social responsibility, and data analytics.
People won’t gamble in a casino if they think it is “rigged.” Similarly, people won’t “play” the stock market if they think stock prices are rigged. At one time, major financial scandals at Enron, WorldCom, HealthSouth, and AIG led to a mistrust of financial reporting in general.
A Wall Street Journal article noted that “repeated disclosures about questionable accounting practices have bruised investors’ faith in the reliability of earnings reports, which in turn has sent stock prices tumbling.” Imagine trying to carry on a business or invest money if you could not depend on the financial statements to be honestly prepared. Information would have no credibility. A well-functioning economy depends on accurate and reliable financial reporting.
U.S. regulators and lawmakers were very concerned that the economy would suffer if investors lost confidence in corporate accounting because of unethical financial reporting.
Ethics Notes help sensitize you to some of the ethical issues in accounting.
Effective financial reporting depends on sound ethical behavior. When analyzing ethics cases and your own ethical experiences, you should apply the three steps outlined in Illustration 1.4.
ILLUSTRATION 1.4 Steps in analyzing ethics cases
Businesses engage in three types of activity—financing, investing, and operating. For example, consider Gert Boyle’s parents, the founders of Columbia Sportswear.
The accounting information system keeps track of the results of each of the various business activities—financing, investing, and operating. Let’s look at each type of business activity in more detail.
It takes money to make money. Financing activities involve raising money from outside sources. The two primary sources of outside funds for corporations are borrowing money (debt financing) and issuing (selling) shares of stock in exchange for cash (equity financing).
Columbia Sportswear may borrow money in a variety of ways. For example, it can take out a loan at a bank or borrow directly from investors by issuing debt securities called bonds. Persons or entities to whom Columbia owes money are its creditors.
Corporations also obtain funds by selling shares of stock to investors. Common stock is the term used to describe the total amount paid in by stockholders for the shares they purchase.
The claims of creditors differ from those of stockholders. If you loan money to a company, you are one of its creditors. In lending money, you specify a payment schedule (e.g., payment at the end of three months). As a creditor, you have a legal right to be paid at the agreed time. In the event of nonpayment, you may legally force the company to sell property to pay its debts. In the case of financial difficulty, creditor claims must be paid before stockholders’ claims.
Stockholders, on the other hand, have no claim to corporate cash until the claims of creditors are satisfied. Suppose you buy a company’s stock instead of loaning it money. You have no legal right to expect any payments from your stock ownership until all of the company’s creditors are paid amounts currently due. However, many corporations make payments to stockholders on a regular basis as long as there is sufficient cash to cover required payments to creditors. These cash payments to stockholders are called dividends.
Once the company has raised cash through financing activities, it uses that cash in investing activities. Investing activities involve the purchase of the resources a company needs in order to operate. Resources owned by a business are called assets. A growing company purchases many assets, such as computers, delivery trucks, furniture, and buildings.
Once a business has the assets it needs to get started, it begins operating activities. Operating activities are the day-to-day actions taken by a company to produce and sell a product, or provide a service. Columbia Sportswear is in the business of selling outdoor clothing and footwear. It sells TurboDown jackets, Millennium snowboard pants, Sorel® snow boots, Bugaboots™, rainwear, and anything else you might need to protect you from the elements. We call amounts earned from the sale of these products revenues.
The company purchases its longer-lived assets through investing activities as described earlier. Other assets with shorter lives, however, result from operating activities.
Before Columbia can sell a single Sorel® boot, it must purchase wool, rubber, leather, metal lace loops, laces, and other materials. It then must process, wrap, and ship the finished product. It also incurs costs like salaries, rents, and utilities. All of these costs, referred to as expenses, are necessary to produce and sell the product.
For example, Columbia keeps track of these types of expenses: cost of goods sold (such as the cost of materials), selling expenses (such as the cost of salespersons’ salaries), marketing expenses (such as the cost of advertising), administrative expenses (such as the salaries of administrative staff, and telephone and heating costs incurred at the corporate office), interest expense (amounts of interest paid on various debts), and income tax expense (corporate taxes paid to the government).
Columbia may also have liabilities arising from these expenses.
Columbia compares the revenues of a period with the expenses of that period to determine whether it earned a profit. When revenues exceed expenses, net income results. When expenses exceed revenues, a net loss results.
Assets, liabilities, expenses, and revenues are of interest to users of accounting information. This information is arranged in the format of four different financial statements, which form the backbone of financial accounting:
To introduce you to these statements, we have prepared the financial statements for your outdoor guide service, Sierra Corporation, after your first month of operations (see International Note).
International Notes highlight differences between U.S. and international accounting standards.
To summarize, you officially started your business in Truckee, California, on October 1, 2025. Sierra provides guide services in the Lake Tahoe area of the Sierra Nevada mountains. Its promotional materials describe outdoor day trips, such as rafting, snowshoeing, and hiking, as well as multi-day backcountry experiences. To minimize your initial investment, your customers either bring their own equipment or rent equipment through local outfitters. The financial statements for Sierra’s first month of business are provided in the following pages.
The income statement reports a company’s revenues and expenses and resulting net income or loss for a period of time (see Decision Tools). To indicate that its income statement reports the results of operations for a specific period of time, Sierra Corporation dates the income statement “For the Month Ended October 31, 2025.” The income statement lists the company’s revenues followed by its expenses. Finally, Sierra determines the net income (or net loss) by deducting expenses from revenues. Sierra’s income statement is shown in Illustration 1.5 (see Helpful Hint). Congratulations, you are already showing a profit!
Decision Tools that are useful for business decision-making are highlighted throughout the text. A summary of the Decision Tools is also provided in each chapter.
ILLUSTRATION 1.5 Sierra Corporation’s income statement
Sierra Corporation Income Statement For the Month Ended October 31, 2025 |
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Revenues | ||||
Service revenue | $10,600 | |||
Expenses | ||||
Salaries and wages expense | $5,200 | |||
Supplies expense | 1,500 | |||
Rent expense | 900 | |||
Interest expense | 50 | |||
Insurance expense | 50 | |||
Depreciation expense | 40 | |||
Total expenses | 7,740 | |||
Net income | $ 2,860 | |||
Why are financial statement users interested in net income?
Thus, reporting a strong profit will make it easier for Sierra to raise additional cash either by issuing shares of stock or borrowing.
Amounts received from issuing stock are not revenues, and amounts paid out as dividends are not expenses. As a result, they are not reported on the income statement. For example, Sierra Corporation does not treat as revenue the $10,000 of cash received from issuing new stock (see Illustration 1.8), nor does it regard as a business expense the $500 of dividends paid (see Illustration 1.6) (see Ethics Note).
If Sierra Corporation is profitable, at the end of each period it must decide what portion of profits to pay to shareholders in dividends. In theory, it could pay all of its current-period profits, but few companies do this. Why? Because they want to retain part of the profits to allow for further expansion. High-growth companies, such as Google and Facebook, often pay no dividends. Retained earnings is the net income retained in the corporation.
The retained earnings statement shows the amounts and causes of changes in retained earnings for a specific time period (see Decision Tools). The time period is the same as that covered by the income statement. The beginning retained earnings amount appears on the first line of the statement. Then, the company adds net income and deducts dividends to determine the retained earnings at the end of the period. If a company has a net loss, it deducts (rather than adds) that amount in the retained earnings statement. Illustration 1.6 presents Sierra’s retained earnings statement (see Helpful Hint).
ILLUSTRATION 1.6 Sierra Corporation’s retained earnings statement
Sierra Corporation Retained Earnings Statement For the Month Ended October 31, 2025 |
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Retained earnings, October 1 | $0 | ||
Add: Net income | 2,860 | ||
2,860 | |||
Less: Dividends | 500 | ||
Retained earnings, October 31 | $2,360 | ||
By monitoring the retained earnings statement, financial statement users can evaluate dividend payment practices.
The balance sheet reports assets and claims to assets at a specific point in time (see Decision Tools). Claims to assets are subdivided into two categories: claims of creditors and claims of owners. As noted earlier, claims of creditors are called liabilities. The owners’ claim to assets is called stockholders’ equity.
Illustration 1.7 shows the relationship among the categories on the balance sheet in equation form.
ILLUSTRATION 1.7 Basic accounting equation
As you can see from looking at Sierra Corporation’s balance sheet in Illustration 1.8, the balance sheet presents the company’s financial position as of a specific date—in this case, October 31, 2025 (see Helpful Hint). It lists assets first. Assets are listed in the order of their liquidity, that is, how quickly they could be converted to cash.
Assets are followed by liabilities and stockholders’ equity (see Alternative Terminology). Stockholders’ equity is comprised of two parts: (1) common stock and (2) retained earnings. As noted earlier, common stock results when the company sells new shares of stock; retained earnings is the net income retained in the corporation. Sierra has common stock of $10,000 and retained earnings of $2,360, for total stockholders’ equity of $12,360.
ILLUSTRATION 1.8 Sierra Corporation’s balance sheet
Sierra Corporation Balance Sheet October 31, 2025 |
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Assets | ||||
Cash | $15,200 | |||
Accounts receivable | 200 | |||
Supplies | 1,000 | |||
Prepaid insurance | 550 | |||
Equipment, net | 4,960 | |||
Total assets | $21,910 | |||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||
Liabilities | ||||
Notes payable | $ 5,000 | |||
Accounts payable | 2,500 | |||
Unearned service revenue | 800 | |||
Salaries and wages payable | 1,200 | |||
Interest payable | 50 | |||
Total liabilities | $ 9,550 | |||
Stockholders’ equity | ||||
Common stock | 10,000 | |||
Retained earnings | 2,360 | |||
Total stockholders’ equity | 12,360 | |||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $21,910 | |||
Creditors analyze a company’s balance sheet to determine the likelihood that they will be repaid.
The primary purpose of a statement of cash flows is to provide financial information about the cash receipts and cash payments of a business for a specific period of time (see Decision Tools). To help investors, creditors, and others in their analysis of a company’s cash position, the statement of cash flows reports the cash effects of a company’s operating, investing, and financing activities. In addition, the statement shows the net increase or decrease in cash during the period, and the amount of cash at the end of the period.
Users are interested in the statement of cash flows because they want to know what is happening to a company’s most important resource. The statement of cash flows provides answers to these simple but important questions:
The statement of cash flows for Sierra Corporation, in Illustration 1.9, shows that cash increased $15,200 during the month (see Helpful Hint). This increase resulted because operating activities (services to clients) increased cash $5,700, and financing activities increased cash $14,500. Investing activities used $5,000 of cash for the purchase of equipment.
ILLUSTRATION 1.9 Sierra Corporation’s statement of cash flows
Sierra Corporation Statement of Cash Flows For the Month Ended October 31, 2025 |
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Cash flows from operating activities | ||||
Cash receipts from operating activities | $11,200 | |||
Cash payments for operating activities | (5,500) | |||
Net cash provided by operating activities | $ 5,700 | |||
Cash flows from investing activities | ||||
Purchased office equipment | (5,000) | |||
Net cash used by investing activities | (5,000) | |||
Cash flows from financing activities | ||||
Issuance of common stock | 10,000 | |||
Issuance of note payable | 5,000 | |||
Payment of dividend | (500) | |||
Net cash provided by financing activities | 14,500 | |||
Net increase in cash | 15,200 | |||
Cash at beginning of period | 0 | |||
Cash at end of period | $15,200 | |||
Illustration 1.10 shows the financial statements of Sierra Corporation (see Helpful Hints). Because the results on some financial statements become inputs to other statements, the statements are interrelated. These interrelationships can be seen in Sierra’s financial statements, as follows.
Study these interrelationships carefully. To prepare financial statements, you must understand the sequence in which these amounts are determined and how each statement impacts the next.
ILLUSTRATION 1.10 Sierra Corporation’s financial statements
Publicly traded U.S. companies must provide shareholders with an annual report. The annual report always includes the financial statements introduced in this chapter. The annual report also includes other important information such as a management discussion and analysis section, notes to the financial statements, and an independent auditor’s report. No analysis of a company’s financial situation and performance is complete without a review of these items.
The management discussion and analysis (MD&A) section presents management’s views on the company’s:
Management must highlight favorable or unfavorable trends and identify significant events and uncertainties that affect these three factors. This discussion obviously involves a number of subjective estimates and opinions. A brief excerpt from the MD&A section of a recent Columbia Sportswear annual report, which addresses its liquidity requirements, is presented in Illustration 1.11.
ILLUSTRATION 1.11 Columbia Sportswear’s management discussion and analysis
Columbia Sportswear Company Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Seasonality and Variability of Business |
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Our business is affected by the general seasonal trends common to the industry, including discretionary consumer shopping and spending patterns, as well as seasonal weather. Our products are marketed on a seasonal basis, and our sales are weighted substantially toward the third and fourth quarters, while our operating costs are more equally distributed throughout the year. |
Explanatory notes and supporting schedules accompany every set of financial statements and are an integral part of the statements. The notes to the financial statements clarify the financial statements and provide additional detail. Information in the notes does not have to be quantifiable (numeric). Examples of notes are:
The notes are essential to understanding a company’s operating performance and financial position.
Illustration 1.12 is an excerpt from the notes to recent Columbia Sportswear financial statements. It describes the methods that the company uses to account for revenues.
ILLUSTRATION 1.12 Notes to Columbia Sportswear’s financial statements
Columbia Sportswear Company Notes to Financial Statements Revenue Recognition |
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Revenues are recognized when our performance obligations are satisfied as evidenced by transfer of control of promised goods to our customers, in an amount that reflects the consideration we expect to be entitled to receive in exchanges for those goods or services. Within our wholesale channel, control generally transfers to the customer upon shipment to, or upon receipt by, the customer depending on the terms of sale with the customer. Within our DTC channel, control generally transfers to the customer at the time of sale within our retail stores and concession-based arrangements and upon shipment to the customer with respect to e-commerce transactions. |
An auditor’s report is prepared by an independent outside auditor. It states the auditor’s opinion as to the fairness of the presentation of the financial position and results of operations and their conformance with generally accepted accounting principles.
An auditor is an accounting professional who conducts an independent examination of a company’s financial statements. Only accountants who meet certain criteria and thereby attain the designation certified public accountant (CPA) may certify audits.
For example, Blockbuster once dominated movie rentals in the United States with over 9,000 stores. But it faltered when the upstart Netflix rapidly took over the movie-rental business. Blockbuster’s auditor then stated that its financial situation raised “substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.” Shortly after that, the company filed for bankruptcy.
Illustration 1.13 is an excerpt from the auditor’s report from Columbia Sportswear’s 2019 annual report. Columbia received an unqualified opinion from its auditor, Deloitte & Touche.
ILLUSTRATION 1.13 Excerpt from auditor’s report on Columbia Sportswear’s financial statements
Columbia Sportswear Company Excerpt from Auditor’s Report |
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We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Columbia Sportswear Company and subsidiaries (the “Company”) as of December 31, 2019 and 2018, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive income, equity, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2019, and the related notes and schedule listed in the Index at Item 15 (collectively referred to as the “financial statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2019 and 2018, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years ended December 31, 2019, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. |
Using the Decision Tools comprehensive exercises ask you to apply business information and the decision tools presented in the chapter. Most of these exercises are based on the companies highlighted in the Feature Story.
Why is accounting such a popular major and career choice?
Accountants are in such demand that it is not uncommon for accounting students to have accepted a job offer a year before graduation. As Illustration 1A.1 reveals, the job options of people with accounting degrees are virtually unlimited.
ILLUSTRATION 1A.1 Career options in accounting
Areas of Accounting Careers | Type of Work | Examples of Employers | Certification Opportunities |
Public accounting |
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Deloitte, EY, KPMG, PwC, Grant Thornton, BDO, Baker Tilly | Certified public accountants (CPAs), enrolled agent (EA), certified information systems auditor (CISA) |
Private accounting |
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For-profit: Starbucks, Google, Under Armour Non-profit: Salvation Army, Red Cross | Certified management accountant (CMA), certified internal auditor (CIA) |
Governmental accounting |
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Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) | Certified government financial manager (CGFM) |
Forensic accounting |
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Insurance companies, law firms, FBI | Certified fraud examiner (CFE) |
How much can a new accountant make? Take a look at the average salaries for college graduates in public and private accounting shown in Illustration 1A.2.1 Keep in mind if you also have a CPA license, you’ll make 10–15% more when you start out.
ILLUSTRATION 1A.2 Salary estimates for jobs in public and corporate accounting
Employer | Jr. Level (0–3 yrs.) | Sr. Level (4–6 yrs.) |
Public accounting (large firm) | $63,250–$83,250 | $78,500–$106,500 |
Public accounting (medium firm) | $56,500–$67,750 | $70,500–$96,000 |
Public accounting (small company) | $51,500–$60,500 | $63,750–$81,500 |
Corporate accounting (large company) | $53,750–$69,500 | $68,750–$87,750 |
Illustration 1A.3 lists some examples of upper-level salaries for managers in corporate accounting. Note that geographic region, experience, education, CPA certification, and company size each play a role in determining salary.
ILLUSTRATION 1A.3 Upper-level management salaries in corporate accounting
Position | Large Company | Small to Medium Company |
Chief financial officer | $207,000–$465,750 | $105,250–$208,750 |
Corporate controller | $140,000–$224,750 | $92,000–$161,250 |
Tax manager | $112,000–$158,250 | $88,000–$124,750 |
The Review and Practice section provides opportunities for students to review key concepts and terms as well as complete multiple-choice questions, brief exercises, exercises, and a comprehensive problem. Detailed solutions are also included.
A sole proprietorship is a business owned by one person. A partnership is a business owned by two or more people associated as partners. A corporation is a separate legal entity for which evidence of ownership is provided by shares of stock.
Internal users are managers who need accounting information to plan, organize, and run business operations. The primary external users are investors and creditors. Investors (stockholders) use accounting information to decide whether to buy, hold, or sell shares of a company’s stock. Creditors (suppliers and bankers) use accounting information to assess the risk of granting credit or loaning money to a business. Other groups who have an indirect interest in a business are taxing authorities, customers, labor unions, and regulatory agencies.
Financing activities involve collecting the necessary funds to support the business. Investing activities involve acquiring the resources necessary to run the business. Operating activities involve putting the resources of the business into action to generate a profit.
An income statement presents the revenues and expenses of a company for a specific period of time. A retained earnings statement summarizes the changes in retained earnings that have occurred for a specific period of time. A balance sheet reports the assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity of a business at a specific date. A statement of cash flows summarizes information concerning the cash inflows (receipts) and outflows (payments) for a specific period of time.
Assets are resources owned by a business. Liabilities are the debts and obligations of the business. Liabilities represent claims of creditors on the assets of the business. Stockholders’ equity represents the claims of owners on the assets of the business. Stockholders’ equity is subdivided into two parts: common stock and retained earnings. The basic accounting equation is Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity.
Within the annual report, the management discussion and analysis provides management’s interpretation of the company’s results and financial position as well as a discussion of plans for the future. Notes to the financial statements provide additional explanation or detail to make the financial statements more informative. The auditor’s report expresses an opinion as to whether the financial statements present fairly the company’s results of operations and financial position.
Accounting offers many different jobs in fields such as public and private accounting, governmental, and forensic accounting. Accounting is a popular major because there are many different types of jobs, with unlimited potential for career advancement.
Decision Checkpoints | Info Needed for Decision | Tool to Use for Decision | How to Evaluate Results |
Are the company’s operations profitable? | Income statement | The income statement reports a company’s revenues and expenses and resulting net income or loss for a period of time. | If the company’s revenues exceed its expenses, it will report net income; otherwise, it will report a net loss. |
What is the company’s policy toward dividends and growth? | Retained earnings statement | The retained earnings statement reports how much of this year’s income the company paid out in dividends to shareholders. | A company striving for rapid growth will pay a low (or no) dividend. |
Does the company rely primarily on debt or stockholders’ equity to finance its assets? | Balance sheet | The balance sheet reports the company’s resources and claims to those resources; there are two types of claims: liabilities and stockholders’ equity. | Compare the amount of debt versus the amount of stockholders’ equity to determine whether the company relies more on creditors or owners for its financing. |
Does the company generate sufficient cash from operations to fund its investing activities? | Statement of cash flows | The statement of cash flows shows the amount of net cash provided or used by operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities. | Compare the amount of net cash provided by operating activities with the amount of net cash used by investing activities. Any deficiency in cash from operating activities must be made up with cash from financing activities. |
1. (LO 1) Which is not one of the three forms of business organization?
b. Creditorship is not a form of business organization. The other choices are incorrect because (a) sole proprietorship, (c) partnership, and (d) corporation are all forms of business organization.
2. (LO 1) Which is an advantage of corporations relative to partnerships and sole proprietorships?
c. An advantage of corporations is that investors are not personally liable for debts of the business. The other choices are incorrect because (a) lower taxes, (b) harder to transfer ownership, and (d) most common form of organization are not true of corporations.
3. (LO 1) Which statement about users of accounting information is incorrect?
d. Regulatory authorities are considered external, not internal, users. The other choices are true statements.
4. (LO 1) Which of the following did not result from the Sarbanes-Oxley Act?
d. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) was created to reduce unethical corporate behavior and decrease the likelihood of future corporate scandals, not to address tax rates. The other choices are incorrect because (a) top management must now certify the accuracy of financial information, (b) penalties for fraudulent activity increased, and (c) increased independence of auditors all resulted from SOX.
5. (LO 2) Which is not one of the three primary business activities?
c. Advertising is a type of operating activity. The other choices are incorrect because (a) financing, (b) operating, and (d) investing are the three primary business activities.
6. (LO 2) Which of the following is an example of a financing activity?
a. Issuing shares of common stock is a financing activity. The other choices are incorrect because (b) selling goods on account is an operating activity, (c) buying delivery equipment is an investing activity, and (d) buying inventory is an operating activity.
7. (LO 2) Net income will result during a time period when:
d. When a company earns more revenues than expenses, it will report net income during a time period. The other choices are incorrect because (a) assets and liabilities are on the balance sheet, not the income statement; (b) assets are on the balance sheet, not the income statement; and (c) net income results when revenues exceed expenses, not when expenses exceed revenues.
8. (LO 3) The financial statements for Macias Corporation contained the following information.
Accounts receivable | $ 5,000 |
Sales revenue | 75,000 |
Cash | 15,000 |
Salaries and wages expense | 20,000 |
Rent expense | 10,000 |
What was Macias Corporation’s net income?
d. Net income = Sales revenue ($75,000) − Salaries and wages expense ($20,000) − Rent expense ($10,000) = $45,000. The other choices are therefore incorrect.
9. (LO 3) What section of a statement of cash flows indicates the cash spent on new equipment during the past accounting period?
a. The investing activities section of the statement of cash flows provides information about property, plant, and equipment accounts, not (b) the operating activities section or (c) the financing activities section. Choice (d) is incorrect as the statement of cash flows does provide this information.
10. (LO 3) Which statement presents information as of a specific point in time?
b. The balance sheet presents information as of a specific point in time. The other choices are incorrect because the (a) income statement, (c) statement of cash flows, and (d) retained earnings statement all cover a period of time.
11. (LO 3) Which financial statement reports assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity?
c. The balance sheet is a formal presentation of the accounting equation, such that Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity, not the (a) income statement, (b) retained earnings statement, or (d) statement of cash flows.
12. (LO 3) Stockholders’ equity represents:
d. Stockholders’ equity represents claims of owners. The other choices are incorrect because (a) claims of creditors and (b) claims of employees are liabilities. Choice (c) is incorrect because the difference between revenues and expenses is net income.
13. (LO 3) As of December 31, 2025, Rockford Corporation has assets of $3,500 and stockholders’ equity of $1,500. What are the liabilities for Rockford as of December 31, 2025?
d. Using the accounting equation, liabilities can be computed by subtracting stockholders’ equity from assets, or $3,500 − $1,500 = $2,000, not (a) $1,500, (b) $1,000, or (c) $2,500.
14. (LO 3) The element of a corporation’s annual report that describes the corporation’s accounting methods is/are the:
a. The corporation’s accounting methods are described in the notes to the financial statements, not in the (b) management discussion and analysis, (c) auditor’s report, or (d) income statement.
15. (LO 3) The element of the annual report that presents an opinion regarding the fairness of the presentation of the financial position and results of operations is/are the:
b. The element of the annual report that presents an opinion regarding the fairness of the presentation of the financial position and results of operations is the auditor’s opinion, not the (a) income statement, (c) balance sheet, or (d) comparative statements.
Use basic accounting equation.
1. (LO 3) At the beginning of the year, Ortiz Company had total assets of $900,000 and total liabilities of $440,000. Answer the following questions.
a. | Assets | – | Liabilities | = | Stockholders’ Equity |
($900,000 – $100,000) | – | ($440,000 + $80,000) | = | $280,000 | |
b. | Liabilities | + | Stockholders’ Equity | = | Assets |
($440,000 – $100,000) | + | ($900,000 – $440,000 + $200,000) | = | $1,000,000 | |
c. | Assets | – | Stockholders’ Equity | = | Liabilities |
($900,000 + $50,000) | – | ($900,000 – $440,000 + $60,000) | = | $430,000 |
Determine where items appear on financial statements.
2. (LO 3) Indicate whether the following items would appear on the income statement (IS), balance sheet (BS), or retained earnings statement (RES).
Prepare a balance sheet.
3. (LO 3) Presented below in alphabetical order are balance sheet items for Feagler Company at December 31, 2025. Prepare a balance sheet following the format of Illustration 1.8.
Accounts receivable | $12,500 |
Cash | 38,000 |
Common stock | 5,000 |
Notes payable | 40,000 |
Retained earnings | 5,500 |
Feagler Company Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 |
||
Assets | ||
Cash | $38,000 | |
Accounts receivable | 12,500 | |
Total assets | $50,500 | |
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||
Liabilities | ||
Notes payable | $40,000 | |
Total liabilities | $40,000 | |
Stockholders’ equity | ||
Common stock | 5,000 | |
Retained earnings | 5,500 | |
Total stockholders’ equity | 10,500 | |
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $50,500 |
Determine where items appear on financial statements.
4. (LO 3) Identify whether the following items would appear on the balance sheet (BS) or income statement (IS) of a corporation.
Prepare an income statement.
1. (LO 3) The following items and amounts were taken from Ricardo Inc.’s 2025 income statement and balance sheet.
Cash | $ 84,700 | Inventory | $ 64,618 |
Retained earnings | 123,192 | Accounts receivable | 88,419 |
Cost of goods sold | 483,854 | Sales revenue | 693,485 |
Salaries and wages expense | 125,000 | Income taxes payable | 6,499 |
Prepaid insurance | 7,818 | Accounts payable | 49,384 |
Interest expense | 994 | Service revenue | 8,998 |
Instructions
Prepare an income statement for Ricardo Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2025.
Ricardo Inc. Income Statement For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 |
||||
Revenues | ||||
Sales revenue | $693,485 | |||
Service revenue | 8,998 | |||
Total revenues | $702,483 | |||
Expenses | ||||
Cost of goods sold | 483,854 | |||
Salaries and wages expense | 125,000 | |||
Interest expense | 994 | |||
Total expenses | 609,848 | |||
Net income | $ 92,635 | |||
Compute net income and prepare a balance sheet.
2. (LO 3) Cozy Bear is a private camping ground near the Mountain Home Recreation Area. It has compiled the following financial information as of December 31, 2025.
Service revenue (from camping fees) | $148,000 | Dividends | $9,000 |
Sales revenue (from general store) | 35,000 | Bonds payable | 50,000 |
Accounts payable | 16,000 | Expenses during 2025 | 135,000 |
Cash | 18,500 | Supplies | 12,500 |
Equipment | 129,000 | Common stock | 40,000 |
Retained earnings (1/1/2025) | 15,000 |
Instructions
Service revenue | $148,000 |
Sales revenues | 35,000 |
Total revenue | 183,000 |
Expenses | 135,000 |
Net income | $ 48,000 |
Cozy Bear Retained Earnings Statement For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 |
|||
Retained earnings, January 1 | $15,000 | ||
Add: Net income | 48,000 | ||
63,000 | |||
Less: Dividends | 9,000 | ||
Retained earnings, December 31 | $54,000 | ||
Cozy Bear Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 |
||||
Assets | ||||
Cash | $ 18,500 | |||
Supplies | 12,500 | |||
Equipment | 129,000 | |||
Total assets | $160,000 | |||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||
Liabilities | ||||
Accounts payable | $16,000 | |||
Bonds payable | 50,000 | |||
Total liabilities | $ 66,000 | |||
Stockholders’ equity | ||||
Common stock | 40,000 | |||
Retained earnings | 54,000 | |||
Total stockholders’ equity | 94,000 | |||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $160,000 | |||
Prepare financial statements.
(LO 3) Jeff Andringa, a former college hockey player, quit his job and started Ice Camp, a hockey camp for kids ages 8 to 18. Eventually, he would like to open hockey camps nationwide. Jeff has asked you to help him prepare financial statements at the end of 2025, his first year of operations. He relates the following facts about his business activities.
In order to get the business off the ground, Jeff decided to incorporate. He sold shares of common stock to a few close friends, as well as bought some of the shares himself. He initially raised $25,000 through the sale of these shares. In addition, the company took out a $10,000 loan at a local bank.
Ice Camp purchased, for $12,000 cash, a bus for transporting kids. The company also bought hockey goals and other miscellaneous equipment with $1,500 cash. The company earned camp tuition of $100,000 during the year but had collected only $80,000 of this amount. Thus, at the end of the year, its customers still owed $20,000. The company rents time at a local rink for $50 per hour. Total rink rental costs during the year were $8,000, insurance was $10,000, salary expense was $20,000, and supplies used totaled $9,000, all of which were paid in cash. The company incurred $800 in interest expense on the bank loan, which it still owed at the end of the year.
The company paid dividends during the year of $5,000 cash. The balance in the corporate bank account at December 31, 2025, was $49,500.
Instructions
Using the format of the Sierra Corporation statements in this chapter, prepare an income statement, retained earnings statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows. (Hint: Prepare the statements in the order stated to take advantage of the flow of information from one statement to the next, as shown in Illustration 1.10.)
Ice Camp Income Statement For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 |
||||
Revenues | ||||
Service revenue | $100,000 | |||
Expenses | ||||
Salaries and wages expense | $20,000 | |||
Insurance expense | 10,000 | |||
Supplies expense | 9,000 | |||
Rent expense | 8,000 | |||
Interest expense | 800 | |||
Total expenses | 47,800 | |||
Net income | $ 52,200 | |||
Ice Camp Retained Earnings Statement For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 |
||||
Retained earnings, January 1, 2025 | $0 | |||
Add: Net income | 52,200 | |||
52,200 | ||||
Less: Dividends | 5,000 | |||
Retained earnings, December 31, 2025 | $47,200 | |||
Ice Camp Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 |
||||
Assets | ||||
Cash | $49,500 | |||
Accounts receivable | 20,000 | |||
Equipment ($12,000 + $1,500) | 13,500 | |||
Total assets | $83,000 | |||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||
Liabilities | ||||
Notes payable | $10,000 | |||
Interest payable | 800 | |||
Total liabilities | $10,800 | |||
Stockholders’ equity | ||||
Common stock | 25,000 | |||
Retained earnings | 47,200 | |||
Total stockholders’ equity | 72,200 | |||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $83,000 | |||
Ice Camp Statement of Cash Flows For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 |
||||
Cash flows from operating activities | ||||
Cash receipts from operating activities | $80,000 | |||
Cash payments for operating activities | (47,000) | |||
Net cash provided by operating activities | $33,000 | |||
Cash flows from investing activities | ||||
Purchase of equipment | (13,500) | |||
Net cash used by investing activities | (13,500) | |||
Cash flows from financing activities | ||||
Issuance of common stock | 25,000 | |||
Issuance of notes payable | 10,000 | |||
Dividends paid | (5,000) | |||
Net cash provided by financing activities | 30,000 | |||
Net increase in cash | 49,500 | |||
Cash at beginning of period | 0 | |||
Cash at end of period | $49,500 | |||
1. What are the three basic forms of business organizations?
2. What are the advantages to a business of being formed as a corporation? What are the disadvantages?
3. What are the advantages to a business of being formed as a partnership or sole proprietorship? What are the disadvantages?
4. Is it possible to create a company using an organizational form that has the advantages of both a partnership and a corporation? Explain.
5. “Accounting is ingrained in our society and is vital to our economic system.” Do you agree? Explain.
6. Who are the internal users of accounting data? How does accounting provide relevant data to the internal users?
7. Who are the external users of accounting data? Give examples.
8. What are the four most common types of data analytics, and what basic question does each address?
9. What are the three main types of business activity? Give examples of each activity.
10. Listed here are some items found in the financial statements of Finzelberg. Indicate in which financial statement(s) each item would appear.
11. Why would a bank want to monitor the dividend payment practices of the corporations to which it lends money?
12. “A company’s net income appears directly on the income statement and the retained earnings statement, and it is included indirectly in the company’s balance sheet.” Do you agree? Explain.
13. What is the primary purpose of the statement of cash flows?
14. What are the three main categories of the statement of cash flows? Why do you think these categories were chosen?
15. What is retained earnings? What items increase the balance in retained earnings? What items decrease the balance in retained earnings?
16. What is the basic accounting equation?
17.
18. Which of these items are liabilities of White Glove Cleaning Service?
19. How are each of the following financial statements interrelated? (a) Retained earnings statement and income statement. (b) Retained earnings statement and balance sheet. (c) Balance sheet and statement of cash flows.
20. What is the purpose of the management discussion and analysis section (MD&A)?
21. Why is it important for financial statements to receive an unqualified auditor’s opinion?
22. What types of information are presented in the notes to the financial statements?
23. The accounting equation is Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity. Appendix A reproduces Apple’s financial statements. Replacing words in the equation with dollar amounts, what is Apple’s accounting equation at September 26, 2020?
24. What are the characteristics of a “critical audit matter”?
Describe forms of business organization.
BE1.1 (LO 1), K Match each of the following forms of business organization with a set of characteristics: sole proprietorship (SP), partnership (P), and corporation (C).
Identify users of accounting information.
BE1.2 (LO 1), K The following lists situations that require the use of accounting information.
Match each of the situations with the following users of accounting information.
Classify items by activity.
BE1.3 (LO 2), K Indicate to which business activity, operating activity (O), investing activity (I), or financing activity (F), each item relates.
Determine effect of transactions on stockholders’ equity.
BE1.4 (LO 3), C Presented below are a number of transactions. Determine whether each transaction affects common stock (C), dividends (D), revenues (R), expenses (E), or does not affect stockholders’ equity (NSE). Provide titles for the revenues and expenses.
Prepare a balance sheet.
BE1.5 (LO 3), AP In alphabetical order below are balance sheet items for Karol Company at December 31, 2025. Prepare a balance sheet following the format of Illustration 1.8.
Accounts payable | $65,000 |
Accounts receivable | 71,000 |
Cash | 22,000 |
Common stock | 18,000 |
Retained earnings | 10,000 |
Determine where items appear on financial statements.
BE1.6 (LO 3), K Eskimo Pie Corporation markets a broad range of frozen treats, including its famous Eskimo Pie ice cream bars. The following items were taken from a recent income statement and balance sheet. In each case, identify whether the item would appear on the balance sheet (BS) or income statement (IS).
Determine proper financial statement.
BE1.7 (LO 3), K Indicate which statement you would examine to find each of the following items: income statement (IS), balance sheet (BS), retained earnings statement (RES), or statement of cash flows (SCF).
Use basic accounting equation.
BE1.8 (LO 3), AP Use the basic accounting equation to answer these questions.
Use basic accounting equation.
BE1.9 (LO 3), AP At the beginning of the year, Morales Company had total assets of $800,000 and total liabilities of $500,000. (Treat each item independently.)
Identify assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity.
BE1.10 (LO 3), K Indicate whether each of these items is an asset (A), a liability (L), or part of stockholders’ equity (SE).
Determine required parts of annual report.
BE1.11 (LO 3), K Which is not a required part of an annual report of a publicly traded company?
Identify benefits of business organization forms.
DO IT! 1.1a (LO 1), C Identify each of the following organizational characteristics with the business organizational form or forms with which it is associated.
Identify accounting terms.
DO IT 1.1b (LO 1), C Match each of the following terms with its definition, classification type, or associated phrase.
Classify financial statement elements.
DO IT! 1.2 (LO 2), K Classify each item as an asset, liability, common stock, revenue, or expense.
Prepare financial statements.
DO IT! 1.3a (LO 3), AP Gray Corporation began operations on January 1, 2025. The following information is available for Gray on December 31, 2025.
Accounts payable | $ 5,000 | Notes payable | $ 7,000 |
Accounts receivable | 2,000 | Rent expense | 10,000 |
Advertising expense | 4,000 | Retained earnings | ? |
Cash | 3,100 | Service revenue | 25,000 |
Common stock | 15,000 | Supplies | 1,900 |
Dividends | 2,500 | Supplies expense | 1,700 |
Equipment | 26,800 |
Prepare an income statement, a retained earnings statement, and a balance sheet for Gray Corporation.
Identify components of annual reports.
DO IT! 1.3b (LO 3), K Indicate whether each of the following items is most closely associated with the management discussion and analysis (MD&A), the notes to the financial statements, or the auditor’s report.
Match items with descriptions.
E1.1 (LO 1, 2, 3), K Here is a list of words or phrases discussed in this chapter:
Instructions
Match each word or phrase above with the best description of it.
Identify forms of business organization.
E1.2 (LO 1), C Consider the following statements.
Sole Proprietorship | Partnership | Corporation | |
|
Instructions
Complete the above by indicating if each of the statements is normally true (T) or false (F) for each type of business organization: sole proprietorship, partnership, and corporation.
Identify users of accounting information.
E1.3 (LO 1), C The following list presents different types of evaluations made by various users of accounting information.
Instructions
Complete the following by indicating (a) the number of the evaluation (1 to 6) that the user would most likely make, and (b) if the user is internal or external.
(a) Type of Evaluation | (b) Type of User | |
Investor | ||
Marketing manager | ||
Creditor | ||
Chief financial officer | ||
Internal Revenue Service | ||
Labor union |
Match items with descriptions.
E1.4 (LO 1, 2, 3), K The following terms or phrases are discussed in this chapter.
Instructions
Match each term or phrase to its description below.
Identify business activities.
E1.5 (LO 2), C All businesses are involved in three types of activities—financing, investing, and operating. Listed below are the names and descriptions of companies in several different industries.
Instructions
Classify business activities.
E1.6 (LO 2), K Consider the following business activities that occur at a Colorado ski area.
Instructions
Classify each of the above items by type of business activity: operating (O), investing (I), or financing (F).
Classify accounts.
E1.7 (LO 2, 3), C The Bonita Vista Golf & Country Club details the following accounts in its financial statements.
Accounts payable | _____ |
Accounts receivable | _____ |
Equipment | _____ |
Sales revenue | _____ |
Service revenue | _____ |
Inventory | _____ |
Mortgage payable | _____ |
Supplies expense | _____ |
Rent expense | _____ |
Salaries and wages expense | _____ |
Instructions
Classify each of the accounts as an asset (A), liability (L), stockholders’ equity (SE), revenue (R), or expense (E) item.
Identify financial statements.
E1.8 (LO 3), K Consider the following typical accounts and statement items.
Instructions
Indicate on which statement—income statement (IS), balance sheet (BS), retained earning statement (RE), and/or statement of cash flows (SCF)—you would find each of the above accounts or items.
Prepare income statement and retained earnings statement.
E1.9 (LO 3), AP This information relates to Benser Co. for the year 2025.
Retained earnings, January 1, 2025 | $67,000 |
Advertising expense | 1,800 |
Dividends | 6,000 |
Rent expense | 10,400 |
Service revenue | 58,000 |
Utilities expense | 2,400 |
Salaries and wages expense | 30,000 |
Instructions
Prepare an income statement and a retained earnings statement for the year ending December 31, 2025.
Prepare income statement and retained earnings statement.
E1.10 (LO 3), AP Suppose the following information was taken from the 2025 financial statements of pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co. (All dollar amounts are in millions.)
Retained earnings, January 1, 2025 | $43,698.8 |
Cost of goods sold | 9,018.9 |
Selling and administrative expenses | 8,543.2 |
Dividends | 3,597.7 |
Sales revenue | 38,576.0 |
Research and development expense | 5,845.0 |
Income tax expense | 2,267.6 |
Instructions
Prepare a retained earnings statement.
E1.11 (LO 3), AP Presented here is information for Zheng Inc. for 2025.
Retained earnings, January 1 | $130,000 |
Service revenue | 400,000 |
Total expenses | 175,000 |
Dividends | 65,000 |
Instructions
Prepare the 2025 retained earnings statement for Zheng Inc.
Prepare a balance sheet.
E1.12 (LO 3), AP The following information is available for Randall Inc.
Accounts receivable | $2,400 | Cash | $6,250 |
Accounts payable | 3,700 | Supplies | 3,760 |
Interest payable | 580 | Unearned service revenue | 850 |
Salaries and wages expense | 4,500 | Salaries and wages payable | 745 |
Notes payable | 31,500 | Depreciation expense | 670 |
Common stock | 50,700 | Equipment (net) | 108,200 |
Inventory | 2,840 |
Instructions
Using the information above, prepare a balance sheet as of December 31, 2025. (Hint: Solve for the missing retained earnings amount after first determining total assets and total liabilities.)
Interpret financial data.
E1.13 (LO 3), AN Consider each of the following independent situations.
Instructions
For each company, provide a brief discussion interpreting these financial data. For example, you might discuss the company’s financial health or its apparent growth philosophy.
Identify financial statement components and prepare income statement.
E1.14 (LO 3), AP The following items and amounts were taken from Lonyear Inc.’s 2025 income statement and balance sheet.
______ Cash | $ 84,700 | ______ Accounts receivable | $ 88,419 |
______ Retained earnings | 123,192 | ______ Sales revenue | 584,951 |
______ Cost of goods sold | 438,458 | ______ Notes payable | 6,499 |
______ Salaries and wages expense | 115,131 | ______ Accounts payable | 49,384 |
______ Prepaid insurance | 7,818 | ______ Service revenue | 4,806 |
______ Inventory | 64,618 | ______ Interest expense | 1,882 |
Instructions
Identify financial statement components and prepare income statement.
E1.15 (LO 3), AP The following items and amounts were taken from Familia Inc.’s 2025 income statement and balance sheet, the end of its first year of operations.
______ Interest expense | $ 2,200 | ______ Equipment, net | $54,700 |
______ Interest payable | 700 | ______ Depreciation expense | 3,200 |
______ Notes payable | 11,800 | ______ Supplies | 4,100 |
______ Sales revenue | 44,300 | ______ Common stock | 26,800 |
______ Cash | 2,900 | ______ Supplies expense | 900 |
______ Salaries and wages expense | 15,600 |
Instructions
Calculate missing amounts.
E1.16 (LO 3), AN Here are incomplete financial statements for Donavan, Inc.
Donavan, Inc. Balance Sheet |
||||
Assets | Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |||
Cash | $ 7,000 | Liabilities | ||
Inventory | 10,000 | Accounts payable | $ 5,000 | |
Buildings (net) | 45,000 | Stockholders’ equity | ||
Total assets | $62,000 | Common stock | (a) | |
Retained earnings | (b) | |||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $62,000 |
Income Statement | |
Revenues | $85,000 |
Cost of goods sold | (c) |
Salaries and wages expense | 10,000 |
Net income | $(d) |
Retained Earnings Statement | |
Beginning retained earnings | $12,000 |
Add: Net income | (e) |
Less: Dividends | 5,000 |
Ending retained earnings | $27,000 |
Instructions
Calculate the missing amounts.
Calculate missing amounts.
E1.17 (LO 3), AN Here are incomplete financial statements for Oway Corporation.
Oway Corporation Balance Sheet |
|||
Assets | Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||
Cash | $ 29,000 | Liabilities | |
Supplies | (a) | Notes payable | $22,000 |
Equipment (net) | 65,000 | Stockholders’ equity | |
Total assets | $(b) | Common stock | 38,000 |
Retained earnings | (c) | ||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $(d) |
Income Statement | |
Revenues | $53,000 |
Depreciation expense | (e) |
Salaries and wages expense | 10,000 |
Interest expense | 1,000 |
Net income | $25,000 |
Retained Earnings Statement | |
Beginning retained earnings | $(f) |
Add: Net income | (g) |
Less: Dividends | 6,000 |
Ending retained earnings | $37,000 |
Instructions
Calculate the missing amounts.
Compute net income and prepare a retained earnings statement and balance sheet.
E1.18 (LO 3), AP Otay Lakes Park is a private camping ground near the Mount Miguel Recreation Area. It has compiled the following financial information as of December 31, 2025.
Service revenue (from camping fees) | $132,000 | Dividends | $ 9,000 |
Sales revenue (from general store) | 25,000 | Notes payable | 50,000 |
Accounts payable | 11,000 | Expenses during 2025 | 126,000 |
Cash | 8,500 | Supplies | 5,500 |
Equipment | 114,000 | Common stock | 40,000 |
Retained earnings (1/1/2025) | 5,000 |
Instructions
Identify financial statement components and prepare an income statement.
E1.19 (LO 3), AP Kellogg Company is the world’s leading producer of ready-to-eat cereal and a leading producer of grain-based convenience foods such as frozen waffles and cereal bars. Suppose the following items were taken from its 2025 income statement and balance sheet. (All dollars are in millions.)
____ Retained earnings | $5,481 | ____ Bonds payable | $ 4,835 |
____ Cost of goods sold | 7,184 | ____ Inventory | 910 |
____ Selling and administrative expenses | 3,390 | ____ Sales revenue | 12,575 |
____ Accounts payable | 1,077 | ||
____ Cash | 334 | ____ Common stock | 105 |
____ Notes payable | 44 | ____ Income tax expense | 498 |
____ Interest expense | 295 |
Instructions
Prepare a statement of cash flows.
E1.20 (LO 3), AP This information is for Williams Corporation for the year ended December 31, 2025.
Cash received from lenders | $20,000 |
Cash received from customers | 50,000 |
Cash paid for new equipment | 28,000 |
Cash dividends paid | 8,000 |
Cash paid to suppliers | 16,000 |
Cash balance 1/1/25 | 12,000 |
Instructions
Prepare a statement of cash flows.
E1.21 (LO 3), AP Suppose the following data are derived from the 2025 financial statements of Southwest Airlines. (All dollars are in millions.) Southwest has a December 31 year-end.
Cash balance, January 1, 2025 | $1,390 |
Cash paid for repayment of debt | 122 |
Cash received from issuance of common stock | 144 |
Cash received from issuance of long-term debt | 500 |
Cash received from customers | 9,823 |
Cash paid for property and equipment | 1,529 |
Cash paid for dividends | 14 |
Cash paid for repurchase of common stock | 1,001 |
Cash paid for goods and services | 6,978 |
Instructions
Correct an incorrectly prepared balance sheet.
E1.22 (LO 3), AP Wayne Holtz is the bookkeeper for Beeson Company. Wayne has been trying to get the balance sheet of Beeson Company to balance. It finally balanced, but now he’s not sure it is correct.
Beeson Company Balance Sheet December 31,.2025 |
||||
Assets | Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |||
Cash | $18,000 | Accounts payable | $16,000 | |
Supplies | 9,500 | Accounts receivable | (12,000) | |
Equipment | 40,000 | Common stock | 40,000 | |
Dividends | 8,000 | Retained earnings | 31,500 | |
Total assets | $75,000 | Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $75,000 |
Instructions
Prepare a correct balance sheet.
Classify items as assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity, and prepare accounting equation.
E1.23 (LO 3), AP Suppose the following items were taken from the balance sheet of Nike, Inc. (All dollars are in millions.)
1.____ Cash | $2,291.1 |
2.____ Accounts receivable | 2,883.9 |
3.____ Common stock | 2,874.2 |
4.____ Notes payable | 342.9 |
5.____ Buildings | 3,759.9 |
6.____ Mortgage payable | 1,311.5 |
7.____ Inventory | $2,357.0 |
8.____ Income taxes payable | 86.3 |
9.____ Equipment | 1,957.7 |
10.____ Retained earnings | 5,818.9 |
11.____ Accounts payable | 2,815.8 |
Instructions
Perform each of the following.
Use financial statement relationships to determine missing amounts.
E1.24 (LO 3), AN The summaries of data from the balance sheet, income statement, and retained earnings statement for two corporations, Walco Corporation and Gunther Enterprises, are presented as follows for 2025.
Walco Corporation | Gunther Enterprises | |
Beginning of year | ||
Total assets | $110,000 | $150,000 |
Total liabilities | 70,000 | (d) |
Total stockholders’ equity | (a) | 70,000 |
End of year | ||
Total assets | (b) | 180,000 |
Total liabilities | 120,000 | 55,000 |
Total stockholders’ equity | 60,000 | (e) |
Changes during year in retained earnings | ||
Dividends | (c) | 5,000 |
Total revenues | 215,000 | (f) |
Total expenses | 165,000 | 80,000 |
Instructions
Determine the missing amounts. Assume all changes in stockholders’ equity are due to changes in retained earnings.
Classify various items in an annual report.
E1.25 (LO 3), K The annual report provides financial information in a variety of formats, including the following.
Management discussion and analysis (MD&A)
Financial statements
Notes to the financial statements
Auditor’s opinion
Instructions
For each of the following, state in what area of the annual report the item would be presented. If the item would probably not be found in an annual report, state “Not disclosed.”
Classify accounts and prepare balance sheet.
E1.26 (LO 3), AP The following list of accounts, in alphabetical order, is for Aventura Inc. at November 30, 2025.
____ Accounts payable | $ 26,200 | ____ Inventory | $18,000 |
____ Accounts receivable | 19,500 | ____ Land | 44,000 |
____ Buildings | 100,000 | ____ Mortgage payable | 97,500 |
____ Cash | 20,000 | ____ Notes payable | 34,000 |
____ Common stock | 20,000 | ____ Retained earnings | 48,500 |
____ Equipment, net | 30,000 | ____ Supplies | 700 |
____ Income taxes payable | 6,000 |
Instructions
Determine forms of business organization.
P1.1 (LO 1), C Presented below are five independent situations.
Instructions
In each case, explain what form of organization the business is likely to take—sole proprietorship, partnership, or corporation. Give reasons for your choice.
Identify users and uses of financial statements.
P1.2 (LO 3), C Financial decisions often place heavier emphasis on one type of financial statement over the others. Consider each of the following hypothetical situations independently.
Instructions
In each situation, state whether the decision-maker would be most likely to place primary emphasis on information provided by the income statement, balance sheet, or statement of cash flows. In each case provide a brief justification for your choice. Choose only one financial statement in each case.
Prepare an income statement, retained earnings statement, and balance sheet; discuss results.
P1.3 (LO 3), AP On June 1, 2025, Elite Service Co. was started with an initial investment in the company of $22,100 cash. Here are the assets, liabilities, and common stock of the company at June 30, 2025, and the revenues and expenses for the month of June, its first month of operations:
Cash | $ 4,600 | Notes payable | $12,000 |
Accounts receivable | 4,000 | Accounts payable | 500 |
Service revenue | 7,500 | Supplies expense | 1,000 |
Supplies | 2,400 | Maintenance and repairs expense | 600 |
Advertising expense | 400 | Utilities expense | 300 |
Equipment | 26,000 | Salaries and wages expense | 1,400 |
Common stock | 22,100 |
During June, the company issued no additional stock but paid dividends of $1,400.
Check figures provide a key number to let you know you are on the right track.
Instructions
Net income | $3,800 | |
Ret. earnings | $2,400 | |
Tot. assets | $37,000 |
Prepare an income statement, retained earnings statement, and balance sheet.
P1.4 (LO 3), AP Reese Inc., a provider of consulting services, was founded on October 1, 2025. At the end of the first month of operations, the company decided to prepare an income statement, retained earnings statement, and balance sheet using the following information.
Accounts payable | $ 3,300 | Supplies | $ 2,460 |
Interest expense | 410 | Supplies expense | 380 |
Equipment (net) | 48,200 | Depreciation expense | 270 |
Salaries and wages expense | 2,500 | Service revenue | 20,920 |
Bonds payable | 21,500 | Salaries and wages payable | 445 |
Unearned service revenue | 4,065 | Common stock | 9,100 |
Accounts receivable | 1,300 | Interest payable | 140 |
Cash | 3,950 |
Instructions
Using the information, prepare an income statement and retained earnings statement for the month of October 2025 and a balance sheet as of October 31, 2025.
End. retained earnings | $17,360 |
Determine items included in a statement of cash flows, prepare the statement, and comment.
P1.5 (LO 3), AP Presented below is selected financial information for Rojo Corporation for December 31, 2025.
Inventory | $ 25,000 | Cash paid to purchase equipment | $ 12,000 |
Cash paid to suppliers | 104,000 | Equipment | 40,000 |
Buildings | 200,000 | Service revenue | 100,000 |
Common stock | 50,000 | Cash received from customers | 132,000 |
Cash dividends paid | 7,000 | Cash received from issuing common stock | 22,000 |
Cash at beginning of period | 9,000 |
Instructions
Net cash increase | $31,000 |
Comment on proper accounting treatment and prepare a corrected balance sheet.
P1.6 (LO 3), AN Micado Corporation was formed on January 1, 2025. At December 31, 2025, Miko Liu, the president and sole stockholder, decided to prepare a balance sheet, which appeared as follows.
Micado Corporation Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 |
||||
Assets | Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |||
Cash | $20,000 | Accounts payable | $30,000 | |
Accounts receivable | 50,000 | Notes payable | 15,000 | |
Inventory | 36,000 | Boat loan | 22,000 | |
Boat | 24,000 | Stockholders’ equity | 63,000 |
Miko willingly admits that she is not an accountant by training. She is concerned that her balance sheet might not be correct. She has provided you with the following additional information.
Instructions
Tot. assets | $85,000 |
The Cookie Creations case starts in Chapter 1 and continues in every chapter. Complete case details and instructions are available in Wiley Course Resources.
CCC1 Natalie Koebel spent much of her childhood learning the art of cookie-making from her grand mother. They spent many happy hours mastering every type of cookie imaginable and later devised new recipes that were both healthy and delicious. Now at the start of her second year in college, Natalie is investigating possibilities for starting her own business as part of the entrepreneurship program in which she is enrolled.
A long-time friend insists that Natalie has to include cookies in her business plan. After a series of brainstorming sessions, Natalie settles on the idea of operating a cookie-making school. She will start on a part-time basis and offer her services in people’s homes. Now that she has started thinking about it, the possibilities seem endless. During the fall, she will concentrate on holiday cookies. She will offer group sessions (which will probably be more entertainment than education) and individual lessons. Natalie also decides to include children in her target market. The first difficult decision is coming up with the perfect name for her business. She settles on “Cookie Creations,” and then moves on to more important issues.
Instructions
CT1.1 The financial statements of Apple Inc. are presented in Appendix A.
Instructions
Refer to Apple’s financial statements and answer the following questions.
CT1.2 Columbia Sportswear Company’s financial statements are presented in Appendix B. Financial statements of Under Armour, Inc. are presented in Appendix C.
Instructions
CT1.3 Amazon.com, Inc.’s financial statements are presented in Appendix D. Financial statements of Walmart Inc. are presented in Appendix E.
Instructions
CT1.4 Xerox was not having a particularly pleasant year. The company’s stock price had already fallen in the previous year from $60 per share to $30. Just when it seemed things couldn’t get worse, Xerox’s stock fell to $4 per share. The following data were taken from the statement of cash flows of Xerox. (All dollars are in millions.)
Cash used in operating activities | $ (663) | |
Cash used in investing activities | (644) | |
Financing activities | ||
Dividends paid | $ (587) | |
Net cash received from issuing debt | 3,498 | |
Cash provided by financing activities | 2,911 |
Instructions
Analyze the information and then answer the following questions.
CT1.5 You can easily search the Internet to find summary information about companies. This information includes basic descriptions of the company’s location, activities, industry, financial health, and financial performance.
Instructions
Go to the Yahoo! Finance website, type in a company name, and then use the links (such as Financials) to locate the information necessary to answer the following questions.
CT1.6 The Wall Street Journal published an article by Michael Rapoport entitled “Coming Soon: What Auditors Really Think About Company Numbers.” It provides a discussion about changes to be made to the auditor’s report.
Instructions
Read the article and then answer the following questions.
CT1.7 Sylvia Ayala recently accepted a job in the production department at Johnson & Johnson. Before she starts work, she decides to review the company’s annual report to better understand its operations.
The content and organization of corporate annual reports have become fairly standardized. Excluding the public relations part of the report (pictures, products, etc.), the following are the traditional financial portions of the annual report.
The official SEC filing of the annual report is called a Form 10-K, which often omits the public relations pieces found in most standard annual reports.
Instructions
Search the Internet to find Johnson & Johnson’s 10-K report dated for the year ended January 3, 2021, to answer the following questions.
CT1.8 Marci Ling is the bookkeeper for Samco Company, Inc. Marci has been trying to get the company’s balance sheet to balance. She finally got it to balance, but she still isn’t sure that it is correct.
Samco Company, Inc. Balance Sheet For the Month Ended December 31, 2025 |
||||
Assets | Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |||
Equipment | $18,000 | Common stock | $12,000 | |
Cash | 9,000 | Accounts receivable | (6,000) | |
Supplies | 1,000 | Dividends | (2,000) | |
Accounts payable | (4,000) | Notes payable | 10,000 | |
Total assets | $24,000 | Retained earnings | 10,000 | |
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $24,000 |
Instructions
Explain to Marci Ling in a memo (a) the purpose of a balance sheet, and (b) why this balance sheet is incorrect and what she should do to correct it.
CT1.9 Rules governing the investment practices of individual certified public accountants prohibit them from investing in the stock of a company that their firm audits. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) became concerned that some accountants were violating this rule. In response to an SEC investigation, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) fired 10 people and spent $25 million educating employees about the investment rules and installing an investment tracking system.
Instructions
Answer the following questions.
CT1.10 Ethical behavior is fundamental to communications between investors and companies. However, it is difficult for company founders to control their enthusiasm in discussions related to their company, such that sometimes new companies overstate their potential for future success, either intentionally or unintentionally, in order to generate investor interest.
For example, Nikola Corporation, a pioneer in electric semi-trucks, was investigated by U.S. securities regulators because critics claimed that the company’s chairperson made false claims about the company’s progress in his efforts to make Nikola “the Tesla of semi-trucks.” Shortly after its stock began trading publicly, the company was estimated to be worth $30 billion, even though it had yet to produce its first electric truck. Similarly, Tesla’s founder and CEO, Elon Musk, has been investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission a number of times regarding the accuracy of his communications, including Tweets.
Instructions
In groups, discuss the following topics.
CT1.11 Some people are tempted to make their finances look worse to get financial aid. Companies sometimes also manage their financial numbers in order to accomplish certain goals. Earnings management is the planned timing of revenues, expenses, gains, and losses to smooth out bumps in net income. In managing earnings, companies’ actions vary from being within the range of ethical activity, to being both unethical and illegal attempts to mislead investors and creditors.
Instructions
Provide responses for each of the following questions.
CT1.12 The FASB has developed the Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification (or more simply “the Codification”). The FASB’s primary goal in developing the Codification is to provide in one place all the authoritative literature related to a particular topic. To provide easy access to the Codification, the FASB also developed the Financial Accounting Standards Board Codification Research System (CRS). CRS is an online, real-time database that provides easy access to the Codification. The Codification and the related CRS provide a topically organized structure, subdivided into topic, subtopics, sections, and paragraphs, using a numerical index system.
You may find this system useful in your present and future studies, and so we have provided an opportunity to use this online system as part of the Expand Your Critical Thinking section.
Instructions
Academic access to the FASB Codification is available through university subscriptions, obtained from the American Accounting Association. This subscription covers an unlimited number of students within a single institution. Once this access has been obtained by your school, you should log in and familiarize yourself with the resources that are accessible at the FASB Codification site.
CT1.13 Although Clif Bar & Company is not a public company, it does share its financial information with its employees as part of its open-book management approach. Further, although it does not publicly share its financial information, it does provide a different form of an annual report to external users. In this report, the company provides information regarding its sustainability efforts.
Instructions
Go to the “Who We Are” page at the Clif Bar website and then identify the company’s five aspirations.
Many people believe that there is a need for one set of international accounting standards. Here is why:
The following are the key similarities and differences between GAAP and IFRS as related to accounting fundamentals.
Similarities
Differences
1. Which of the following is not a reason why a single set of high-quality international accounting standards would be beneficial?
2. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act determines:
3. IFRS is considered to be more:
IFRS1.1 Who are the two key international players in the development of international accounting standards? Explain their role.
IFRS1.2 What is the benefit of a single set of high-quality accounting standards?
IFRS1.3 The complete annual report of Louis Vuitton, including the notes to its financial statements, is available at the company’s website.
Answer the following questions from the company’s 2020 annual report.
a. What accounting firm performed the audit of Louis Vuitton’s financial statements?
b. What is the address of the company’s corporate headquarters?
c. What is the company’s reporting currency?
Answers to IFRS Self-Test Questions
1. d2. c3. a
If you are thinking of purchasing Best Buy stock, or any stock, how can you decide what the shares are worth? If you manage Columbia Sportswear’s credit department, how should you determine whether to extend credit to a new customer? If you are a financial executive at Alphabet Inc. (Google), how do you decide whether your company is generating adequate cash to expand operations without borrowing? Your decision in each of these situations will be influenced by a variety of considerations. One of them should be your careful analysis of a company’s financial statements.
In this chapter, we take a closer look at the balance sheet and introduce some useful ways for evaluating the information provided by the financial statements. We also examine the financial reporting concepts underlying the financial statements. We begin by introducing the classified balance sheet.
Two early pioneers in providing investment information online to the masses were Tom and David Gardner, brothers who created an online investor website called The Motley Fool. The name comes from Shakespeare’s As You Like It. The fool in Shakespeare’s play was the only one who could speak unpleasant truths to kings and queens without being killed. Tom and David view themselves as 21st-century “fools,” revealing the “truths” of the stock market to the small investor, who they feel has been taken advantage of by Wall Street insiders.
The Motley Fool’s online bulletin board enables investors to exchange information and insights about companies. (Similar services are provided by TikTok, Twitter, Reddit, Facebook, and others.) Critics of these bulletin boards contend that they are simply high-tech rumor mills that cause investors to bid up stock prices to unreasonable levels. For example, the stock of PairGain Technologies jumped 32% in a single day as a result of a bogus takeover rumor on an investment bulletin board. Some observers are concerned that small investors—ironically, the very people the Gardner brothers are trying to help—will be hurt the most by misinformation and intentional scams.
Rather than getting swept away by rumors, investors must sort out the good information from the bad. One thing is certain—as information services such as The Motley Fool increase in number, gathering information will become even easier. Evaluating it will be the harder task.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES | REVIEW | PRACTICE |
---|---|---|
LO 1 Identify the sections of a classified balance sheet. |
|
DO IT! 1a Assets Section of Classified Balance Sheet 1b Balance Sheet Classifications |
LO 2 Use ratios to evaluate a company’s profitability, liquidity, and solvency. |
|
DO IT! 2 Ratio Analysis |
LO 3 Discuss financial reporting concepts. |
|
DO IT! 3 Financial Accounting Concepts and Principles |
Go to the Review and Practice section at the end of the chapter for a targeted summary and practice applications with solutions. Visit Wiley Course Resources for additional tutorials and practice opportunities. |
A balance sheet presents a snapshot of a company’s financial position at a point in time. It lists individual asset, liability, and stockholders’ equity items. To improve users’ understanding of a company’s financial position, companies often prepare what is referred to as a classified balance sheet instead.
A classified balance sheet generally contains the standard classifications listed in Illustration 2.1.
ILLUSTRATION 2.1 Standard balance sheet classifications
Assets | Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |
Current assets | Current liabilities | |
Long-term investments | Long-term liabilities | |
Property, plant, and equipment | Stockholders’ equity | |
Intangible assets |
These groupings help financial statement readers determine such things as:
Many of these groupings can be seen in the balance sheet of Franklin Corporation shown in Illustration 2.2 (see Helpful Hint). In the sections that follow, we explain each of these groupings.
Current assets are defined as follows.
For example, accounts receivable are current assets because the company will collect them and convert them to cash within one year. Supplies is a current asset because the company expects to use the supplies in operations within one year.
Some companies use a period longer than one year to classify assets and liabilities as current because they have an operating cycle longer than one year.
Except where noted, we will assume that companies use one year to determine whether an asset or liability is current or long-term.
ILLUSTRATION 2.2 Classified balance sheet
Franklin Corporation Balance Sheet October 31, 2025 |
|||||
Assets | |||||
Current assets | |||||
Cash | $6,600 | ||||
Debt investments | 2,000 | ||||
Accounts receivable | 7,000 | ||||
Notes receivable | 1,000 | ||||
Inventory | 3,000 | ||||
Supplies | 2,100 | ||||
Prepaid insurance | 400 | ||||
Total current assets | $22,100 | ||||
Long-term investments | |||||
Stock investments | 5,200 | ||||
Investment in real estate | 2,000 | 7,200 | |||
Property, plant, and equipment | |||||
Land | 10,000 | ||||
Equipment | $24,000 | ||||
Less: Accumulated depreciation— equipment | 5,000 | 19,000 | 29,000 | ||
Intangible assets | |||||
Patents | 3,100 | ||||
Total assets | $61,400 | ||||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |||||
Current liabilities | |||||
Notes payable | $11,000 | ||||
Accounts payable | 2,100 | ||||
Unearned sales revenue | 900 | ||||
Salaries and wages payable | 1,600 | ||||
Interest payable | 450 | ||||
Total current liabilities | $16,050 | ||||
Long-term liabilities | |||||
Mortgage payable | 10,000 | ||||
Notes payable | 1,300 | ||||
Total long-term liabilities | 11,300 | ||||
Total liabilities | 27,350 | ||||
Stockholders’ equity | |||||
Common stock | 14,000 | ||||
Retained earnings | 20,050 | ||||
Total stockholders’ equity | 34,050 | ||||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $61,400 | ||||
Companies list current assets in order of liquidity, that is, the order in which they expect to convert them into cash (follow this rule when doing your homework). Common types of current assets, listed in order of liquidity, are:
Why are receivables considered more liquid than inventory? Inventory must be sold before it is converted to cash (and is often sold on account), whereas receivables are converted to cash upon collection.
As explained later in the chapter, a company’s current assets are important in assessing its short-term debt-paying ability.
Long-term investments generally include the following (see Alternative Terminology).
In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported total long-term investments of $7,200 on its balance sheet.
Property, plant, and equipment is defined as follows.
In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported property, plant, and equipment of $29,000.
Notice that in Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation subtracts $5,000 in Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment from the Equipment account. Depreciation is the systematic allocation of the cost of an asset to expense over number of years (rather than expensing the full purchase price in the year of purchase). The assets that the company depreciates are reported on the balance sheet at cost less accumulated depreciation, often referred to as book value. The accumulated depreciation account shows the total amount of depreciation that the company has expensed thus far in the asset’s life.
In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported accumulated depreciation of $5,000, so the book value of the equipment is $19,000 ($24,000 – $5,000). In your homework, present each accumulated depreciation account immediately below the related plant asset, as shown in Illustration 2.2 for Franklin Corporation.
Many companies have assets that do not have physical substance and yet often are very valuable:
In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported intangible assets of $3,100.
In the liabilities and stockholders’ equity section of the balance sheet, the first grouping is current liabilities.
In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported five different types of current liabilities, for a total of $16,050.
Long-term liabilities (long-term debt) are:
Many companies report long-term debt maturing after one year as a single amount in the balance sheet and show the details of the debt in notes that accompany the financial statements. Others list the various types of long-term liabilities. In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported long-term liabilities of $11,300.
Stockholders’ equity consists of two parts: common stock and retained earnings.
In Illustration 2.2, Franklin Corporation reported common stock of $14,000 and retained earnings of $20,050.
We previously introduced the four financial statements. We discussed how these statements provide information about a company’s performance and financial position. Here, we extend this discussion by showing you specific tools that you can use to analyze financial statements in order to make a more meaningful evaluation of a company.
Ratio analysis expresses the relationship among selected items of financial statement data. A ratio expresses the mathematical relationship between one quantity and another. For analysis of the primary financial statements, we classify ratios as shown in Illustration 2.3.
ILLUSTRATION 2.3 Financial ratio classifications
A single ratio by itself is not very meaningful. Accordingly, in this and the following chapters, we will use various comparisons to shed light on company performance:
Next, we use some ratios and comparisons to analyze the financial statements of Best Buy.
Best Buy generates profits for its stockholders by selling electronics.
Illustration 2.4 shows a simplified income statement for Best Buy. From this income statement, we can see that Best Buy’s net income increased from $1,464 million to $1,541 million.
ILLUSTRATION 2.4 Best Buy’s income statement
Best Buy Co., Inc. Income Statements For the Year Ended February 1, 2020, and the Year Ended February 2, 2019 (in millions) |
||||
2020 | 2019 | |||
Revenues | ||||
Net sales and other revenue | $43,686 | $42,940 | ||
Expenses | ||||
Cost of goods sold | 33,590 | 32,918 | ||
Selling, general, and administrative expenses and other | 8,103 | 8,134 | ||
Income tax expense | 452 | 424 | ||
Total expenses | 42,145 | 41,476 | ||
Net income (loss) | $1,541 | $1,464 | ||
hhgregg was a competitor of Best Buy. hhgregg was much smaller than Best Buy. At one time, hhgregg operated 228 stores in 20 states. Then, one year it reported a net loss of $54,879,000. The next year, it filed for bankruptcy. Just because a company has a net loss does not mean it is about to go bankrupt. However, because net losses are not sustainable over the long-term, they are worthy of investigation.
To evaluate the profitability of Best Buy, we will use ratio analysis. Profitability ratios, such as earnings per share, measure the operating success of a company for a given period of time.
Earnings per share (EPS) measures the net income earned on each share of common stock (see Decision Tools). Stockholders usually think in terms of the number of shares they own or plan to buy or sell, so stating net income earned as a per share amount provides a useful perspective for determining the investment return. Advanced accounting courses present more refined techniques for calculating earnings per share.
By comparing earnings per share of a single company over time, we can evaluate its relative earnings performance from the perspective of a stockholder—that is, on a per share basis. It is very important to note that comparisons of earnings per share across companies are not meaningful because of the wide variations in the numbers of shares of outstanding stock among companies.
Illustration 2.5 shows the earnings per share calculation for Best Buy in 2020 and 2019, based on the information presented below. To simplify our calculations, we assumed that any change in the number of shares of common stock for Best Buy occurred in the middle of the year.
(in millions) | 2020 | 2019 | ||
Net income | $1,541 | $1,464 | ||
Preferred dividends | –0– | –0– | ||
Shares of common stock outstanding at beginning of year | 266 | 283 | ||
Shares of common stock outstanding at end of year | 256 | 266 |
ILLUSTRATION 2.5 Best Buy’s earnings per share
($ and shares in millions) | 2020 | 2019 | ||||
Earnings per share |
Best Buy’s earnings per share increased from $5.33 to $5.90. This increase occurred because its net income increased and its outstanding shares decreased.
You can learn a lot about a company’s financial health by also evaluating the relationship between its various assets and liabilities. Illustration 2.6 provides a simplified balance sheet for Best Buy.
ILLUSTRATION 2.6 Best Buy’s balance sheet
Best Buy Co., Inc. Balance Sheets (in millions) |
||||||
February 1, 2020 | February 3, 2019 | |||||
Assets | ||||||
Current assets | ||||||
Cash and cash equivalents | $2,229 | $1,980 | ||||
Receivables | 1,149 | 1,015 | ||||
Merchandise inventories | 5,174 | 5,409 | ||||
Other current assets | 305 | 466 | ||||
Total current assets | 8,857 | 8,870 | ||||
Property and equipment | 9,228 | 9,200 | ||||
Less: Accumulated depreciation | 6,900 | 6,690 | ||||
Net property and equipment | 2,328 | 2,510 | ||||
Other assets | 4,406 | 1,521 | ||||
Total assets | $15,591 | $12,901 | ||||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||||
Current liabilities | ||||||
Accounts payable | $ 5,288 | $ 5,257 | ||||
Unredeemed gift card liabilities | 281 | 290 | ||||
Accrued compensation payable | 410 | 482 | ||||
Other current liabilities | 2,081 | 1,484 | ||||
Total current liabilities | 8,060 | 7,513 | ||||
Long-term liabilities | ||||||
Long-term debt | 1,257 | 1,332 | ||||
Other long-term liabilities | 2,795 | 750 | ||||
Total long-term liabilities | 4,052 | 2,082 | ||||
Total liabilities | 12,112 | 9,595 | ||||
Stockholders’ equity | ||||||
Common stock | 26 | 27 | ||||
Retained earnings and other | 3,453 | 3,279 | ||||
Total stockholders’ equity | 3,479 | 3,306 | ||||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $15,591 | $12,901 | ||||
Suppose you are a banker at CitiGroup considering lending money to Best Buy, or you are a sales manager at Apple interested in selling computers and cell phones to Best Buy on credit.
Working Capital One measure of liquidity is working capital, which is the difference between the amounts of current assets and current liabilities (see Illustration 2.7).
ILLUSTRATION 2.7 Working capital
Best Buy had working capital in 2020 of $797 million ($8,857 million − $8,060 million).
Current Ratio Liquidity ratios measure the short-term ability of the company to pay its maturing obligations and to meet unexpected needs for cash. One liquidity ratio is the current ratio, computed as current assets divided by current liabilities (see Decision Tools).
Illustration 2.8 shows the 2020 and 2019 current ratios for Best Buy.
What does the ratio actually mean? Best Buy’s 2020 current ratio of 1.10:1 means that for every dollar of current liabilities, Best Buy has $1.10 of current assets. Best Buy’s current ratio decreased in 2020, which suggests its liquidity declined.
One potential weakness of the current ratio is that it does not take into account the composition of the current assets.
ILLUSTRATION 2.8 Current ratio
Best Buy ($ in millions) |
||||
2020 | 2019 | |||
1.18:1 |
For example, suppose a company’s cash balance declined while its merchandise inventory increased substantially. If inventory increased because the company is having difficulty selling its products, then the current ratio might not fully reflect the reduction in the company’s liquidity (see Ethics Note).
Now suppose that instead of being a short-term creditor, you are interested in either buying Best Buy’s stock or extending the company a long-term loan.
Debt to Assets Ratio The debt to assets ratio is one measure of solvency. It is calculated by dividing total liabilities (both current and long-term) by total assets. It measures the percentage of total financing provided by creditors rather than stockholders (see Helpful Hint).
The higher the percentage of total liabilities (debt) to total assets, the greater the risk that the company may be unable to pay its debts as they come due. Illustration 2.9 shows the debt to assets ratios for Best Buy.
ILLUSTRATION 2.9 Debt to assets ratio
Best Buy ($ in millions) |
||||
2020 | 2019 | |||
74% |
The 2020 ratio of 78% means that every dollar of assets was financed by 78 cents of debt. The higher the ratio, the more reliant the company is on debt financing.
The adequacy of this ratio is often judged in light of the company’s earnings. At one time, Best Buy and its competitor hhgregg relied on debt financing in a roughly equal fashion, but hhgregg went bankrupt. This is largely explained by the fact that hhgregg’s income was insufficient to pay its debt obligations as they came due. Generally, companies with relatively stable earnings, such as public utilities, can support higher debt to assets ratios than can cyclical companies with widely fluctuating earnings, such as many high-tech companies. In later chapters, you will learn additional ways to evaluate solvency.
You have learned about the four financial statements and some basic ways to interpret those statements. In this section, we discuss concepts that underlie these financial statements. It would be unwise to make business decisions based on financial statements without understanding the implications of these concepts.
How does Best Buy decide on the type of financial information to disclose? What format should it use? How should it measure assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses? Accounting professionals at Best Buy and all other U.S. companies get guidance from a set of accounting standards that have authoritative support, referred to as generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
Standard-setting bodies, in consultation with the accounting profession and the business community, determine these accounting standards.
ILLUSTRATION 2.10 World view of the standard-setting environment
The FASB and IASB use a conceptual framework to serve as the basis for future accounting standards. The framework begins by stating that the primary objective of financial reporting is to provide financial information that is useful to investors and creditors for making decisions about providing capital. According to the FASB, useful information should possess two fundamental qualities, relevance and faithful representation, as shown in Illustration 2.11.
ILLUSTRATION 2.11 Fundamental qualities of useful information
In addition to the two fundamental qualities of relevance and faithful representation, the FASB also describes a number of enhancing qualities of useful information. These include comparability, consistency, verifiability, timeliness, and understandability, as shown in Illustration 2.12.
ILLUSTRATION 2.12 Enhancing qualities of useful information
To develop accounting standards, the FASB relies on some key assumptions, as shown in Illustration 2.13 (see Ethics Note). These include assumptions about the monetary unit, economic entity, periodicity, and going concern.
ILLUSTRATION 2.13 Key assumptions in financial reporting
GAAP generally uses one of two measurement principles, the historical cost principle or the fair value principle. Selection of which principle to follow generally relates to trade-offs between relevance and faithful representation.
Historical Cost Principle The historical cost principle (or cost principle) dictates that companies record assets at their cost. This is true not only at the time the asset is purchased but also over the time the asset is held. For example, if land that was purchased for $30,000 increases in value to $40,000, it continues to be reported at $30,000.
Fair Value Principle The fair value principle indicates that assets and liabilities should be reported at fair value (the price that would be received if an asset was sold or the amount that would be required to be paid to settle a liability). Fair value information may be more useful than historical cost for certain types of assets and liabilities. For example, certain investment securities are reported at fair value because market price information is often readily available for these types of assets.
In choosing between cost and fair value, the FASB uses two qualities that make accounting information useful for decision-making—relevance and faithful representation.
The full disclosure principle requires that companies disclose sufficient details regarding circumstances and events that would make a difference to financial statement users. If an important item cannot reasonably be reported directly in one of the four types of financial statements, then it should be discussed in notes that accompany the statements.
Providing information is costly. In deciding whether companies should be required to provide a certain type of information, accounting standard-setters consider the cost constraint. It weighs the cost that companies will incur to provide the information against the benefit that financial statement users will gain from having the information available.
Illustration 2.14 summarizes aspects of the conceptual framework.
ILLUSTRATION 2.14 Summary of conceptual framework
Objective of Financial Reporting | |||||
To provide financial information that is useful to existing and potential investors and creditors in making decisions about providing resources to the company. | |||||
Qualitative Characteristics of Useful Financial Information | |||||
Fundamental Qualitative Characteristics | Enhancing Qualitative Characteristics | ||||
1. Relevance
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2. Faithful representation
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Assumptions | Principles | ||||
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Cost Constraint |
In a classified balance sheet, companies classify assets as current assets; long-term investments; property, plant, and equipment; and intangibles. They classify liabilities as either current or long-term. A stockholders’ equity section shows common stock and retained earnings.
Ratio analysis expresses the relationship among selected items of financial statement data. Profitability ratios, such as earnings per share (EPS), measure aspects of the operating success of a company for a given period of time.
Liquidity ratios, such as the current ratio, measure the short-term ability of a company to pay its maturing obligations and to meet unexpected needs for cash. Solvency ratios, such as the debt to assets ratio, measure the ability of a company to survive over a long period.
Generally accepted accounting principles are a set of rules and practices recognized as a general guide for financial reporting purposes. The basic objective of financial reporting is to provide information that is useful for decision-making.
To be judged useful, information should have the primary characteristics of relevance and faithful representation. In addition, useful information is comparable, consistent, verifiable, timely, and understandable.
The monetary unit assumption requires that companies include in the accounting records only transaction data that can be expressed in terms of money. The economic entity assumption states that economic events can be identified with a particular unit of accountability. The periodicity assumption states that the economic life of a business can be divided into artificial time periods and that meaningful accounting reports can be prepared for each period. The going concern assumption states that the company will continue in operation long enough to carry out its existing objectives and commitments.
The historical cost principle states that companies should record assets at their cost. The fair value principle indicates that assets and liabilities should be reported at fair value. The full disclosure principle requires that companies disclose sufficient details regarding circumstances and events that would make a difference to financial statement users.
The cost constraint weighs the cost that companies incur to provide a type of information against its benefit to financial statement users.
Decision Checkpoints | Info Needed for Decision | Tool to Use for Decision | How to Evaluate Results |
How does the company’s earnings performance compare with that of previous years? | Net income available to common stockholders and weighted-average common shares outstanding | A higher measure suggests improved performance, although the number is subject to manipulation. Values should not be compared across companies. | |
Can the company meet its near-term obligations? | Current assets and current liabilities | Higher ratio suggests favorable liquidity. | |
Can the company meet its long-term obligations? | Total liabilities and total assets | Lower value suggests favorable solvency. |
1. (LO 1) In a classified balance sheet, assets are usually classified as:
d. Assets are classified as current assets; long-term investments; property, plant and equipment; and intangible assets. The other choices are incorrect because (a) long-term assets includes long-term investments; property, plant, and equipment; and intangible assets; (b) common stock refers to the equity of the firm and is not an asset; and (c) while tangible assets describes property, plant, and equipment, it is better to use the more common terminology of property, plant, and equipment.
2. (LO 1) Current assets are listed:
a. Current assets should be listed by order of expected conversion to cash (liquidity), not (b) by importance, (c) by longevity, or (d) alphabetically.
3. (LO 1) The correct order of presentation in a classified balance sheet for the following current assets is:
c. The correct order of presentation for current assets is cash, accounts receivable, inventory, and then prepaid insurance. The other choices are therefore incorrect.
4. (LO 1) A company has purchased a tract of land. It expects to build a production plant on the land in approximately 5 years. During the 5 years before construction, the land will be idle. The land should be reported as:
c. Land or buildings that are currently not used in operations are considered to be long-term investments. The other choices are incorrect because (a) this classification is for property, plant, and equipment used in operations; (b) land is never expensed; and (d) intangible assets have no physical existence and are used in the production of income.
5. (LO 1) The balance in retained earnings is not affected by:
c. Issuance of common stock has no impact on retained earnings. The other choices are incorrect because (a) net income increases retained earnings, (b) net loss decreases retained earnings, and (d) dividends decrease retained earnings.
6. (LO 2) Which is an indicator of profitability?
b. Earnings per share is a measure of profitability. The other choices are incorrect because (a) the current ratio is a measure of liquidity, (c) the debt to assets ratio is a measure of solvency, and (d) total assets is a measure of size.
7. (LO 2) For 2025, Spanos Corporation reported net income $26,000, net sales $400,000, and weighted-average common shares outstanding 4,000. There were preferred dividends of $2,000. What was the 2025 earnings per share?
a. Earnings per share = Net income ($26,000) less Preferred dividends ($2,000) divided by Weighted-average common shares outstanding (4,000) = $6.00 per share, not (b) $6.50, (c) $99.50, or (d) $100.00.
8. (LO 2) Which of these measures is an evaluation of a company’s ability to pay current liabilities?
b. The current ratio measures liquidity. Higher current ratios indicate higher liquidity. The other choices are incorrect because (a) earnings per share is a measure of a firm’s profitability, not its ability to pay its current liabilities; (c) one of these answers is incorrect; and (d) there is a correct answer.
9. (LO 2) The following ratios are available for Reilly Inc. and O’Hare Inc.
Current Ratio | Debt to Assets Ratio | Earnings per Share | ||||
Reilly Inc. | 2:1 | 75% | $3.50 | |||
O’Hare Inc. | 1.5:1 | 40% | $2.75 |
Compared to O’Hare Inc., Reilly Inc. has:
d. Reilly Inc. has higher liquidity as it has a higher current ratio, and lower solvency due to its higher debt to assets ratio. However, profitability cannot be compared across companies using earnings per share because of the wide variations in the number of shares of common stock of different companies. The other choices are therefore incorrect.
10. (LO 2) Companies that can support higher debt to assets ratios are characterized by having:
a. In order to meet debt payments as they come due, a company must have a stable earnings stream. The other choices are incorrect as they do not address the ability to meet debt payments as they come due.
11. (LO 3) Generally accepted accounting principles are:
a. All U.S. companies get guidance from a set of rules and practices that have authoritative support, referred to as generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). Standard-setting bodies, in consultation with the accounting profession and the business community, determine these accounting standards. The other choices are incorrect because GAAP is (b) not established by the Internal Revenue Service, (c) not intended to provide guidance in resolving ethical dilemmas, or (d) created by people and can evolve over time, unlike laws of nature, such as those in physics and chemistry.
12. (LO 3) What organization issues U.S. accounting standards?
a. The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) is the organization that issues U.S. accounting standards, not the (b) International Accounting Standards Committee or (c) International Auditing Standards Committee. Choice (d) is wrong as there is a correct answer.
13. (LO 3) What is the primary criterion by which accounting information can be judged?
c. Usefulness for decision-making is the primary criterion by which accounting information can be judged. The other choices are incorrect because (a) consistency, (b) predictive value, and (d) comparability all help to make accounting information more useful but are not the primary criterion by which accounting information is judged.
14. (LO 3) Neutrality is an ingredient of:
Faithful Representation | Relevance | |
a. | Yes | Yes |
b. | No | No |
c. | Yes | No |
d. | No | Yes |
c. Neutrality is an ingredient of faithful representation but not relevance. The other choices are therefore incorrect.
15. (LO 3) The characteristic of information that evaluates whether omitting or misstating an item could influence the decision of a financial statement user.
b. Materiality evaluates whether omitting or misstating an item could influence the decision of a financial statement user, not (a) comparability, (c) cost, or (d) consistency.
Prepare the current assets section of a balance sheet.
1. (LO 1) A list of financial statement items for Miguel Company includes the following: Accounts Receivable $25,000, Prepaid Insurance $7,000, Cash $8,000, Supplies $11,000, and Stock Investments (short-term) $14,000. Prepare the current assets section of the balance sheet, listing the accounts in proper sequence.
Miguel Company Balance Sheet (partial) |
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Current assets | ||||
Cash | $ 8,000 | |||
Stock investments | 14,000 | |||
Accounts receivable | 25,000 | |||
Supplies | 11,000 | |||
Prepaid insurance | 7,000 | |||
Total current assets | $65,000 |
Classify accounts on balance sheet.
2. (LO 1) The following are the major balance sheet classifications:
Current assets (CA) | Current liabilities (CL) |
Long-term investments (LTI) | Long-term liabilities (LTL) |
Property, plant, and equipment (PPE) | Common stock (CS) |
Intangible assets (IA) | Retained earnings (RE) |
Match each of the following accounts to its proper balance sheet classification.
_____Prepaid insurance | _____Unearned service revenue |
_____Notes payable (short-term) | _____Debt investments (short-term) |
_____Equipment | _____Accumulated depreciation—equipment |
_____Mortgage payable | _____Stock investments (long-term) |
_____Copyrights | _____Salaries and wages payable |
CA Prepaid insurance | CL Unearned service revenue |
CL Notes payable (short-term) | CA Debt investments (short-term) |
PPE Equipment | PPE Accumulated depreciation—equipment |
LTL Mortgage payable | LTI Stock investments (long-term) |
IA Copyrights | CL Salaries and wages payable |
Calculate liquidity and solvency ratios.
3. (LO 2) Maison Inc. reported the following selected information at December 31.
2025 | |
Total current assets | $ 45,584 |
Total assets | 278,000 |
Total current liabilities | 32,560 |
Total liabilities | 189,040 |
Calculate (a) the current ratio and (b) the debt to assets ratio for December 31, 2025.
Prepare assets section of a classified balance sheet.
1. (LO 1) Suppose the following information (in thousands of dollars) is available for H. J. Heinz Company—famous for ketchup and other fine food products—for the year ended April 30, 2025.
Prepaid insurance | $ 168,182 | Buildings | $4,344,269 |
Land | 56,007 | Cash | 617,687 |
Goodwill | 4,411,521 | Accounts receivable | 1,161,481 |
Trademarks | 723,243 | Accumulated depreciation—buildings | 2,295,563 |
Inventory | 1,378,216 |
Instructions
Prepare the assets section of a classified balance sheet, listing the items in proper sequence and including a statement heading.
H. J. Heinz Company Balance Sheet (partial) April 30, 2025 (in thousands) |
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Assets | |||||
Current assets | |||||
Cash | $617,687 | ||||
Accounts receivable | 1,161,481 | ||||
Inventory | 1,378,216 | ||||
Prepaid insurance | 168,182 | ||||
Total current assets | $ 3,325,566 | ||||
Property, plant, and equipment | |||||
Land | 56,007 | ||||
Buildings | $4,344,269 | ||||
Less: Accumulated depr.—buildings | 2,295,563 | 2,048,706 | 2,104,713 | ||
Intangible assets | |||||
Goodwill | 4,411,521 | ||||
Trademarks | 723,243 | 5,134,764 | |||
Total assets | $10,565,043 |
Compute and interpret various ratios.
2. (LO 2) Suppose the following data were taken from the 2025 and 2024 financial statements of American Eagle Outfitters. (All dollars are in thousands.)
2025 | 2024 | |
Current assets | $1,020,834 | $1,189,108 |
Total assets | 1,867,680 | 1,979,558 |
Current liabilities | 376,178 | 464,618 |
Total liabilities | 527,216 | 562,246 |
Net income | 400,019 | 387,359 |
Dividends paid on common stock | 80,796 | 61,521 |
Weighted-average common shares outstanding | 216,119 | 222,662 |
Instructions
Perform each of the following.
2025 | 2024 | |||||
a. | Current ratio | |||||
b. | Earning per share | |||||
c. | Debt to assets ratio | |||||
d. | American Eagle’s debt to assets ratio decreased slightly from 28.4% for 2024 to 28.2% for 2025, indicating a very small increase in solvency for 2025. |
Prepare financial statements.
(LO 1) Listed here are items taken from the income statement and balance sheet of Bargain Electronics, Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2025. Certain items have been combined for simplification. (Amounts are given in thousands.)
Notes payable (due in 3 years) | $50.5 |
Cash | 141.1 |
Salaries and wages expense | 2,933.6 |
Common stock | 454.9 |
Accounts payable | 922.2 |
Accounts receivable | 723.3 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 110.0 |
Equipment | 1,031.0 |
Cost of goods sold | 9,501.4 |
Income taxes payable | 7.2 |
Interest expense | 1.5 |
Mortgage payable | 451.5 |
Retained earnings (December 31, 2025) | 1,336.3 |
Inventory | 1,636.5 |
Sales revenue | 12,456.9 |
Debt investments (short-term) | 382.6 |
Income tax expense | 30.5 |
Goodwill | 202.7 |
Notes payable (due in 6 months) | 784.6 |
Instructions
Prepare an income statement and a classified balance sheet using the items listed. Do not use any item more than once.
Bargain Electronics, Inc. Income Statement For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 (in thousands) |
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Revenues | ||||
Sales revenue | $12,456.9 | |||
Expenses | ||||
Cost of goods sold | $9,501.4 | |||
Salaries and wages expense | 2,933.6 | |||
Interest expense | 1.5 | |||
Income tax expense | 30.5 | |||
Total expenses | 12,467.0 | |||
Net loss | $(10.1) |
Bargain Electronics, Inc. Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 (in thousands) |
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Assets | ||||
Current assets | ||||
Cash | $141.1 | |||
Debt investments | 382.6 | |||
Accounts receivable | 723.3 | |||
Inventory | 1,636.5 | |||
Total current assets | $2,883.5 | |||
Property, plant and equipment | ||||
Equipment | 1,031.0 | |||
Less: Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 110.0 | 921.0 | ||
Intangible assets | ||||
Goodwill | 202.7 | |||
Total assets | $4,007.2 | |||
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||
Current liabilities | ||||
Notes payable | $784.6 | |||
Accounts payable | 922.2 | |||
Income taxes payable | 7.2 | |||
Total current liabilities | $1,714.0 | |||
Long-term liabilities | ||||
Mortgage payable | 451.5 | |||
Notes payable | 50.5 | 502.0 | ||
Total liabilities | 2,216.0 | |||
Stockholders’ equity | ||||
Common stock | 454.9 | |||
Retained earnings | 1,336.3 | |||
Total stockholders’ equity | 1,791.2 | |||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $4,007.2 |
1. What is meant by the term operating cycle?
2. Define current assets. What basis is used for ordering individual items within the current assets section?
3. Distinguish between long-term investments and property, plant, and equipment.
4. How do current liabilities differ from long-term liabilities?
5. Identify the two parts of stockholders’ equity in a corporation and indicate the purpose of each.
6.
7. Name ratios useful in assessing (a) liquidity, (b) solvency, and (c) profitability.
8. Tom Dawes, the founder of Footwear Inc., needs to raise $500,000 to expand his company’s operations. He has been told that raising the money through debt will increase the riskiness of his company much more than issuing stock. He doesn’t understand why this is true. Explain it to him.
9. What do these classes of ratios measure?
10. Holding all other factors constant, indicate whether each of the following signals generally good or bad news about a company.
11. Which ratio or ratios from this chapter do you think should be of greatest interest to:
12.
13.
14. Merle Hawkins, the president of Pathway Company, is pleased. Pathway substantially increased its net income in 2025 while keeping its unit inventory relatively the same. Jon Dietz, chief accountant, cautions Merle, however. Dietz says that since Pathway changed its method of inventory valuation, there is a consistency problem and it is difficult to determine whether Pathway is better off. Is Dietz correct? Why or why not?
15. What is the distinction between comparability and consistency?
16. Describe the constraint inherent in the presentation of accounting information.
17. Your roommate believes that accounting standards are uniform throughout the world. Is your roommate correct? Explain.
18. Wanda Roberts is president of Best Texts. She has no accounting background. Wanda cannot understand why fair value is not used as the basis for all accounting measurement and reporting. Discuss.
19. What is the economic entity assumption? Give an example of its violation.
20. What was Apple’s largest current asset, largest current liability, and largest item under “Assets” at September 26, 2020?
Classify accounts on balance sheet.
BE2.1 (LO 1), K The following are the major balance sheet classifications:
Current assets (CA) | Current liabilities (CL) |
Long-term investments (LTI) | Long-term liabilities (LTL) |
Property, plant, and equipment (PPE) | Common stock (CS) |
Intangible assets (IA) | Retained earnings (RE) |
Match each of the following accounts to its proper balance sheet classification.
_____Accounts payable | _____Buildings |
_____Accounts receivable | _____Cash |
_____Accumulated depreciation | _____Goodwill |
_____Income taxes payable | _____Inventory |
_____Investment in long-term bonds | _____Patents |
_____Land | _____Supplies |
Identify the order of asset classifications.
BE2.2 (LO 1), K Place a number, 1 through 7, in front of each of the following balance sheet categories to designate the order in which they are to be presented in a classified balance sheet.
_____Long-term investments | _____Current assets |
_____Current liabilities | _____Long-term liabilities |
_____Stockholders’ equity | _____Property, plant, and equipment |
_____Intangible assets |
Prepare the current assets section of a balance sheet.
BE2.3 (LO 1), AP A list of financial statement items for Chin Company includes the following: accounts receivable $14,000, prepaid insurance $2,600, cash $10,400, supplies $3,800, and debt investments (short-term) $8,200. Prepare the current assets section of the balance sheet listing the items in the proper sequence.
Compute earnings per share.
BE2.4 (LO 2), AP The following information (in millions of dollars) is available for L Brands for a recent year: sales revenue $9,043, net income $220, preferred dividend $0, and weighted-average common shares outstanding 333 million. Compute the earnings per share for L Brands.
Calculate liquidity ratios.
BE2.5 (LO 2), AP These selected condensed data are taken from a recent balance sheet of Bob Evans Farms (in millions of dollars).
Cash | $29.3 |
Accounts receivable | 20.5 |
Inventory | 28.7 |
Other current assets | 24.0 |
Total current assets | $102.5 |
Total current liabilities | $201.2 |
Compute working capital and the current ratio.
Calculate liquidity and solvency ratios.
BE2.6 (LO 2), AP Ross Music Inc. reported the following selected information at March 31.
2025 | |
Total current assets | $262,787 |
Total assets | 439,832 |
Total current liabilities | 293,625 |
Total liabilities | 376,002 |
Calculate (a) the current ratio and (b) the debt to assets ratio for March 31, 2025.
Recognize generally accepted accounting principles.
BE2.7 (LO 3), K Indicate whether each statement is true or false. If false, indicate how to correct the statement.
Identify characteristics of useful information.
BE2.8 (LO 3), K The accompanying chart shows the qualitative characteristics of useful accounting information. Fill in the blanks.
Identify characteristics of useful information.
BE2.9 (LO 3), K Given the characteristics of useful accounting information, complete each of the following statements.
Identify characteristics of useful information.
BE2.10 (LO 3), K Here are some qualitative characteristics of useful accounting information:
Match each qualitative characteristic to one of the following statements.
Define full disclosure principle.
BE2.11 (LO 3), K The full disclosure principle dictates that:
Prepare assets section of balance sheet.
DO IT! 2.1a (LO 1), AP Mylar Corporation has collected the following information related to its December 31, 2025, balance sheet.
Accounts receivable | $22,000 | Equipment | $180,000 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 50,000 | Inventory | 58,000 |
Cash | 13,000 | Supplies | 7,000 |
Stock investments (long-term) | 1,900 | Goodwill | 4,100 |
Prepare the assets section of Mylar Corporation’s balance sheet.
Classify financial statement items by balance sheet classification.
DO IT! 2.1b (LO 1), AP The following financial statement items were taken from the financial statements of Gomez Corp.
____Trademarks | ____Inventory |
____Notes payable (current) | ____Accumulated depreciation |
____Interest revenue | ____Land |
____Income taxes payable | ____Common stock |
____Debt investments (long-term) | ____Advertising expense |
____Unearned sales revenue | ____Mortgage payable (due in 3 years) |
Match each of the financial statement items to its proper balance sheet classification. (See E2.1 for a list of the balance sheet classifications.) If the item would not appear on a balance sheet, use “NA.”
Compute ratios and analyze.
DO IT! 2.2 (LO 2), AP The following information is available for Nguoi Corporation.
2025 | 2024 | |
Current assets | $ 54,000 | $ 36,000 |
Total assets | 240,000 | 205,000 |
Current liabilities | 22,000 | 30,000 |
Total liabilities | 72,000 | 100,000 |
Net income | 80,000 | 40,000 |
Preferred dividends | 6,000 | 6,000 |
Common dividends | 3,000 | 1,500 |
Common shares outstanding at beginning of year | 40,000 | 30,000 |
Common shares outstanding at end of year | 75,000 | 40,000 |
Identify financial accounting concepts and principles.
DO IT! 2.3 (LO 3), K The following characteristics, assumptions, principles, and constraint guide the FASB when it creates accounting standards.
Relevance | Periodicity assumption |
Faithful representation | Going concern assumption |
Comparability | Historical cost principle |
Consistency | Full disclosure principle |
Monetary unit assumption | Materiality |
Economic entity assumption | Cost constraint |
Match each item above with a description below.
Classify accounts on balance sheet.
E2.1 (LO 1), AP The following are the major balance sheet classifications.
Current assets (CA) | Current liabilities (CL) |
Long-term investments (LTI) | Long-term liabilities (LTL) |
Property, plant, and equipment (PPE) | Stockholders’ equity (SE) |
Intangible assets (IA) |
Instructions
Classify each of the following financial statement items taken from Ming Corporation’s balance sheet.
____ Accounts payable | ____ Income taxes payable |
____ Accounts receivable | ____ Inventory |
____ Accumulated depreciation—equipment | ____ Stock investments (to be sold in 7 months) |
____ Land | |
____ Buildings | ____ Mortgage payable |
____ Cash | ____ Supplies |
____ Interest payable | ____ Equipment |
____ Goodwill | ____ Prepaid rent |
Classify financial statement items by balance sheet classification.
E2.2 (LO 1), AP The major balance sheet classifications are listed in E2.1.
Instructions
Classify each of the following financial statement items based upon the major balance sheet classifications listed in E2.1.
____ Prepaid advertising | ____ Patents |
____ Equipment | ____ Bonds payable |
____ Trademarks | ____ Common stock |
____ Salaries and wages payable | ____ Accumulated depreciation—equipment |
____ Income taxes payable | |
____ Retained earnings | ____ Unearned sales revenue |
____ Accounts receivable | ____ Inventory |
____ Land (held for future use) |
Classify items as current or noncurrent, and prepare assets section of balance sheet.
E2.3 (LO 1), AP Suppose the following items were taken from the December 31, 2025, assets section of the Boeing Company balance sheet. (All dollars are in millions.)
Inventory | $16,933 | Patents | $12,528 |
Notes receivable—due after December 31, 2026 | 5,466 | Buildings | 21,579 |
Cash | 9,215 | ||
Notes receivable—due before December 31, 2026 | 368 | Accounts receivable | 5,785 |
Debt investments (short-term) | 2,008 | ||
Accumulated depreciation—buildings | 12,795 |
Instructions
Prepare the assets section of a classified balance sheet, listing the current assets in order of their liquidity.
Prepare assets section of a classified balance sheet.
E2.4 (LO 1), AP Suppose the following information (in thousands of dollars) is available for H. J. Heinz Company—famous for ketchup and other fine food products—at April 30, 2025.
Prepaid insurance | $ 125,765 | Buildings | $4,033,369 |
Land | 76,193 | Cash | 373,145 |
Goodwill | 3,982,954 | Accounts receivable | 1,171,797 |
Trademarks | 757,907 | Accumulated depreciation—buildings | 2,131,260 |
Inventory | 1,237,613 |
Instructions
Prepare the assets section of a classified balance sheet, listing the items in proper sequence and including a statement heading.
Prepare a classified balance sheet.
E2.5 (LO 1), AP These items are taken from the financial statements of Longhorn Co. at December 31, 2025.
Buildings | $105,800 |
Accounts receivable | 12,600 |
Prepaid insurance | 3,200 |
Cash | 11,840 |
Equipment | 82,400 |
Land | 61,200 |
Insurance expense | 780 |
Depreciation expense | 5,300 |
Interest expense | 2,600 |
Common stock | 60,000 |
Retained earnings (January 1, 2025) | 40,000 |
Accumulated depreciation—buildings | 45,600 |
Accounts payable | 9,500 |
Notes payable | 93,600 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 18,720 |
Interest payable | 3,600 |
Service revenue | 14,700 |
Instructions
Prepare a classified balance sheet. Assume that $13,600 of the note payable will be paid in 2026.
Prepare a classified balance sheet.
E2.6 (LO 1), AP The following items are taken from the financial statements of Carmen Co. at December 31, 2025.
Land | $195,600 |
Accounts receivable | 21,700 |
Supplies | 9,200 |
Cash | 11,840 |
Equipment | 82,400 |
Buildings | 261,200 |
Land improvements | 45,780 |
Notes receivable (due in 2026) | 5,300 |
Accumulated depreciation—land improvements | 12,600 |
Common stock | 75,000 |
Retained earnings (December 31, 2025) | 495,000 |
Accumulated depreciation—buildings | 32,600 |
Accounts payable | 9,500 |
Mortgage payable | 93,600 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 18,720 |
Interest payable | 3,600 |
Income taxes payable | 14,700 |
Patents | 46,700 |
Investments in stock (long-term) | 71,500 |
Debt investments (short-term) | 4,100 |
Instructions
Prepare a classified balance sheet. Assume that $9,100 of the mortgage payable will be paid in 2026.
Prepare a classified balance sheet.
E2.7 (LO 1), AP Suppose the following items were taken from the 2025 financial statements of Texas Instruments, Inc. (All dollars are in millions.)
Common stock | $2,826 | Accumulated depreciation—equipment | $3,547 |
Prepaid rent | 164 | Accounts payable | 1,459 |
Equipment | 6,705 | Patents | 2,210 |
Stock investments (long-term) | 637 | Notes payable (long-term) | 810 |
Debt investments (short-term) | 1,743 | Retained earnings | 6,896 |
Income taxes payable | 128 | Accounts receivable | 1,823 |
Cash | 1,182 | Inventory | 1,202 |
Instructions
Prepare a classified balance sheet in good form as of December 31, 2025.
Prepare liabilities and stockholders’ equity sections.
E2.8 (LO 1), AP Randal Inc.’s balance sheet, dated October 28, 2025, includes the following liabilities and stockholders’ equity items (in millions).
Accounts payable | $431.6 | Long-term debt | $1,209.8 |
Common stock | 642.4 | Other long-term liabilities | 122.6 |
Current portion of long-term debt | 254.9 | Retained earnings | 979.8 |
Income taxes payable | 14.8 | Unearned sales revenue | 16.0 |
Instructions
Prepare the liabilities and stockholders’ equity sections of the balance sheet.
Prepare a balance sheet.
E2.9 (LO 1), AP The financial statements of Summit Ltd. includes the following items at December 31, 2025.
Accounts payable | $ 21,050 | Income tax expense | $ 5,200 |
Accounts receivable | 20,780 | Interest expense | 4,550 |
Accumulated depreciation—buildings | 50,600 | Interest payable | 2,100 |
Land | 194,000 | ||
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 21,470 | Long-term investments | 28,970 |
Mortgage payable | 104,000 | ||
Buildings | 133,800 | Operating expenses | 158,680 |
Cash | 24,040 | Prepaid insurance | 1,420 |
Common stock | 140,000 | Retained earnings, January 1 | 116,520 |
Equipment | 66,100 | Service revenue | 183,040 |
Supplies | 1,240 |
Instructions
Prepare financial statements.
E2.10 (LO 1), AP The following financial statement items are for Batra Corporation at year-end, July 31, 2025.
Operating expenses | $ 32,500 | Interest payable | $ 1,000 |
Salaries and wages expense | 44,700 | Supplies expense | 900 |
Unearned sales revenue | 12,000 | Dividends declared | 12,000 |
Utilities expense | 2,600 | Depreciation expense | 3,000 |
Equipment | 62,900 | Retained earnings, August 1, 2024 | 17,940 |
Accounts payable | 4,220 | Rent expense | 10,800 |
Service revenue | 113,600 | Income tax expense | 5,000 |
Rent revenue | 18,500 | Supplies | 1,500 |
Common stock | 25,000 | Debt investments (short-term) | 20,000 |
Cash | 5,060 | Bank loan payable (due December 31, 2025) | 21,800 |
Accounts receivable | 17,100 | ||
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 6,000 | Interest expense | 2,000 |
Instructions
Prepare an income statement, retained earnings statement, and balance sheet for the year.
Compute and interpret profitability ratio.
E2.11 (LO 2), AP Suppose the following information is available for Callaway Golf Company for the years 2025 and 2024. (Dollars are in thousands, except share information.)
2025 | 2024 | |
Net sales | $ 1,117,204 | $ 1,124,591 |
Net income (loss) | 66,176 | 54,587 |
Total assets | 855,338 | 838,078 |
Share information | ||
Common shares outstanding at year-end | 64,507,000 | 66,282,000 |
Preferred dividends | –0– | –0– |
There were 73,139,000 shares of common stock outstanding at the end of 2023.
Instructions
Prepare financial statements.
E2.12 (LO 1, 2), AP These financial statement items are for Fairview Corporation at year-end, July 31, 2025.
Salaries and wages payable | $ 2,080 |
Salaries and wages expense | 57,500 |
Supplies expense | 15,600 |
Equipment | 18,500 |
Accounts payable | 4,100 |
Service revenue | 66,100 |
Rent revenue | 8,500 |
Notes payable (due in 2028) | 1,800 |
Common stock | 16,000 |
Cash | 29,200 |
Accounts receivable | 9,780 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 6,000 |
Dividends | 4,000 |
Depreciation expense | 4,000 |
Retained earnings (beginning of the year) | 34,000 |
Instructions
Compute liquidity ratios and compare results.
E2.13 (LO 2), AP Nordstrom, Inc. operates department stores in numerous states. Selected financial statement data (in millions of dollars) for a recent year follow.
Beginning of Year | End of Year | |
Cash and cash equivalents | $358 | $72 |
Receivables (net) | 1,788 | 1,942 |
Merchandise inventory | 956 | 900 |
Other current assets | 259 | 303 |
Total current assets | $3,361 | $3,217 |
Total current liabilities | $1,635 | $1,601 |
Instructions
Compute liquidity measures and discuss findings.
E2.14 (LO 2), AP The chief financial officer (CFO) of Myeneke Corporation requested that the accounting department prepare a preliminary balance sheet on December 30, 2025, so that the CFO could get an idea of how the company stood. He knows that certain debt agreements with its creditors require the company to maintain a current ratio of at least 2:1. The preliminary balance sheet is as follows.
Myeneke Corp. Balance Sheet December 30, 2025 |
|||||
Current assets | Current liabilities | ||||
Cash | $25,000 | Accounts payable | $ 20,000 | ||
Accounts receivable | 30,000 | Salaries and wages payable | 10,000 | $ 30,000 | |
Prepaid insurance | 5,000 | $ 60,000 | Long-term liabilities | ||
Equipment (net) | 200,000 | Notes payable | 80,000 | ||
Total assets | $260,000 | Total liabilities | 110,000 | ||
Stockholders’ equity | |||||
Common stock | 100,000 | ||||
Retained earnings | 50,000 | 150,000 | |||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $260,000 |
Instructions
Compute and interpret solvency ratios.
E2.15 (LO 2), AP Suppose the following data were taken from the 2025 and 2024 financial statements of American Eagle Outfitters. (All numbers, including share data, are in thousands.)
2025 | 2024 | |
Current assets | $ 925,359 | $1,020,834 |
Total assets | 1,963,676 | 1,867,680 |
Current liabilities | 401,763 | 376,178 |
Total liabilities | 554,645 | 527,216 |
Net income | 179,061 | 400,019 |
Dividends paid on common stock | 82,394 | 80,796 |
Weighted-average common shares outstanding | 205,169 | 216,119 |
Instructions
Perform each of the following.
Identify qualitative characteristics.
E2.16 (LO 3), K Here are some fundamental and enhancing qualitative characteristics of financial information.
Instructions
Match each of the above characteristics to one of the following statements, using the numbers 1 to 12.
Identify accounting assumptions and principles.
E2.17 (LO 3), K Presented below are the assumptions and principles discussed in this chapter.
Instructions
Identify by number the accounting assumption or principle that is described below. Do not use a number more than once.
Identify accounting terminology.
E2.18 (LO 1, 2, 3), K The following list of terms or phrases are discussed in this chapter.
Instructions
Match each term or phrase to its description below.
Identify the assumption or principle that has been violated.
E2.19 (LO 3), C Lopez Co. had three major business transactions during 2025.
Instructions
In each situation, identify the assumption or principle that has been violated, if any, and discuss what the company should have done.
Prepare a classified balance sheet.
P2.1 (LO 1), AP Suppose the following items are taken from the 2025 balance sheet of Verizon Communications. (All dollars are in millions.)
Goodwill | $3,927 |
Common stock | 6,283 |
Equipment | 1,737 |
Accounts payable | 152 |
Patents | 234 |
Stock investments (long-term) | 3,247 |
Accounts receivable | 1,061 |
Prepaid rent | 233 |
Debt investments (short-term) | 1,160 |
Retained earnings | 6,108 |
Cash | 2,292 |
Notes payable (long-term) | 734 |
Unearned sales revenue | 413 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 201 |
Instructions
Prepare a classified balance sheet for Verizon Communications as of December 31, 2025.
Tot. current assets | $4,746 |
Tot. assets | $13,690 |
Prepare financial statements.
P2.2 (LO 1), AP These items are taken from the financial statements of Martin Corporation for 2025.
Retained earnings (beginning of year) | $31,000 |
Utilities expense | 2,000 |
Equipment | 66,000 |
Accounts payable | 18,300 |
Cash | 10,100 |
Salaries and wages payable | 3,000 |
Common stock | 22,800 |
Dividends | 12,000 |
Supplies | 3,100 |
Debt investment (long-term) | 5,700 |
Trademarks | 2,000 |
Service revenue | 68,000 |
Prepaid insurance | 3,500 |
Maintenance and repairs expense | 1,800 |
Depreciation expense | 3,600 |
Accounts receivable | 11,700 |
Insurance expense | 2,200 |
Salaries and wages expense | 37,000 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 17,600 |
Instructions
Prepare an income statement, a retained earnings statement, and a classified balance sheet as of December 31, 2025.
Net income | $21,400 |
Tot. assets | $84,500 |
Prepare financial statements.
P2.3 (LO 1), AP You are provided with the following information for Lazuris Enterprises, effective as of its April 30, 2025, year-end.
Accounts payable | $834 |
Accounts receivable | 810 |
Accumulated depreciation—equipment | 670 |
Cash | 1,270 |
Common stock | 16,900 |
Cost of goods sold | 1,060 |
Depreciation expense | 335 |
Dividends | 325 |
Equipment | 2,420 |
Goodwill | 1,800 |
Income tax expense | 165 |
Income taxes payable | 135 |
Insurance expense | 210 |
Interest expense | 400 |
Inventory | 967 |
Investment in land | 14,200 |
Land | 3,100 |
Mortgage payable (long-term) | 3,500 |
Notes payable (short-term) | 61 |
Prepaid insurance | 60 |
Retained earnings (beginning) | 1,600 |
Salaries and wages expense | 700 |
Salaries and wages payable | 222 |
Sales revenue | 5,100 |
Stock investments (short-term) | 1,200 |
Instructions
a. | Net income | $2,230 |
b. | Tot. current assets | $4,307 |
Tot. assets | $25,157 |
Compute ratios; comment on relative profitability, liquidity, and solvency.
P2.4 (LO 2), AN Comparative financial statement data for Loeb Corporation and Bowsh Corporation, two competitors, appear below. All balance sheet data are as of December 31, 2025.
Loeb Corporation | Bowsh Corporation | |||
Net sales | $1,800,000 | $620,000 | ||
Cost of goods sold | 1,175,000 | 340,000 | ||
Operating expenses | 283,000 | 98,000 | ||
Interest expense | 9,000 | 3,800 | ||
Income tax expense | 85,000 | 36,000 | ||
Current assets | 407,200 | 190,336 | ||
Plant assets (net) | 532,000 | 139,728 | ||
Current liabilities | 66,325 | 33,716 | ||
Long-term liabilities | 108,500 | 40,684 | ||
Dividends paid on common stock | 36,000 | 15,000 | ||
Weighted-average common shares outstanding | 80,000 | 50,000 |
Instructions
Compute and interpret liquidity, solvency, and profitability ratios.
P2.5 (LO 2), AP The following are financial statements of Ohara Company.
Ohara Company Income Statement For the Year Ended December 31, 2025 |
|
Net sales | $2,218,500 |
Cost of goods sold | 1,012,400 |
Selling and administrative expenses | 906,000 |
Interest expense | 78,000 |
Income tax expense | 69,000 |
Net income | $153,100 |
Ohara Company Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 |
|
Assets | |
Current assets | |
Cash | $60,100 |
Debt investments | 84,000 |
Accounts receivable (net) | 169,800 |
Inventory | 145,000 |
Total current assets | 458,900 |
Plant assets (net) | 575,300 |
Total assets | $1,034,200 |
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | |
Current liabilities | |
Accounts payable | $ 160,000 |
Income taxes payable | 35,500 |
Total current liabilities | 195,500 |
Bonds payable | 200,000 |
Total liabilities | 395,500 |
Stockholders’ equity | |
Common stock | 350,000 |
Retained earnings | 288,700 |
Total stockholders’ equity | 638,700 |
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $1,034,200 |
Additional information: The weighted-average common shares outstanding during the year was 50,000.
Instructions
Compute and interpret liquidity, solvency, and profitability ratios.
P2.6 (LO 2), AP Condensed balance sheet and income statement data for Danke Corporation are presented as follows.
Danke Corporation Balance Sheets December 31 |
||
2025 | 2024 | |
Assets | ||
Cash | $28,000 | $20,000 |
Receivables (net) | 70,000 | 62,000 |
Other current assets | 90,000 | 73,000 |
Long-term investments | 62,000 | 60,000 |
Property, plant, and equipment (net) | 510,000 | 470,000 |
Total assets | $760,000 | $685,000 |
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||
Current liabilities | $75,000 | $70,000 |
Long-term liabilities | 80,000 | 90,000 |
Common stock | 330,000 | 300,000 |
Retained earnings | 275,000 | 225,000 |
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $760,000 | $685,000 |
Danke Corporation Income Statements For the Years Ended December 31 |
||
2025 | 2024 | |
Sales revenue | $750,000 | $680,000 |
Cost of goods sold | 440,000 | 400,000 |
Operating expenses (including income taxes) | 240,000 | 220,000 |
Net income | $ 70,000 | $ 60,000 |
Additional information:
Dividends paid | $20,000 | $15,000 |
Weighted-average common shares outstanding | 33,000 | 30,000 |
Instructions
Compute these values and ratios for 2024 and 2025.
Compute ratios and compare liquidity and solvency for two companies.
P2.7 (LO 2), AP Selected financial data of two competitors, Target and Walmart, are presented here. (All dollars are in millions.) Suppose the data were taken from the 2025 financial statements of each company.
Target (1/31/25) | Walmart (1/31/25) | |||
Income Statement Data for Year | ||||
Net sales | $64,948 | $401,244 | ||
Cost of goods sold | 44,157 | 306,158 | ||
Selling and administrative expenses | 16,389 | 76,651 | ||
Interest expense | 894 | 2,103 | ||
Other income | 28 | 4,213 | ||
Income taxes | 1,322 | 7,145 | ||
Net income | $ 2,214 | $ 13,400 | ||
Balance Sheet Data (End of Year) | ||||
Current assets | $17,488 | $ 48,949 | ||
Noncurrent assets | 26,618 | 114,480 | ||
Total assets | $44,106 | $163,429 | ||
Current liabilities | $10,512 | $ 55,390 | ||
Long-term liabilities | 19,882 | 42,754 | ||
Total stockholders’ equity | 13,712 | 65,285 | ||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $44,106 | $163,429 | ||
Weighted-average common shares outstanding (millions) | 774 | 3,951 |
Instructions
For each company, compute these values and ratios.
Comment on the objectives and qualitative characteristics of financial reporting.
P2.8 (LO 3), E A friend of yours, Saira Ortiz, recently completed an undergraduate degree in science and has just started working with a biotechnology company. Saira tells you that the owners of the business are trying to secure new sources of financing which are needed in order for the company to proceed with development of a new healthcare product. Saira said that her boss told her that the company must put together a report to present to potential investors.
Saira thought that the company should include in this package the detailed scientific findings related to the Phase I clinical trials for this product. She said, “I know that the biotech industry sometimes has only a 10% success rate with new products, but if we report all the scientific findings, everyone will see what a sure success this is going to be! The president was talking about the importance of following some set of accounting principles. Why do we need to look at some accounting rules? What they need to realize is that we have scientific results that are quite encouraging, some of the most talented employees around, and the start of some really great customer relationships. We haven’t made any sales yet, but we will. We just need the funds to get through all the clinical testing and get government approval for our product. Then these investors will be quite happy that they bought in to our company early!”
Instructions
(Note: This is a continuation of the Cookie Creations from Chapter 1.)
CCC2 After investigating the different forms of business organization, Natalie Koebel decides to operate her business as a corporation, Cookie Creations Inc., and she begins the process of getting her business running.
While at a trade show, Natalie is introduced to Gerry Richards, operations manager of “Biscuits,” a national food retailer. After much discussion, Gerry asks Natalie to consider being Biscuits’ major supplier of oatmeal chocolate chip cookies. He provides Natalie with the most recent copy of the financial statements of Biscuits. He expects that Natalie will need to supply Biscuits’ Watertown warehouse with approximately 1,500 dozen cookies a week. Natalie is to send Biscuits a monthly invoice, and she will be paid approximately 30 days from the date the invoice is received in Biscuits’ Chicago office.
Natalie is thrilled with the offer. However, she has recently read in the newspaper that Biscuits has a reputation for selling cookies and donuts with high amounts of sugar and fat, and as a result, consumer demand for the company’s products has decreased.
Instructions
Natalie has several questions. Answer the following questions for Natalie.
CT2.1 The financial statements of Apple Inc. are presented in Appendix A.
Instructions
Answer the following questions using the financial statements and the notes to the financial statements.
CT2.2 The financial statements of Columbia Sportswear Company are presented in Appendix B. Financial statements of Under Armour, Inc. are presented in Appendix C. Assume Columbia’s weighted-average common shares outstanding was 69,683,000, and Under Armour’s was 416,103,000.
Instructions
CT2.3 Amazon.com, Inc.’s financial statements are presented in Appendix D. Financial statements of Walmart Inc. are presented in Appendix E.
Instructions
CT2.4 Suppose the following information was reported by Gap, Inc.
2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | |
Total assets (millions) | $7,065 | $7,985 | $7,564 | $7,838 | $8,544 |
Working capital | $1,831 | $2,533 | $1,847 | $1,653 | $2,757 |
Current ratio | 1.87:1 | 2.19:1 | 1.86:1 | 1.68:1 | 2.21:1 |
Debt to assets ratio | .42:1 | .39:1 | .42:1 | .45:1 | .39:1 |
Earnings per share | $1.89 | $1.59 | $1.35 | $1.05 | $0.94 |
CT2.5 You can use the Internet to identify summary liquidity, solvency, and profitability information about companies, and compare this information across companies in the same industry.
Instructions
Select a well-known company and then go to the Yahoo! Finance website to locate information to answer the following questions.
CT2.6 The Feature Story described the dramatic effect that investor bulletin boards are having on the investment world. This exercise will allow you to evaluate a bulletin board discussing a company of your choice.
Instructions
Go to the Yahoo! Finance website. Type in a company name (or use the index to find it) and then use the Conversations tab to answer the following questions.
CT2.7 As a financial analyst in the planning department for Erin Industries, Inc., you must develop ratios from the comparative financial statements. This information is to be used to convince creditors that, despite a slight decline in sales, Erin Industries, Inc. is liquid, solvent, and profitable, and that it deserves their continued support. Lenders are particularly concerned about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.
Here are the data requested and the computations developed from the financial statements:
2025 | 2024 | |
Current ratio | 3.1 | 2.1 |
Working capital | Up 22% | Down 7% |
Debt to assets ratio | 0.60 | 0.70 |
Net income | Up 32% | Down 8% |
Earnings per share | $2.40 | $1.15 |
Instructions
Erin Industries, Inc. asks you to prepare brief comments stating how each of these items supports the argument that its financial health is improving. The company wishes to use these comments to support presentation of data to its creditors. With the class divided into groups, prepare the comments as requested, giving the implications and the limitations of each item regarding Erin’s financial well-being.
CT2.8 B. P. Palmer is the chief executive officer of Future Products. Palmer is an expert engineer but a novice in accounting.
Instructions
Write a letter to B. P. Palmer that explains (a) the three main types of ratios; (b) examples of each, how they are calculated, and what they measure; and (c) the bases for comparison in analyzing Future Products’ financial statements.
CT2.9 At one time, Boeing closed a giant deal to acquire another manufacturer, McDonnell Douglas. Boeing paid for the acquisition by issuing shares of its own stock to the stockholders of McDonnell Douglas. In order for the deal not to be revoked, the value of Boeing’s stock could not decline below a certain level for a number of months after the deal.
During the first half of the year, Boeing suffered significant cost overruns because of inefficiencies in its production methods. Had these problems been disclosed in the quarterly financial statements during the first and second quarters of the year, the company’s stock most likely would have plummeted, and the deal would have been revoked. Company managers spent considerable time debating when the bad news should be disclosed. One public relations manager suggested that the company’s problems be revealed on the date of either Princess Diana’s or Mother Teresa’s funeral, in the hope that it would be lost among those big stories that day. Instead, the company waited until October 22 of that year to announce a $2.6 billion write-off due to cost overruns. Within one week, the company’s stock price had fallen 20%, but by this time the McDonnell Douglas deal could not be reversed.
Instructions
Answer the following questions.
CT2.10 Every company needs to plan in order to move forward. Its top management must consider where it wants the company to be in three to five years. Like a company, you need to think about where you want to be three to five years from now, and you need to start taking steps now in order to get there.
Instructions
Provide responses to each of the following items.
CT2.11 If your school has a subscription to the FASB Codification, log in and prepare responses to the following.
Instructions
CT2.12 Auditors provide a type of certification of corporate financial statements. Certification is used in many other aspects of business as well. For example, it plays a critical role in the sustainability movement. An article by Angus Chen, entitled “Do Sustainable Certifications for Coffee Really Help the Coffee Growers,” discusses the role of certification in the coffee business.
Instructions
Search and read the article online, and then answer the following questions.
The classified balance sheet, although generally required internationally, contains certain variations in format when reporting under IFRS. The following are the key similarities and differences between GAAP and IFRS related to the financial statements.
IFRS has many differences in terminology from what are shown in your text. For example, in the following sample statement of financial position, notice in the investment category that stock is called shares.
Franklin Corporation Statement of Financial Position October 31, 2025 |
||||||
Assets | ||||||
Intangible assets | ||||||
Patents | $3,100 | |||||
Property, plant, and equipment | ||||||
Land | $10,000 | |||||
Equipment | $24,000 | |||||
Less: Accumulated depreciation | 5,000 | 19,000 | 29,000 | |||
Long-term investments | ||||||
Share investments | 5,200 | |||||
Investment in real estate | 2,000 | 7,200 | ||||
Current assets | ||||||
Prepaid insurance | 400 | |||||
Supplies | 2,100 | |||||
Inventory | 3,000 | |||||
Notes receivable | 1,000 | |||||
Accounts receivable | 7,000 | |||||
Debt investments | 2,000 | |||||
Cash | 6,600 | 22,100 | ||||
Total assets | $61,400 | |||||
Equity and Liabilities | ||||||
Equity | ||||||
Share capital | $20,050 | |||||
Retained earnings | 14,000 | $34,050 | ||||
Non-current liabilities | ||||||
Mortgage payable | 10,000 | |||||
Notes payable | 1,300 | 11,300 | ||||
Current liabilities | ||||||
Notes payable | 11,000 | |||||
Accounts payable | 2,100 | |||||
Salaries and wages payable | 1,600 | |||||
Unearned service revenue | 900 | |||||
Interest payable | 450 | 16,050 | ||||
Total equity and liabilities | $61,400 |
1. A company has purchased a tract of land and expects to build a production plant on the land in approximately 5 years. During the 5 years before construction, the land will be idle. Under IFRS, the land should be reported as:
2. Current assets under IFRS are listed generally:
3. Companies that use IFRS:
4. Companies that follow IFRS to prepare a statement of financial position generally use the following order of classification:
IFRS2.1 In what ways does the format of a statement of financial of position under IFRS often differ from a balance sheet presented under GAAP?
IFRS2.2 What term is commonly used under IFRS in reference to the balance sheet?
IFRS2.3 The statement of financial position for Sundell Company includes the following accounts (in British pounds): Accounts Receivable £12,500, Prepaid Insurance £3,600, Cash £15,400, Supplies £5,200, and Debt Investments (short-term) £6,700. Prepare the current assets section of the statement of financial position, listing the accounts in proper sequence.
IFRS2.4 The following information is available for Lessila Bowling Alley at December 31, 2025.
Buildings | $128,800 | Share Capital | $100,000 | ||||
Accounts Receivable | 14,520 | Retained Earnings (beginning) | 15,000 | ||||
Prepaid Insurance | 4,680 | Accumulated Depreciation—Buildings | 42,600 | ||||
Cash | 18,040 | Accounts Payable | 12,300 | ||||
Equipment | 62,400 | Notes Payable | 97,780 | ||||
Land | 64,000 | Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment | 18,720 | ||||
Insurance Expense | 780 | Interest Payable | 2,600 | ||||
Depreciation Expense | 7,360 | Bowling Revenues | 14,180 | ||||
Interest Expense | 2,600 |
Prepare a classified statement of financial position. Assume that $13,900 of the notes payable will be paid in 2023.
IFRS2.5 The complete annual report of Louis Vuitton, including the notes to its financial statements, is available at the company’s website.
Identify five differences in the format of the statement of financial position used by Louis Vuitton compared to a company, such as Apple, that follows GAAP. (Apple’s financial statements are available in Appendix A.)
Answers to IFRS Self-Test Questions
1. d2. b3. c4. c