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CH 9 COMPLETING THE ACCOUNTING CYCLE

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But, as they are used no accounting entries are made to record the usage at the time ... Income summary account is used only during the closing entry process. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CH 9 COMPLETING THE ACCOUNTING CYCLE


1
CH 9 COMPLETING THE ACCOUNTING CYCLE
2
9.1 The Adjustment Process
  • It is important that financial statements are
    up-to date, accurate and consistent from year to
    year.
  • Accountants must make sure that
  • 1) All accounts are brought up-to date
  • 2) All late transactions are taken into account
  • 3) All calculations have been made correctly
  • 4) All GAAPs have been complied with

3
Adjusting entries
  • To do this we make adjustments to such things as
    insurance, supplies,
  • An adjusting entry assigns amounts of revenue or
    expense to the appropriate accounting period
    before finalizing the books for the financial
    period.
  • This is necessary because accounting books become
    inaccurate between statements dates.
  • Why is this allowed?
  • Saves time, effort and money.
  • Imagine having to correct supplies every time you
    or someone in your company used a pen!

4
Adjusting entries for supplies
  • When supplies are purchased they are debited
    correctly
  • But, as they are used no accounting entries are
    made to record the usage at the time
  • Thus you will have 2 accounts
  • Supplies
  • Supplies expense

5
Adjusting entries continued
  • Supplies will have a balance of what you paid
    (full purchase price)
  • Supplies expense will have a balance of zero
  • Until an adjustment is made to correct this
  • This is done at the end of the accounting cycle

6
How do you count what you dont have?
  • At the end of the cycle you would take inventory
    of what supplies you have and subtract it from
    what you thought you had.
  • An adjustment to this would
  • Debit the supplies expense account and
  • Credit the supplies account

7
Adjusting entries for prepaid expenses
  • Some expense items are paid for in advance.
  • This usually presents no special problem because
    the item (rent) falls within the fiscal period
  • But sometimes we have special expenses
    (insurance) where that are paid for and extend
    beyond the fiscal period

8
A prepaid expanse
  • A prepaid expanse is an item paid for in advance,
    but one where the benefits extend into the future
  • Insurance is the most common example because we
    pay upfront for one years insurance before we
    actually use it.

9
When it is bought we
  • Debit the prepaid insurance account and credit
    the bank account.
  • Prepaid insurance has value and therefore we
    consider it an asset.
  • If we cancelled it after 3 months we would get
    money back.

10
At the end of the fiscal period
  • you need to figure out how much insurance has
    been used and debit insurance expense this amount
    and credit prepaid insurance.
  • Say you bought the insurance on March 1st for a
    year. You paid 1800 for it.
  • How many months of use did you have this year?

11
How many months?
  • 9?
  • 10?
  • 10!
  • So 1800 / 12 150
  • Right?
  • Therefore, 10 X 150 1500
  • This is how much (in ) was used on this
    insurance policy.

12
Adjusting Entries for Late-Arriving Purchase
Invoices
  • Goods and services are often bought towards the
    end of an accounting period.
  • Bills for these purchases may not arrive until
    the next fiscal period.
  • Remember the matching principal
  • Expenses are to be recognised in the same period
    as the revenue that they helped to earn!

13
Late Arriving continued
  • Luckily, financial statements are not prepared
    for 2 or 3 weeks after the accounting period.
  • This gives enough time for all invoices from the
    last period to come in.
  • Ex telephone bill arrives 2 weeks after the
    fiscal period endsdebit telephone expense
  • Credit accounts payable

14
9.2 Adjusting Entries and the Work Sheet
  • We will now add 2 columns to our work sheet.
  • It will now have 8 columns

15
And it will look like this
16
For this example we find after taking inventory
that supplies on hand at the end of the fiscal
period is 526.00.
17
Example continued
  • Our supplies account balance was 1480.90
  • Therefore our adjustment for this is 954.90
  • Notice that we number or letter each entry for
    ease of identifying them later

18
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19
Adjusting for insurance expense
  • From our example we know that our Prepaid
    Insurance 6564.00

20
Prepaid insurance listing
21
Total used 2494.00
22
Late purchase invoices
  • Telephone 45
  • Truck repair 496
  • Printer repair 85
  • Total 626

23
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24
Extending the worksheet
  • The worksheet steps are the same except for the
    following 2 steps
  • Step 1) Evaluate each item in the first 4 columns
    (trial balance and adjustments). You may need to
    add or subtract (if an adjustment was made) This
    will result in one number for each entry
  • Step 2) Transfer the value found in step one to
    one of the last 4 columns (income statement or
    balance sheet)
  • Note make sure that debits balances remain debit
    balances and credit balances remain credit
    balances.

25
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26
Balancing the work sheet
  • Again everything is the same except for the
    following steps
  • 1) Total each of the last 4 columns
  • 2) Determine the difference between the two
    income statement columns and the two balance
    sheet columns
  • 3) Ensure that the two differences are the same.
    If not, the worksheet does not balance and
    therefore contains errors.

27
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28
Journalizing and posting adjusting entries
  • All adjusting entries must be formally
    journalized.

29
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30
Closing Entries Concepts
  • The final stage of the accounting cycle is to
    prepare the accounts for the next fiscal period.
  • To do this you must understand which accounts
    have balances that continue from one period to
    the next and which do not

31
Real Accounts and Nominal Accounts
  • Real Accounts have balances that continue into
    the next fiscal period. All assets, liabilities
    and Owners capital accounts. Ex Bank, Truck,
    accounts payable
  • Nominal Accounts have balances that do not
    continue into the next fiscal period. Revenue,
    Expense and Drawing accounts. All nominal
    accounts start each fiscal period with a zero
    balance.
  • A special nominal account called the Income
    summary account is used only during the closing
    entry process. It summarizes the revenue and
    expenses for the period. The temporary balance in
    this account represents either the net income or
    net loss.

32
Closing out the Nominal Accounts
  • There must be no balances left in any of the
    nominal accounts at the end of the accounting
    period.
  • Closing an account means to cause it to have no
    balance.
  • The total equity of a business is not contained
    in one account.
  • It is contained in the equity section of the
    ledger.

33
Closing out the Nominal Accounts continued
  • The capital account shows the equity balance at
    the beginning of the period.
  • Any changes are contained in the revenue, expense
    and drawing accounts.
  • Closing the nominal equity accounts involves
    moving the values collected in those accounts
    into one real equity account the capital
    account

34
Steps for Closing out the Nominal Account
  • Step 1) Bring the accounts up-to-date by
    journalizing and posting the adjusting entries.
    Remember, some accounts were allowed to become
    inexact. These need to be corrected first.
  • Step 2) Close the nominal accounts and prepare
    them for the next fiscal period. This involves
    journalizing and posting the closing entries
  • a) transfer the balances of the revenue and
    expense accounts to the new income summary
    account.

35
Steps for Closing out the Nominal Account
  • Step 2 -- b) transfer the balances of the income
    summary and drawings accounts to the capital
    account.
  • When this is done all of the nominal accounts
    will have zero balances.
  • Step 3) Take off a post closing trial balance.
    There is a lot of potential for making errors in
    the process of journalizing and posting the
    adjusting and closing entries. A trial balance is
    taken off to ensure that the ledger is still in
    balance. A post closing trail balance is taken as
    soon as the closing entries have been posted.

36
You have now completed the accounting cycle!!!
37
9.4 Journalizing and posting the closing entries
  • This section is extremely well explained in you
    text pgs 327 332

38
Closing Entries Summary
  • The four closing entries do the following
  • 1. Close out the revenue accounts to the income
    summary account
  • 2. Close out the expense accounts to the income
    summary account
  • 3. Close out the income summary account to the
    capital account
  • 4. Close out the drawings account to the capital
    account.

39
Post-Closing Trial Balance
  • Always do this after you have finished
    journalizing and posting the adjusting and
    closing entries.

40
Uses of the work sheet
  • 1. Provides a method of organising the figures
    for the financial statements. It contains all of
    the up-to-date figures for the statements in one
    convenient place.
  • 2. Lets the accounts see the effects of adjusted
    entries before they are recorded in the accounts.
    Accountants sometimes have choices as to how to
    handle the adjustments.
  • 3. It proves the arithmetic accuracy of the
    figures before they are used in the financial
    statements.
  • 4. Is the source for all of the information for
    recording the adjusting and closing entries.

41
9.5 Adjusting for Depreciation
  • Depreciation refers to an allowance made for the
    decrease in value of an asset over time. All
    assets (with the exception of land) are expected
    to do this.
  • Again this section is very thoroughly explained
    in your text pgs 336 - 348
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