{"id":118227,"date":"2023-09-02T18:54:42","date_gmt":"2023-09-02T18:54:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/learnexams.com\/blog\/?p=118227"},"modified":"2023-09-02T18:54:45","modified_gmt":"2023-09-02T18:54:45","slug":"wall-street-prep-bundled-questions-and-answers-100-verified","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.learnexams.com\/blog\/2023\/09\/02\/wall-street-prep-bundled-questions-and-answers-100-verified\/","title":{"rendered":"Wall Street Prep BUNDLED Questions and Answers 100% Verified"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Wall Street Prep Premium Exam | 50 Questions<br>and Answers | Graded A+<br>What is generally not considered to be a pre-tax non-recurring (unusual or infrequent) item? &#8211;<br>Answer Extraordinary gains\/losses<br>what is false about depreciation and amortization &#8211; Answer D&amp;A may be classified within interest<br>expense<br>Company X&#8217;s current assets increased by $40 million from 2007-2008 while the companies current<br>liabilities increased by $25 million over the same period. the cash impact of the change in working<br>capital was &#8211; Answer a decrease of 15 million<br>the final component of an earnings projection model is calculating interest expense. the calculation may<br>create a circular reference because &#8211; Answer interest expense affects net income, which affects FCF,<br>which affects the amount of debt a company pays down, which, in turn affects the interest expense,<br>hence the circular reference<br>a 10-q financial filing has all of the following characteristics except &#8211; Answer issued four times a year.<br>Depreciation Expense found in the SG&amp;A line of the income statement for a manufacturing firm would<br>most likely be attributable to which of the following &#8211; Answer computers used by the accounting<br>department<br>If a company has projected revenues of $10 billion, a gross profit margin of 65%, and projected SG&amp;A<br>expenses of $2billion, what is the company&#8217;s operating (EBIT) margin? &#8211; Answer 45%<br>A company has the following information, 1. 2014 revenues of $5 billion,2013 Accounts receivable of<br>$400 million, 2014 accounts receivable of $600 million, what are the days sales outstanding &#8211; Answer<br>36.5<br>A company has the following information:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li>2014 Revenues of $8 billion<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2014 COGS of $5 billion<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2013 Accounts receivable of $400 million<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2014 Accounts receivable of $600 million<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2013 Inventories of $1 billion<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2014 Inventories of $800 million<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2013 Accounts payable of $250 million<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2014 Accounts payable of $300 million<br>What are the inventory days for the company? &#8211; Answer 65.7 days<br>Which of the following is true &#8211; Answer Coca Cola&#8217;s brand name is not reflected as an intangible<br>asset on its balance sheet<br>A company has the following information:<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2014 share repurchase plan of $4 billion<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Average share price of $60 for the year 2013<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Expected EPS growth for 2014 of 10%<br>What should the number of shares repurchased by the company be in your financial model? &#8211; Answer<br>60.6 million<br>non-controlling interest &#8211; Answer is an expense on the income statement and equity o the balance<br>sheet<br>A company has the following information:<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>2013 retained earnings balance of $12 billion<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Net income of $3.5 billion in 2014<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Capex of $200 million in 2014<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Preferred dividends of $100 million in 2014<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Common dividends of $400 million in 2014<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep | 43 Questions and<br>Answers | Graded A+<br>Assets &#8211; Answer resources a company uses to operate its business<br>includes cash, A\/R, PP&amp;E<br>Liabilities &#8211; Answer represents the company&#8217;s contractual obligations and includes A\/P, debt, accrued<br>expenses<br>Shareholder&#8217;s equity &#8211; Answer is the residual<br>the value of the business available to the owners (shareholders) after debts have been paid off<br>Income statement &#8211; Answer illustrates the profitability of the company over a specified period of<br>time<br>broad sense: shows revenue-expenses<br>Balance sheet &#8211; Answer snapshot of the company economic resources and funding for those<br>resources at a given point in time (A = L + SE)<br>Revenue &#8211; Answer &#8220;top-line&#8221;<br>represents the sale of goods and services<br>it is recorded when earned (even though cash might not have been received at the time of transaction)<br>Expenses &#8211; Answer netted against revenue to arrive at net income<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>COGS (directly associate with good production), SG&amp;A (indirectly associated with production), interest<br>expense (expense related to paying debt holders periodic payments), taxes, depreciation expense (noncash expense accounting for the use of PP&amp;E, often imbedded within COGS and SG&amp;A)<br>Net income &#8211; Answer &#8220;bottom-line&#8221;<br>revenue-expenses<br>the profitability available to common shareholder&#8217;s after debt payments have been made (interest<br>expense)<br>EPS (earnings per share) &#8211; Answer portion of a company&#8217;s profit allocated to each outstanding share<br>of common stock<br>EPS = (net income &#8211; dividends on preferred stock)\/weighted average shares outstanding<br>Cash flow statement &#8211; Answer While cash is not necessarily received when a sale occurs, the income<br>statement still records the sale. As a result, the income statement captures all the economic transactions<br>of the business.<br>The cash flow statement is needed because the income statement uses what is called accrual<br>accounting. In accrual accounting, revenues are recorded when earned regardless of when cash is<br>received (revenue includes sales using cash and made on credit A\/R)<br>Since we also want to have a clear understanding of the cash position of a company, we need the<br>statement of cash flows to reconcile the income statement to cash inflows and outflows.<br>&#8220;cash position of the company&#8221;<br>cash from operating activities, cash from investing activities, and cash from financing activities<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep Excel Questions and<br>Answers 100% Verified<br>Which of the following keys IS NOT a way to trace precedent cells? &#8211; Answer Ctrl Alt [<br>Please select the answer that best describes the shortcut to<br>Split (not freeze) an excel sheet into just two panes (top and bottom)<br>To navigate from pane to pane &#8211; Answer 1. With the active cell on any row but in column A, hit Alt W<br>S to split the panes to a top and bottom. 2. Hit F6 to jump from pane to pane (in some versions of Excel<br>you will need to hit F6 several times to get from one pane to the other).<br>You are in cell A1 and start a formula by typing = in a worksheet with split top and bottom panes. In<br>order to jump to the bottom pane while working on the formula: &#8211; Answer Hit F6<br>If I want to add the title &#8220;Company Financials&#8221; in cell A1 ensure that all columns are the same width<br>across all the worksheets in my workbook, how would I do that? &#8211; Answer 1. Group the wroksheets<br>by hitting Ctrl Shift and use the PageUp\/Down keys to select the worksheets. 2. In the active sheet type<br>in &#8220;Company Financials&#8221; in A1 and apply the desired width to all columns 3. Remember to hit Ctrl Pageup<br>or Pagedown to make sure that future edits only apply to active sheet.<br>If I want to add the title &#8220;Company Financials&#8221; in cell A1 ensure that all columns are the same width<br>across all the worksheets in my workbook, how would I do that? &#8211; Answer 1. Group the wroksheets<br>by hitting Ctrl Shift and use the PageUp\/Down keys to select the worksheets. 2. In the active sheet type<br>in &#8220;Company Financials&#8221; in A1 and apply the desired width to all columns 3. Remember to hit Ctrl Pageup<br>or Pagedown to make sure that future edits only apply to active sheet.<br>What is the keyboard sequence to<br>1) Group highlighted columns (but not to hide group)<br>2) Hide the group (will show a + sign above the column)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep | 99 Questions and<br>Answers 100% Correct | 2023-2024<br>Do companies prefer straight-line or accelerated depreciation?<br>For GAAP reporting purposes, companies generally prefer straight-line depreciation. That&#8217;s because a<br>company will record lower depreciation in the early years of the asset&#8217;s life than if they had used<br>accelerated depreciation. As a result, companies using straight-line depreciation will show higher net<br>income than under accelerated depreciation.<br>Do companies depreciate land?<br>No, land is considered to have an indefinite life and is not depreciated.<br>Can companies amortize goodwill?<br>Under GAAP, public companies are not allowed to amortize goodwill. Instead, it must be tested annually<br>for impairment.<br>The longer answer is that under GAAP, public companies are not allowed to amortize goodwill and must<br>instead test it annually for impairment. However, private companies may elect to amortize goodwill. In<br>addition, for tax reporting purposes, goodwill may be amortized over 15 years under some<br>circumstances.<br>What is the impact of share issuance on EPS?<br>The major impact to EPS is that the actual share count increases, thereby decreasing EPS. However,<br>there is sometimes an impact on net income. That&#8217;s because assuming share issuances generate cash for<br>the company, there will be higher interest income, which increases net income and EPS slightly. Because<br>returns on excess cash for most companies are low, this impact is usually very minor and doesn&#8217;t offset<br>the negative impact to EPS from a higher share count.<br>What is the impact of share repurchases on EPS?<br>The major impact to EPS is that the actual share count is reduced, thereby increasing EPS. However,<br>there is sometimes an impact on net income. That&#8217;s because assuming share repurchases are funded<br>with the company&#8217;s excess cash, any interest income that would have otherwise been generated on that<br>cash is no longer available, thereby reducing net income &#8211; and EPS &#8211; slightly. Because returns on excess<br>cash for most companies are low, this impact is usually very minor and doesn&#8217;t offset the positive impact<br>to EPS from a lower share count.<br>How do you calculate earnings per share?<br>Earnings per share (EPS) is calculated as net income divided by the company&#8217;s weighted average shares<br>outstanding during the period.<br>There are two ways to measure EPS &#8211; Basic and Diluted. Basic<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>EPS is net income divided by the actual shares, while Diluted EPS is net income divided by actual shares<br>and shares from potentially dilutive securities such as options, restricted stock, and convertible bonds or<br>stock.<br>A company acquired a machine for $5 million in 2003 and has since generated $3 million in<br>accumulated depreciation. In addition, the PP&amp;E now has a fair value of $20 million. Assuming GAAP,<br>what is the value of that PP&amp;E on the company&#8217;s balance sheet?<br>The short answer is $2 million. Except for certain liquid financial assets which can be written up to reflect<br>fair market value, companies must carry the value of assets at their historical cost.<br>Do you amortize intangible assets?<br>Intangible like customer lists, copyrights and patents &#8211; assets that have a finite life &#8211; are amortized, while<br>others like trademarks (and goodwill) are considered to have indefinite lives and are not amortized.<br>How do capital leases affect the three financial statements?<br>Leases treated as capital leases (as opposed to operating leases) create an asset and associated liability<br>for the thing that is being leased. For example, if a company leases a building for 30 years, the building is<br>recognized as an asset on the lessee&#8217;s balance sheet with a corresponding debt-like liability. The income<br>statement impact is the depreciation expense associated with the building, as well as interest expense<br>associated with the financing.<br>How do operating leases affect the three financial statements?<br>Under US GAAP, companies can choose to account for leases as operating or capital leases.<br>Operating leases primarily only impact the income statement. When leases are accounted for as<br>operating leases, lease (rent) payments are treated as operating expenses like wages and utilities:<br>Regardless of whether you sign a 1-year lease or a 30-year lease, every time you pay the rent, cash is<br>credited and an operating expense is debited.<br>The only significant balance sheet impacts have to do with timing differences between payments<br>(prepaid and accrued rent) and the matching of rent payments to when the tenant benefits from that<br>rent (leading to balance sheet accruals for smoothing of rent escalations and upfront rent incentives like<br>a free month). Starting in 2019, operating leases will no longer be allowed under US GAAP.<br>How can a profitable firm go bankrupt?<br>To be profitable, a company must generate revenues that exceed expenses. However, if the company is<br>ineffective at collecting cash from customers and allows its receivables to balloon, or if it is unable to get<br>favorable terms from suppliers and must pay cash for all inventories and supplies, what can occur is that<br>despite a profitable income statement, the company suffers from liquidity problems due to the timing<br>mismatch of cash inflows and outflows.<br>While reliably profitable companies who simply have these working capital issues can usually secure<br>financing to deal with it, theoretically, if financing becomes unavailable for some reason (the 2008 credit<br>crisis is an example where even profitable companies couldn&#8217;t secure financing), even a profitable<br>company could be forced to declare bankruptcy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Is it bad if a company has negative retained earnings?<br>Not necessarily. Retained earnings will be negative if the company has generated more accounting losses<br>than profits. This is often the case for early-stage companies that are investing heavily to support future<br>growth. The other component of retained earnings is common or preferred dividends, which could<br>contribute to a lower or even negative retained earnings.<br>What&#8217;s more important: the income statement or the cash flow statement?<br>hey are both important and any serious analysis requires using both. However, I would think that the<br>cash flow is slightly more important because it reconciles net income, the accrual-based bottom line on<br>the income statement to what&#8217;s happening to cash, while also showing you the critical movement of<br>cash during the period. Without the cash flow statement, I can only see what&#8217;s happening from an<br>accrual profitability standpoint. The cash flow statement on the other hand can alert me to any liquidity<br>issues, as well as any other major investments or financial activities that do not hit the income<br>statement.<br>The one situation in which I would prefer the income statement is if I also have the beginning and endof-year balance sheet. That&#8217;s because I could reconcile the cash flow statement simply by looking at the<br>balance sheet year over changes along with the income statement.<br>Why are increases in accounts receivable a cash reduction on the cash flow statement?<br>Since cash flow statements start with net income, and net income captures all of a company&#8217;s revenue &#8211;<br>not just cash revenue &#8211; an increase in accounts receivable suggests that more customers paid with credit<br>during the period and so an adjustment down needs to be made to net income when arriving at cash<br>since the company never actually received those funds &#8211; they&#8217;re still sitting on the balance sheet as<br>receivables.<br>How should increases in inventory get handled on the cash flow statement?<br>Increases in inventory, as well as any other working capital assets, reflect a usage of cash and should thus<br>be reflected as an outflow on the cash from operations section of the cash flow statement. Conversely,<br>increases in working capital liabilities represent a source of cash and should be presented as an inflow in<br>the section.<br>Do inventories get captured on the income statement?<br>There is no inventory line on the income statement, but it does get captured, if only partially, and<br>indirectly in cost of goods sold (and potentially other operating expenses).<br>For example, COGS is recognized on the income statement during a period, regardless of whether the<br>associated inventory was purchased during the same period. That means that a portion of the COGS line<br>on the income statement will likely reflect a portion of inventory used up. That&#8217;s why the other two<br>financial statements are better for understanding what is happening to inventory. Specifically, the cash<br>flow statement shows the year-over-year changes in inventory, while the absolute balance of beginning<br>and end-of-period inventory can be observed on the balance sheet.<br>Which section of the cash flow statement captures interest expense?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep Accounting | 180 Questions<br>and Answers | Updated 2023-2024<br>Liquidity Ratios &#8211; Answer measures of a firm&#8217;s short-term ability to meet its current obligations<br>Profitability Ratios &#8211; Answer measures of a firm&#8217;s profitability relative to its assets (operating<br>efficiency) and to its revenue (operating profitability)<br>Activity Ratios &#8211; Answer Measure of efficiency of a firm&#8217;s assets<br>Solvency Ratios &#8211; Answer Measure of a firm&#8217;s ability to pay its obligations<br>Inventory Turnover &#8211; Answer COGS \/ avg inventory<br>Receivables Turnover &#8211; Answer revenue \/ average accounts receivable<br>DSO (Days Sales Outstanding) &#8211; Answer AR\/Credit Sales * days in period<br>days in period\/receivables turnover<br>A\/P turnover &#8211; Answer COGS \/ Average A\/P<br>PPP (payables purchasing period) &#8211; Answer days in period\/ Accounts payable turnover<br>Current Ratio &#8211; Answer current assets\/current liabilities<br>Quick ratio (acid test) &#8211; Answer Cash and AR divided by current liabilities<br>Gross profit margin &#8211; Answer gross profit\/revenue<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>operating margin &#8211; Answer operating profit\/revenue<br>net profit margin &#8211; Answer net income\/revenue<br>asset turnover &#8211; Answer revenue\/ average assets<br>return on assets (ROA) &#8211; Answer Net Income \/ Average Assets<br>return on equity (ROE) &#8211; Answer net income\/ total equity<br>Basic EPS &#8211; Answer (Net Income &#8211; Preferred Dividends)\/(Weighted Average of Shares Outstanding)<br>Diluted EPS &#8211; Answer diluted net income \/ weighted average diluted shares outstanding<br>dividend yield &#8211; Answer dividends\/net income<br>debt to EBITDA &#8211; Answer Total Debt\/EBITDA<br>interest coverage ratio &#8211; Answer EBIT\/ interest expense<br>fixed charge coverage &#8211; Answer (EBIT + Lease charges)\/(Interest Payments + Lease charges)<br>Debt to Total Assets &#8211; Answer Total Debt\/Total Assets<br>debt to equity &#8211; Answer total liabilities\/total equity<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>cash from operations (CFO) &#8211; Answer uses net income as a starting point and converts accrual base<br>net income into cash flow from operations via a series of adjustments<br>cash from investing activities (CFI) &#8211; Answer capital expenditures \/ asset sales and purchases<br>cash from financing activities (CFF) &#8211; Answer new borrowing \/ pay down of debt \/ new issuance of<br>stock \/ share repurchases \/ issuance of dividends<br>working capital &#8211; Answer -CFO<br>-increase in current assets = cash outflow<br>-increase in current liabilities = cash inflow<br>asset write downs \/ impairments &#8211; Answer -added back to CFS via CFO<br>Increases in A\/R, inventory, prepaid expenses, other current assets should be <strong><em><strong><em>_<\/em><\/strong><\/em><\/strong> net<br>income to get to CFO &#8211; Answer subtracted<br>increases in A\/P, accrued expenses, other current liabilities should be <strong><em><strong>__<\/strong><\/em><\/strong> net income to get<br>to CFO &#8211; Answer added<br>gains on sale of assets &#8211; Answer subtracted from CFO<br>stock based compensation &#8211; Answer added to CFO<br>Common CFI inflows\/outflows &#8211; Answer &#8211; capital expenditures<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li>purchases of intangible assets<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>asset sales<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>sales of debt\/ equity security<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>purchases of debt\/equity security<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep: Excel Questions and<br>Answers | Updated 2023-2024<br>Add\/delete sheets &#8211; Answer alt-i-w OR alt h-i-s<br>Moving around task ribbon &#8211; Answer Tab and shift (to select)<br>Auto fit cell &#8211; Answer alt-h-o-i<br>Custom fit columns &#8211; Answer alt h-o-w<br>Custom fit rows &#8211; Answer alt h-o-h<br>Select entire column\/row &#8211; Answer ctrl shift-arrow key<br>Format cells &#8211; Answer ctrl 1<br>Paste special &#8211; Answer alt e-s<br>Freeze panes &#8211; Answer alt w-f-f<br>Split panes &#8211; Answer alt w-s<br>Move between panes &#8211; Answer F6<br>Get in cell AND navigate to others while inside &#8211; Answer F2<br>Edit a cell from the outside &#8211; Answer alt h-e<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep Accounting Questions<br>and Answers with Complete Solutions<br>FASB &#8211; Answer Financial Accounting Standards Board, which oversees GAAP through issuance of<br>SFAS, oversight by the SEC<br>SFAS &#8211; Answer Standard Financial Accounting Statements, issued by the FASB<br>AA,P,C: Accounting Entity &#8211; Answer The assumption that a corporation is an entity separate from any<br>person<br>AA,P,C: Going Concern &#8211; Answer The Assumption that a corporation will continue to exist for the<br>foreseeable future<br>AA,P,C: Measurement &amp; Units &#8211; Answer The principle that financial statements can only show the<br>quantifiable assets or liabilities of a corporation<br>AA,P,C: Periodicity &#8211; Answer the principle that financial statements reflect a standard period of time,<br>usually years or quarters<br>AA,P,C: Historical Cost &#8211; Answer The principle that resources and liabilities are recorded at their<br>initial cost rather than a continuously updating value<br>AA,P,C: Revenue Recognition &#8211; Answer The principle that revenues are recorded when EARNED and<br>MEASURABLE<br>AA,P,C: Matching &#8211; Answer The principle that costs must be recorded in the same period that<br>revenues were generated<br>AA,P,C: Disclosure &#8211; Answer The principle that a corporation must reveal all relevant financial<br>information<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AA,P,C: Estimates and Judgement &#8211; Answer The constraint that estimates\/predictions cannot always<br>be accurate<br>AA,P,C: Materiality &#8211; Answer The constraint that one transaction may be deemed relevant for one<br>company but not another, usually based on size<br>AA,P,C: Consistency &#8211; Answer The constraint that recording methods and assumptions may not<br>always be the same over time<br>AA,P,C: Conservatism &#8211; Answer The constraint that assets are usually understated and liabilities are<br>not understated, for example historical cost measurements<br>Income Statement &#8211; Answer depicts the revenues and expenses of a company over a given time<br>period<br>Revenue &#8211; Answer proceeds from the goods or services offered for sale by a company<br>Cost of Goods Sold &#8211; Answer Represents the cost of manufacture or procurement for goods or<br>services that generate revenue (cost of inventory, factory overhead, raw materials, direct labor costs,<br>depreciation of fixed assets)<br>Gross Profit &#8211; Answer Revenue-Cost of Goods Sold, i.e. profit only after direct expenses have been<br>calculated<br>Selling, General and Administrative Expenses &#8211; Answer costs not directly associated with<br>manufacture or procurement of revenue driving goods or services<br>Research and Development Expenses &#8211; Answer costs associated with developing new products or<br>procedures<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wall Street Prep: Analyzing Financial<br>Reports<br>True or false: 10-Q&#8217;s must be filed four times a year for publicly traded companies. &#8211; Answer False;<br>only 3x a year<br>True or False: Both the 10-K and 10-Q filings are audited. &#8211; Answer False; only 10-K filings are<br>audited<br>True or false: All publicly traded companies and private companies with revenues greater than $850m<br>must file 10-K&#8217;s annually with the SEC. &#8211; Answer False<br>True or false: For large accelerated filers, 10-K&#8217;s must be filed no later than 90 days after the fiscal yearend date. &#8211; Answer False; for large accelerated filers, 10-Ks must be filed not later than 60 days after<br>the fiscal year-end date.<br>True or false: For accelerated filers, 10-K&#8217;s must be filed no later than 90 days after the fiscal year end<br>date. &#8211; Answer False; For accelerated filers, 10-K&#8217;s must be filed no later than 60 days after the fiscal<br>year-end date.<br>Companies often produce glossy annual reports.<br>True or false: These reports cannot contain information not included in the 10-K. &#8211; Answer False<br>Part I of the 10-K contains the Management Discussion &amp; Analysis section, while Part II contains the<br>Financial statements and Footnotes. &#8211; Answer False<br>It is 4\/18\/2014. What are the revenues Google reported on its latest available quarterly financials (use<br>revenues for the latest three months)? 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