©Cambridge Business Publishers, 2020 Solutions Manual, Chapter 4 4-1 Chapter 1 Introducing Financial Accounting Learning Objectives – coverage by question Mini- Exercises Exercises Problems Cases and Projects LO1 – Identify the users of accounting information and discuss the costs and benefits of disclosure.
25 28, 34 49, 50
LO2 – Describe a company’s business activities and explain how these activities are represented by the accounting equation.
19, 20, 21 27, 29, 32, 33 36, 37, 38, 43 47
LO3 – Introduce the four key financial statements including the balance sheet, income statement, statement of stockholders’ equity and statement of cash flows.
22, 23, 24 30, 31
37, 38, 39,
40, 41, 42,
43, 44, 45
46, 47, 49
LO4 – Describe the institutions that regulate financial accounting and their role in establishing generally accepted accounting principles.
26 34 50
LO5 – Compute two key ratios that are commonly used to assess profitability and risk – return on equity and the debt-to-equity ratio.
32, 33 36, 43, 44, 45 46, 47, 48, 49
LO6 – Appendix 1A: Explain the
conceptual framework for financial reporting.35 Financial Accounting, 6e Michelle Hanlon, Robert Magee, Glenn Pfeiffer, Thomas Dyckman (Solutions Manual All Chapters, 100% Original Verified, A+ Grade) 1 / 4
©Cambridge Business Publishers, 2020 4-2Financial Accounting, 6 th Edition
QUESTIONS
Q1-1. Organizations undertake planning activities that subsequently shape three
major activities: financing, investing, and operating. Financing is the means
used to pay for resources. Investing refers to the buying and selling of resources necessary to carry out the organization’s plans. Operating activities are the actual carrying out of these plans. (Planning is the glue that connects these activities, including the organization’s ideas, goals and strategies.) Q1-2. An organization’s financing activities (liabilities and equity = sources of funds) pay for investing activities (assets = uses of funds). An organization cannot have more or less assets than its liabilities and equity combined and, similarly, it cannot have more or less liabilities and equity than its total assets. This
means: assets = liabilities + equity. This relation is called the accounting
equation (sometimes called the balance sheet equation, or BSE), and it applies to all organizations at all times.
Q1-3. The four main financial statements are: income statement, balance sheet,
statement of stockholders’ equity, and statement of cash flows. The income statement provides information relating to the company’s revenues, expenses and profitability over a period of time. The balance sheet lists the company’s assets (what it owns), liabilities (what it owes), and stockholders’ equity (the residual claims of its owners) as of a point in time. The statement of stockholders’ equity reports on the changes to each stockholders’ equity account during the year. Some changes to stockholders’ equity, such as those resulting from the payment of dividends and unrealized gains (losses) on marketable securities, can only be found in this statement as they are not included in the computation of net income. The statement of cash flows identifies the sources (inflows) and uses (outflows) of cash, that is, from what sources the company has derived its cash and how that cash has been used.All four statements are necessary in order to provide a complete picture of the financial condition of the company.Q1-4. The balance sheet provides information that helps users understand a company’s resources (assets) and claims to those resources (liabilities and stockholders’ equity) as of a given point in time.An income statement reports whether the business has earned a net income (also called profit or earnings) or a net loss. Importantly, the income statement lists the types and amounts of revenues and expenses making up net income or net loss. The income statement covers a period of time.Q1-5. Your authors would agree with Mr. Buffett. A recent study of top financial officers suggests they find earnings and the year-to-year changes in earnings as the most important items to report. We would add cash flows particularly from operations, and the year-to-year changes. 2 / 4
©Cambridge Business Publishers, 2020 Solutions Manual, Chapter 4 4-3 Q1-6. The statement of cash flows reports on the cash inflows and outflows relating to a company’s operating, investing, and financing activities over a period of time.The sum of these three activities yields the net change in cash for the period.This statement is a useful complement to the income statement which reports on revenues and expenses, but conveys relatively little information about cash flows.Q1-7. Articulation refers to the updating of the balance sheet by information contained in the income statement or the statement of cash flows. For example, retained earnings is increased each period by any profit earned during the period (as reported in the income statement) and decreased each period by the payment of dividends (as reported in the statement of cash flows and the statement of stockholders’ equity). It is by the process of articulation that the financial statements are linked.Q1-8. Return refers to income, and risk is the uncertainty about the return we expect to earn. The lower the risk, the lower the expected return. For example, savings accounts pay a low return because of the low risk of a bank not returning the principal with interest. Higher returns are to be expected for common stocks as there is a greater uncertainty about the realized return compared with the expected return. Higher expected return offsets this higher risk.Q1-9. Companies often report more information than is required by GAAP because the benefits of doing so outweigh the costs. These benefits often include lower interest rates and better terms from lenders, higher stock prices and greater access to equity investors, improved relationships with suppliers and customers, and increased ability to attract the best employees. All of these benefits arise because the increased disclosure reduces uncertainty about the company’s future prospects.Q1-10. External users and their uses of accounting information include: (a) lenders for measuring the risk and return of loans; (b) shareholders for assessing the return and risk in acquiring shares; and (c) analysts for assessing investment potential. Other users are auditors, consultants, officers, directors for overseeing management, employees for judging employment opportunities, regulators, unions, suppliers, and appraisers.Q1-11. Managers deal with a variety of information about their employers and customers that is not generally available to the public. Ethical issues arise concerning the possibility that managers might personally benefit by using confidential information. There is also the possibility that their employers and/or customers might be harmed if certain information is not kept confidential. 3 / 4
©Cambridge Business Publishers, 2020 4-4 Financial Accounting, 6 th Edition Q1-12. Return on equity (ROE) is computed as net income divided by average stockholders’ equity (an average of stockholders’ equity for the current and previous year is commonly used, but the ratio is sometimes computed only with beginning or ending stockholders’ equity). The return on equity is a popular measure for analysis because it compares the level of return earned with the amount of equity invested to generate the return. Furthermore, it combines both the income statement and the balance sheet and, thereby, highlights the fact that companies must manage both well to achieve high performance.
Q1-13.
While businesses acknowledge the increasing need for more complete disclosure of financial and nonfinancial information, they have resisted these demands to protect their competitive position. These companies must weigh the benefits they receive from the market as a result of more transparent and revealing financial reporting against the costs of divulging proprietary information.
Q1-14.
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) are the various methods, rules, practices, and other procedures that have evolved over time in response to the need to regulate the preparation of financial statements. They are primarily set by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), an entity of the private sector with representatives from companies that issue financial statements, accounting firms that audit those statements, and users of financial information.
Q1-15.
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) are the accounting methods, rules and principles established by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). The need for IFRS stems from the wide variety of accounting principles adopted in various countries and the lack of comparability that this variety creates. IFRS are intended to create a common set of accounting guidelines that will make the financial statements of companies from different countries more comparable.The IASB has no enforcement authority. As a consequence, the strict enforcement of IFRS is left to the accounting profession and/or securities market regulators in each country. Many countries have reserved the right to make exceptions to IFRS by applying their own (local) accounting rules in selected areas. Some accountants and investors argue that a little diversity is a good thing – variations in accounting practice reflect differences in cultures and business practices of various countries. However, one concern is that IFRS may create the false impression that everyone is following the same rules, even though some variation will continue to permeate international financial reporting.
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