Financial Analysis and Reporting (Introduction)
Financial Analysis and Reporting (Introduction)
Financial Analysis and Reporting (Introduction)
Objectives:
1. Define accounting.
2. To acquaint with the business’ use of financial statements for decision making purposes.
3. To introduce some technical terms in Accounting which will help them understand the language of business.
Accounting
- Accounting Standard Council (ASC) defined it as “it is service activity. Its function is to provide quantitative
information, primarily financial in nature, about economic entities, that is intended to be useful in making
economic decisions.”
- American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) defined it as “an art of recording, classifying,
summarizing in a significant manner and in terms of money, transactions and events which are, in part at
least of a financial character and interpreting the results thereof.”
As mentioned earlier, the business and the owner are being separated and the financial statements
become the “bridge of communication” between them.
1. Assets – resources controlled by the enterprises as a result of past transactions and events and from which
future economic benefits are expected to flow the enterprise.
- things that are owned and used by the enterprise in its operations.
2. Liabilities – present obligation of an enterprise arising from past transactions or events, the settlement
which is expected to result in an outflow from the enterprise of resources embodying economic
benefits.
- financial obligations of the business to the creditors.
3. Owner’s Equity or Capital – the residual interest in the assets of the enterprise after deducting all its
liabilities.
- it is increased when there is profit or additional contributions and decreased when there is loss or
withdrawals by the owner.
4. Revenues – the gross inflow of economic benefits during the period arising in the course of ordinary
activities of an enterprise when those inflows result in increase in equity, other than those relating
to contributions from owners.
5. Expenses – the gross outflow of economic benefits during the period arising in the course of ordinary
activities of an enterprise when those outflow result in decrease in equity, other than those relating
to distribution to owners.
Bookkeeping – is the process of recording “systematically’ the business transaction in a “chronological manner”.
Accounting Cycle
- refers to the various steps of the accounting process which are composed of the following steps:
Business Transactions
- business transactions are analyzed from the view point of business. It the transaction is “ Purchased” or
“Bought”, it is the business that is buying.
Illustration
“Bought a car for a cash, P 650,000.”
We then say,
Car 650,000
Cash 650,000
Account Titles
- are identifications or brief descriptions of item that fall to same kind, class or nature. In recording business
transactions, the elements of financial statements which are better known as “accounting elements” or
“accounting values” are to be assigned with their individual names called “account titles”.
Chart of Accounts
Accounting Equation
JOURNALIZING
Book of Accounts – records that are used and kept by the business in storing all of the accounting data
PARTICULAR – shows the item or the accounts debited and credited as a result of a transaction analysis
as well as brief or concise explanation of what the transaction is about
FOLIO – shows the number of an account in a ledger page or page of a ledger to which it was
transferred. Folio is a Latin word for “page”.
DEBIT COLUMN – this is a money column showing the peso amount of the value received in a
transaction
CREDIT COLUMN – this is a money column showing the peso amount of the value parted in a
transaction
Recording is the first phase of Accounting. This involves the writing down of business transaction in a systematic
manner and in order of occurrence in the book of original entry.
1. The Date Column is divided into sub-columns. Enter in the first sub-column the month and the year. The year
is written above the month in the same space of the first line.
2. The Particular Colum – After analyzing a transaction and have ably determined the value received and the
value parted with. Enter the debit item first in the same line with the transaction date and the corresponding
peso amount in the debit money column. The credit item is indented with a reasonable distance from the
column of the debit item. The amount of the debit must be equal with the amount of the credit
A complete journal entry should have an explanation.
3. Leave a vacant space before recording the next transaction. Write only the date in the second sub-column of
the date column and the same procedure is follows.