Class 5 - Post-Class Slides
Class 5 - Post-Class Slides
❖ A/R are reported on the balance sheet net of the allowance for doubtful
accounts
⏵ Increases (credits) in the allowance = bad debt expense
We make the
⏵ DR BDE (Exp) 100
adjustment at
CR ADA (XA) 100
period close
A/R: A Simple Timeline
1. Number of Units
– Perpetual: an ongoing count of units is maintained during the year
– Periodic: units in inventory are counted at end of the fiscal year
❖ On January 2, 2018, YETI purchased $15,000 worth of kitchen grade stainless steel at
$3/lb
❖ On January 14, 2018, YETI purchased an additional $10,000 worth of stainless steel at
$4/lb
❖ Question: How many pounds of stainless steel does the company hold in its inventory?
❖ During the year, the company makes 10,000 tumblers and ramblers, using
6,000 pounds of stainless steel and sells all of them for $300,000
❖ Real world
⏵ Different units of inventory have different prices
⏵ Prices may fluctuate across time or across suppliers
Definitions
Beginning Balance
Ending Balance
Inventory and Cost of Goods Sold
Inventory Systems and Cost-flow Assumptions
Definitions
❖ Step 1: Do a physical inventory count at the end of the fiscal year to find the ending
balance
❖ Step 2: Add the purchases to your inventory account
❖ Step 3: Use one of 3 Periodic methods to find COGS from the inventory T-account
Let’s go back to our YETI example (and assume they had $0 in beg. inventory
balance):
YETI uses 6,000 pounds of steel in the goods they sell for the reporting period.
3 Periodic Methods Through an Example
❖ Inventory purchases
⏵ 5,000 lbs at $3/lb → total cost: $15,000
⏵ 2,500 lbs at $4/lb → total cost: $10,000
Resulting inventory balance: $25,000
▪ Inventory needs
Sell cups that used 6,000 lbs of steel during the
reporting period
3 Periodic Methods Through an Example
1,000 $4 $4,000
$19,000
3,500 $3 $10,500
$20,500
❖ Question: Assuming inventory cost per unit rises over time, what are the
effects of using FIFO vs. LIFO on a company’s financial statements?
⏵ COGS?
⏵ Net Income?
⏵ Tax expense?
FIFO Avg. Cost LIFO
❖ Since Average Costs and averages the total cost per unit:
⏵ COGS, NET INCOME & TAX EXPENSE are IN BETWEEN FIFO and
LIFO results
FIFO Avg. Cost LIFO
DogGone Biscuits sells specialty dog treats all across the United States.
DogGone Biscuits had three inventory purchases throughout the
reporting year (and had $0 in its beginning inventory balance):
First purchase: 500 pounds of biscuits at $8/lb
Second purchase: 200 pounds of biscuits at $9/lb
Third purchase: 600 pounds of biscuits at $10/lb
Over the course of the year, DogGone Biscuits sold 850 lbs of dog
biscuits.
Applying What We Learned
❖ Inventory purchases
⏵ 500 pounds at $8/lb → total cost: $4,000
⏵ 200 pounds at $9/lb → total cost: $1,800
⏵ 600 pounds at $10/lb → total cost: $6,000
❖ Resulting inventory balance: $11,800
❖ Inventory needs
⏵ Sells 850 pounds of dog biscuits during the reporting period
DogGone Biscuits Question
❖ Inventory purchases
⏵ 500 pounds at $8/lb → total cost: $4,000
⏵ 200 pounds at $9/lb → total cost: $1,800
⏵ 600 pounds at $10/lb → total cost: $6,000
❖ Resulting inventory balance: $11,800
❖ Inventory needs
⏵ Sells 850 pounds of dog biscuits during the reporting period
First-In-First-Out (FIFO)
# Units Cost per Unit Total Cost
200 $9 $1,800
850 $7,300
200 $9 $1,800
50 $8 $400
850 $8,200
❖Up till now we used cost – i.e. price we paid – to value inventory
❖Measurement rule:
Lower of cost or market
❖ Measurement rule:
Lower of cost or market
❖ If the market value of inventory is below its cost, we have to ‘write it down’
⏵ I.e. inventory write-off
❖ Accounting “conservatism”!
❖ Cannot “write up” an asset
Long-term Assets
Tangible Assets
1. Productive assets (e.g. machinery, buildings, and vehicles)
2. Natural resources (e.g. timber and natural gas)
3. Land Tangible: can feel,
touch
Intangible Assets
1. Identifiable intangibles with limited lives (e.g. software, patents)
2. Identifiable intangibles with indefinite lives (e.g. brand logos and
trademarks)
3. Goodwill
Definition: Expenses
In case of long-term assets:
Assets that have limited
useful lives
Tangible Assets
1. Productive assets
⏵ “Depreciation”
2. Natural resources
⏵ “Depletion”
3. Land
⏵ NOT depreciated – stays at cost
Expensing Long-term Assets
Intangible Assets
1. Identifiable intangibles with limited lives
⏵ “Amortization”
2. Identifiable intangibles with indefinite lives
⏵ Not amortized – stays at cost
3. Goodwill
⏵ Not amortized – stays at cost
❖ Historical Cost
⏵ The amount paid, or the fair market value of the liability incurred
or other resources surrendered, to acquire an asset and place it
in a condition and position for its intended use
Capitalizing versus Expensing
❖ Salvage Value
❖ The expected value at the end of the life of the asset.
❖ Amount to be Depreciated
❖ Cost – Salvage Value
“Net PPE” – what we
list on our “books”!
❖ Book Value
❖ Cost – Accumulated Depreciation
PPE Natural Intangibles
Some Useful Definitions Resources
❖ Depreciation/Depletion/Amortization
❖ The process of assigning the cost of a long-term asset to expense.
❖ Accumulated Depreciation/Depletion/Amortization
❖ Contra asset account used to record depreciation/ depletion/ amortization expense.
❖ *** Not a decrease to PP&E directly
❖ For example:
EB 0
Basic Accounting for Capital Assets
2. Allocating the cost of the asset to expense over its useful life (depreciation)
2. Allocating the cost of the house to expense over its useful life
❖ “Today we learned that some numbers in the financial statements are not
based on solid verifiable information”
❖ GAAP requires all direct or incidental costs incurred in acquiring an asset and
preparing it for its original intended use to be capitalized as part of the cost of
the asset
⏵ e.g., Sales taxes, Shipping costs, Preparation costs
Journal entry
2. Allocating the cost of the asset to expense over its useful life
Step 2: Allocating the cost
❖ Definition of expense is using up of an asset. In this case we are using it up
over time.
⏵ Depreciation Expense for Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE)
⏵ Amortization Expense for Intangible Assets
⏵ Depletion Expense for Natural Resources
❖ We record an expense and reduce the value of the net asset via accumulated
depreciation
❖ Two pieces of information the company must estimate to allocate the asset to
expense properly
⏵ Estimated life: how long is the asset projected to be productive (i.e. future
benefit)?
⏵ Salvage value: how much can the asset be sold for at the end of the useful?
❖ Measurement Issues:
⏵ The company must predict use and salvage value far into the future
❖ Measurement Biases:
⏵ Long-term nature means biases may take a long time to show up (this
creates incentives)
⏵ Managers likely to reassess usage (and thus change policies) when under
pressure to perform
1. Straight-line
2. Double-declining balance (“Accelerated” Method)
3. Units-of-production
The choice of the method depends on what management believes to be the “true”
pattern of economic use of the asset.
Step 2: Allocating the cost
1. Straight-line:
• Charges an equal amount per time period
• Appropriate for assets that lose their usefulness evenly over their lives
• We’ve done this before
= $28.8M for the first whole year = $28.8M * (9/12) for 2023 = $21.6M for 2023
Method 1: Straight-Line Depreciation
❖ EXAMPLE On April 1, 2023, an F-22 Raptor (asset) with an estimated life of 5 years
and an estimated salvage value of $27M was acquired. The asset had a cash price of
$171M. The fiscal year-end is December 31.
ADJUSTING ENTRY:
2023
2024
2
Depreciation = Book value X
Useful life in years
Method 2: Double-Declining Balance
***Stop depreciating when book value = salvage value
2
Depreciation = Book value X
Useful life in years
Method 2: Double-Declining Balance
❖ Compute double-declining balance depreciation for the current year?
2
Depreciation = Book value X
Useful life in years
= ($171M – 0) x 2/5
= $68.4M for the first whole year
19,200
Recap: Depreciation Journal Entries
Balance Sheet
Asset 171.0
Accumulated Depreciation (28.8)
Book Value (net PPE) 142.2
❖ Book value (net PPE) is defined as the original capitalized cost less any
accumulated depreciation.
⏵ It is the amount that appears on the balance sheet.
Market
Cost
Valuation: Lower of Cost or Market
❖ Order:
⏵ First: measure at cost
⏵ Later: revalue at market value if market is lower than cost
❖ Write-down:
⏵ When you reduce the asset’s book value and record an offsetting expense
2. Allocating the cost of the asset to expense over its useful life
2. Expenses:
❖ Capitalized
Debit: Asset xx
Credit: Cash/Accounts Payable xx
❖ Expensed immediately
❖ Suppose you are the CEO of a company. Your company made some repairs to
its assets.
❖ If you are under pressure to increase profit, what choice (capitalize vs. expense)
would you make to increase profits in the short term?
Basic Accounting for Capital Assets
2. Allocating the cost of the asset to expense over its useful life
❖ If we sell the asset, we need to make sure any record of the asset is
removed from the accounting records
⏵ Which accounts are affected?
⏵ Raptor (Asset) Yes
⏵ Accumulated Depreciation Yes
⏵ Depreciation Expense No
Sale or Disposal of an Asset
❖ Gains:
⏵ When the selling price is HIGHER than the ‘net’ book value of the sold asset
❖ Losses:
⏵ When the selling price is LOWER than the ‘net’ book value of the sold asset
❖ Gain/loss on asset sale is an income statement account that represents the net
effect of this transaction. It is typically put on the income statement below
“Operating Income” in “Other Income and Expenses”
Rule for Calculating Gains and Losses
No Loss / Gain
Selling Price = 5,400 Cash 5,400
Accumulated Depreciation 6,600
Selling Price equal to book
Equipment 12,000
value.
2. We record the cash effects, and the difference goes to gain/loss on asset
sale.
1. Identifiable Assets
2. Goodwill
❖ This is the one unidentifiable intangible asset. It has the following properties :
❖Essentially – brand value is not on the Balance Sheet unless the company gets
bought or merged
Goodwill
Here’s how it works:
Facebook purchases WhatsApp for $19 billion in 2014
identifiable assets
▪ Tangible assets
– Make sure you know how to compute straight-line depreciation
– Disposals of assets (gain and loss)
▪ Intangible assets
– Definite and indefinite lives
– Goodwill
▪ Asset valuation
– Lower of cost or market
Summary
▪ Current Assets
▪ A/R and ADA
▪ Inventory
▪ Cash & Cash Equivalents
▪ Liquidity
▪ Long-Term Assets
▪ Depreciation/Depletion
▪ Capital Expenditures
▪ Intangibles
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