-
Accounting
Basics
ASSETS = OWNER’S EQUITY +
LIABILITIES
Creditors are a liability. (You owe
them.) = Payables.
Increase of
creditors is a source of cash.
Debtors are an asset. (They owe you.) =
Receivables.
Increase of debtors is a
consumption of cash.
Net
Profit = Change in Owner’s Equity.
Gross Profit = Sales less Cost of
Sales.
Matching Convention:
Profit is calculated by matching costs with the
revenue recognized during the period.
Allocation Convention: First, determine
all costs. Second, allocate costs to sales,
inventory, etc.
Cost Convention: Items
are valued at the historical cost of all input
factors.
Conservatism Convention:
Recognize costs immediately and revenue only when
it is certain.
Accruals Convention: An
obligation from a credit worthy customer may be
regarded as a sale.
Cost of
Raw Materials in P/L Account = Opening Inventory +
Purchases
–
Closing
Inventory
Valuation of Closing
Inventory can be done by FIFO, LIFO or Average
Value.
High Valuation of Closing
Inventory = High Profits, because low valuation of
matched materials cost.
Types of
inventory: Raw Materials, Work-In-Progress,
Finished Goods.
Reserves
are unallocated profits. Reserves would be a part
of owner’s equity, except for some reason are
being held back
from recognition as
such. Bad debt reserves are owner’s equity held
for the purpose of covering bad debt
tha
t may arise in
future
periods.
Depreciation
?
Straight Line: Depreciation = (Purchase
Cost
–
Expected Residual
Value) / Service Life
?
Reducing
Balance: Depreciation = Current Book Value *
Calculated Rate
rv
where n =
years of service, rv = residual value, pc =
purchase cost.
pc
rh
y
?
Consumption:
Depreciation =
?
?
pc
?
rv
?
where rh
y
= running hours
this year, rh
l
= lifetime
running hours.
rh
l
Calculated
Rate =
1
?
n
Current Cost Accounting
Four adjustments need to be made to
convert Historic Cost (normal) statements to
Current Cost statements.
Adjustment 1: Fixed Assets &
Depreciation
1.
List assets at current value (usually
replacement cost) less total accumulated
depreciation, adjusted for the new value.
The current cost revaluation reserve is
credited the difference, so that the profit & loss
account does not show any gains
or
losses for revaluation, which is after all not
profit from operations.
2.
The depreciation charge to be accounted
for this year is the difference between the new
total accumulated depreciation
desired,
and the total accumulated depreciation as of last
year. The “current consumption” depreciation is
calculated per
normal practice and
reflected on the profit & loss statement. The
remaining “backlog” or
“top
-
up” depreciation
is
DEBITED from the current cost
revaluation reserve, because it reflects a lower
starting book value of the asset in
question than is otherwise shown.
Adjustment 2: Cost of Sales
1.
Find a suitable price index for the
beginning of the year, end of the year and average
through the year. Convert all prices
from historic dollars to index-average
dollars by dividing by the index at the relevant
time and multiplying by the
average
index.
2.
Determine current cost of sales by:
(opening inventory + purchases)
–
closing inventory, all in
adjusted current values.
3.
Cost of Sales Adjustment is the
difference between historic cost of sales and
current cost of sales. This adjustment is
added to cost of sales (reducing
profit) and also added to the current cost
revaluation reserve.
4.
Closing inventory value must be listed
at the current prices. Adjust closing inventory
value by the appropriate price
index,
and add the resulting adjustment to the valuation
on the balance sheet and also to the current cost
revaluation
reserve.
Adjustment 3: Monetary Working Capital
1.
Determine the opening and closing MWC
(debtors etc. less creditors etc., but not
including cash because cash is not
WORKING capital). Subtract opening from
closing to determine this year’s change in
MWC.
2.
Isolate the volume change component of
the change in MWC by taking the difference of the
opening and closing values
as expressed
in current dollars. (Convert to current dollars
using indexes as in the Cost of Sales adjustment.)
3.
Find the price
increase component by subtracting the volume
change component from the total change from step
1.
4.
Deduct the
price increase component from operating profit and
add it to the current cost revaluation reserve.
Adjustment 4: Gearing Ratio
Adjustment
1.
Determine the gearing ratio. Find net
borrowings (loans less cash but not including
creditors) and net operating assets
(net borrowings plus owner’s equity
plus all reserves). Gearing ratio is net
borrowings divided by net operating assets
and is usually expressed as a
percentage.
2.
Multiply
the three previous
adjustments by the gearing ratio to determine the
amount which should be “backed out”
(because loan payments are fixed at
historical price levels).
3.
Credit this amount to operating profits
and debit this amount from the current cost
revaluation reserve.
Ratio
Analysis
Liquidity Ratios:
Current Ratio = Current Assets /
Current Liabilities. Measures ability to pay
bills. Rule of thumb: 2.
Quick Ratio =
(Current Assets
–
Inventory)
/ Current Liabilities. Measures ability to pay
bills NOW. Rule of thumb: 1.
Profitability Ratios:
Profit
Margin = Profit after interest and taxes / Sales.
Return on Total Assets = Profit after
interest and taxes / Total assets.
Return on Specific Assets = Profit
after interest and taxes / Inventory.
Return on Own
er’s Equity =
Profit attributable to parent company / Owner’s
equity.
Return On Investment
(from Dupont Chart) = Profit/Sales x Total Asset
Turnover.
Capital Structure
Ratios:
Fixed to Current Asset Ratio =
Fixed assets / Current assets. Meaningless without
industry average to compare to.
Debt
Ratio = Total debt / Total assets. Also known as
the gearing or leverage ratio.
Times
Interest Earned = (Profit before tax + Interest
charges) / Interest charges. Measures the
company’s ability to weather
loss of
profit or increase in interest rates without
defaulting on loan obligations.
Efficiency Ratios:
Inventory
Turnover = Sales / Inventory. Measures number of
times inventory is turned over during a year.
Average Collection Period = Debtors /
Sales per day. Calculates the average number of
days a debtor goes before paying.
Fixed
Assets Turnover = Sales / Fixed assets. Measures
how hard assets are worked. Be careful about asset
valuation. If a
company has more up-to-
date (therefore higher) asset values on the books,
their ratio will look worse.
Stock Market Ratios:
Earnings Per Share = Profit
after tax, minority interests and extraordinary
items / Number of ordinary shares in issue.
Price to Earnings = Market price / EPS.
Measures how many years of profit you must spend
to buy a share.
Dividend Yield =
Dividend per share / Market value per share.
Expressed as a percentage.
Dividend
Cover = Net profit of the year / Dividend payout.
Shows the degree to which the dividend is
reasonable to pay out.
Off-
Balance Sheet Transactions
Companies can use a variety of means to
control what appears on their financial statements
for any of the obvious reasons.
This is
usually illegal, depending. Tactics are:
Controlled non-subsidiaries
–
owning less than 50% of a
company but structuring it in such a way as to
retain management
control, perhaps by
owning all the voting stock but also issuing non-
voting stock.
Consignment inventories
–
arranging for
inventory to be owned by someone else so you don’t
have to report it as an asset.
Example:
A car dealership might not take possession of a
car until it is sold, even though it is obvious
that the car on the lot is
a productive
asset to the dealership.
Debt factoring
–
If debts (accounts
receivable) are sold to a third party for
collection, they can be written off the books.
However, if the deal with the third
party includes a right of recourse against the
company, the debts to all intents and
purposes still belong to the company
and should (but might not be) reported as such.
Acquisitions & Mergers
Goodwill is the amount paid
in a takeover over and above the book value of the
company being bought. It represents hidden
assets, tangible and intangible, that
the buying company is willing to pay for. Goodwill
can be written off immediately at the
time of purchase, or capitalized over
its useful lifetime. It depends on management
attitudes and the nature of what
constitutes the goodwill.
Brands
Brands
are intangible assets. Brands include names and
appearances, but also include technical know-how
such as the recipe
for an item of
confectionery or the water content in malt whisky.
Some companies report their brands as assets on
the balance
sheet. Some of the reasons
for doing this are:
-
Smaller companies which desire to be
left alone can use brands to increase their book
value, making it more costly for
predator companies to attempt
takeovers;
-
Aggressive predator companies can use
brand assets to drive up their share prices,
reducing the number of shares they
must
use to finance share-swap takeovers;
-
Highly
leveraged companies can use brands can be used to
increase non-loan assets, reducing their apparent
debt ratio;
-
If
brands are listed as separate assets, they can be
capitalized during a merger or takeover, reducing
the amount of
goodwill and the problem
of figuring out how to deal with it.
However, if you do put brands on the
balance sheet, you have to depreciate them over
their expected useful life. This will
reduce profits, which abrogates some of
the advantages of putting the brand on the balance
sheet in the first place. It is hard
to
know the useful life of a brand. Some companies
claim that brands have an indefinite life, but
auditors are not convinced.
Valuing a brand is also difficult. Two
methods that are sometimes used:
Historic Cost
–
all costs involved in developing and maintaining
the brand are capitalized. This method claims to
be objective,
but it is difficult to
know if any given expense was for developing a
brand or simply for selling product. In essence,
previously written-off costs are
reintroduced as capital items.
Earnings
Method
–
Management attempts
to attribute the actual earnings of the company to
specific brands and then apply a
multiplier to this figure which
reflects the brand strength over the foreseeable
future. This method is very subjective and
based on wild guesses about future
earnings potential.
Research & Development
R&D expenditure is usually written off
in the year it is incurred. However, some
companies claim that since they expect to
derive benefit in future years from
their R&D expenditure, it should be capitalized
and depreciated. This is especially true of
companies where R&D represents a major
percentage of total expenditures, for example
software companies. The problem is
that
there are usually major technical and commercial
risks associated with R&D, so the conservatism
principle says that it
should be
written off immediately.
Management Accounting
Financial Accounting
Management Accounting
Backward-looking. Reports on past
performance.
Forward-looking. Supports
management decision-making.
Highly
structured around the accounting equation.
No formal structure. Designed ad hoc by
each company.
Accounting professional
standards apply.
No externally imposed
rules.
Compulsory by law.
No
–
but all companies use it
in some form.
Strictly money terms.
Mostly money terms, but also perhaps
quantities, etc.
Reports on the company
as a whole.
Generally reports on
specific activities or departments.
External auditors go over the books
frequently.
No mandatory auditing, but
some companies audit internally.
It is important to remember that
management accounting is a service function that
provides information relevant to a decision,
but does not actually make the
decision. Other factors besides cost and money
information are generally considered in
decision-making.
Cost Accounting
Job Costing: Costs are allocated
(apportioned) to individual finished items. Direct
costs are allocated to the units to which
they apply, and overheads are allocated
according to some scheme.
Process Costing: Used where
identification of individual finished items is
impossible. Example: Oil refining. Process costing
collects information about all costs
during an accounting period and divides those
costs by the total quantity output.
Variable Costs: Costs which vary
directly with output, and for which if output were
zero, cost would be zero. Example: Raw
materials.
Fixed Costs:
Costs which are the same regardless of output.
Example: Factory rent.
Semi-Variable
Costs: Costs which vary with output, but not as
directly as variable costs. Example: Depreciation
of factory
machinery. Machinery will
wear out faster while it is being used, but it
will lose value at some rate even sitting idle.
Break-Even Point: The sales quantity
where total costs equal total revenue at a given
price. Or you can plot just profit per
volume, particularly if you want to
compare different cost structures (ie, with or
without the big new machine).
Contribution Margin = Sales Revenue
–
Variable Costs
Contribution Margin Ratio, aka
Profit/Volume Ratio = Contribution Margin Per Unit
/ Sales Revenue
Break-Even Point =
Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin Ratio
Assumptions underpinning cost-volume-
profit analysis (break-even analysis):
-
All costs can
be identified as variable and fixed.
-
All costs
behave precisely as either variable or fixed.
-
Sales price per
unit is known in advance and remains constant with
all output volumes.
-
Sales mix is maintained precisely as
volume changes.
-
All production is sold.
Direct Costs, aka Traceable Costs:
Costs which can be directly identified with
production. Strong overlap with variable costs
but not precisely the same thing.
Indirect Costs, aka Common Costs: Costs
which cannot be directly identified with
production. Often fixed costs.
Manufacturing Overhead: Depreciation on
factory equipment; energy costs for running the
factory; salaries of foremen,
supervisors, QA inspectors.
Non-Manufacturing Overhead:
Depreciation on office equipment; computers and
motor vehicles; building rent; salaries of
office and sales staff and general
management.
Product Costs:
Costs which can be attached to production items
without undue difficulty. Product costs contain a
mixture of
fixed, variable, direct and
indirect costs.
Period Costs: Costs
which are best treated in time periods. Again,
period costs contain a mixture of fixed, variable,
direct and
indirect costs.
Controllable & Non-Controllable Costs:
Refers to whether management has the ability to
choose whether or not to incur the
costs. Costs can only be said to be
controllable or not from the point of view of a
particular manager. For example, the
company’s insurance premiums are
non
-controllable by a shift supervisor
but controllable by the finance director.
Controllability is also influenced by
the time-scale involved. In the very short term no
cost is controllable by anyone. The
concept of controllable
costs is important in budgeting. Managers should
be held to budgetary accountability for their
controllable costs only.
Standard Cost: The engineered and
researched cost that is budgeted for each item of
production.
Actual Cost: Period-by-
period measurement of the actual expenditure for
each item of production.
Engineered Costs: Costs which are
unavoidable if the company wants to continue
production. Example: Raw materials for a
given product design. There is no way
to avoid a certain amount of steel if you want to
build a car.
Discretionary Costs: Costs
which need not be incurred every accounting period
at the level management has come to expect.
Examples: Administrative support, R&D,
machine maintenance.
Beware
the unitizing of fixed costs. If fixed costs are
$$20,000 and variable costs are $$100 per unit, then
as quantity moves
from 100 to 200,
variable costs per unit remain $$100 but fixed
costs per unit changes from $$200 to $$100. Making
decisions
based on a fixed cost per
unit is deceptive if quantity can change.
To determine how to
allocate resources, determine the limiting factor
and then calculate contribution per limiting
factor.
Job Costing
Plantwide Overhead Rate =
Budgeted Total Overhead / Budgeted Production
Quantity (single product firm)
Multi-
product firms require
an “activity base” like direct labor cost or
machine hours. This is then used as the
denominator to
get a company-wide
overhead rate. At the end of the year, most likely
the actual total overhead and actual production
quantity will be different. The amount
by which the actual overheads differ from the
total allocated overheads will be
credited or debited directly to the
profit & loss account.
Departmental Overhead Rate = various
different overhead amounts and activity bases for
the various different departments.
Machine calibration might use machine
hours as an activity base. Personnel might use
total headcount. But some method
must
be applied to allocate these various overheads to
cost items (production).
Direct Method. Manufacturing
departments are each allocated a share of support
department overheads, by their percentage
consumption of activity bases. For
example, if machining has 75 employees and
fabrication has 25, then $$50,000 of budgeted
personnel overhead will be allocated as
$$37,500 to machining and $$12,500 to fabrication.
Once this is done, the total
budgeted
overhead to be dealt with by each manufacturing
departments will be known. In order to allocate
this to actual cost
items, the
manufacturing departments will also be given
activity bases. So if machining has a total of
$$125,000 overhead
allocated, and is
budgeted to use 2500 machine-hours, machining will
be assigned a $$50/machine-hour overhead rate.
Step Method. The step
method recognizes that support departments provide
services to other support departments as well as
to production. The first support
department’s overhead is allocated to all other
departments, etc
., until only
manufacturing
departments are left. The
order in which departments’ costs are allocated
could be decreasing order of total overhead,
decreasing order of percentage of
services rendered to other support departments, or
some other scheme. When determining
any
support department’s activity base, ignore that
department’s consumption of its own resources. IE,
if total company head
count is 200, but
personnel (which goes first) has 10 staff, the
total activity base is 190. The second and
subsequent service
departments must
allocate not only their original overhead, but
also their share of overhead from earlier
allocations.
Joint Products
& By-Products
A joint
product is two or more products which must appear
together during the process of production. If
management has the
option of not
allowing the second product to appear, it is not
considered a joint product. By-products are joint
products where
the secondary product is
considered undesirable or low-value compared to
the main product.
Joint
products present a problem: How should costs be
allocated between the two (or more) products? Some
methods:
Equal Shares: All
costs are simply divided in half (or whatever) and
allocated to each individual product.
Physical Characteristics: Costs are
allocated based on some measurable quantity, like
weight or volume.
Sales Value at Split-
Off: Costs are allocated based on the value which
could be realized if the products were sold
immediately, without further
processing, at the split-off point.
Ultimate Net Sales Value: Costs are
allocated based on the net value realized if the
goods are sold after all further processing
that the company plans to perform.
By-Product Zero
Value: All costs are allocated to the main
product, with the by-product produced at zero
value. If any of the
by-product is
sold, it is credited to sales. Any of the by-
product that is kept in inventory is listed on the
balance sheet, but at a
zero cost.
Process Costing
An equivalent unit of production is an
assessment of the degree of completion of a unit
under each major component of cost.
For
example, if four million litres of paint are in
work-in-progress inventory and are considered 25%
finished, work-in-
progress is valued as
one million litres of equivalent units. Equivalent
units can be assessed for each major cost category
(raw
materials, labor). The purpose is
to assign a number of equivalent units to each
accounting period so that costs can be
allocated to production. The problem is
opening and closing inventory that may be
partially completed at any given time. For
each cost category, sum: 1. Effort
expended this period to complete opening
inventory, not counting whatever was done in
the previous period. 2. Units started
and completed during the period. 3. Effort
expended during the period on closing
inventory.
In
allocating direct costs, add the balance sheet
value of opening inventory to the expenditure
during the period for each
category
(materials, labor). Divide by total equivalent
units to get cost per equivalent unit.
[More process costing stuff in Module
10 was skipped]
Absorption
& Variable Costing
Full
Costing aka Absorption Costing: Calculate Cost of
Sales including fixed costs allocated to
production. Report net profits
less
other, unallocated expenses. Fixed costs are
bundled into the cost of sales figure.
Variable Costing aka Direct Costing:
Calculate Contribution Margin by subtracting
Variable Cost of Sales from revenue.
Then subtract fixed costs as a lump
sum. Only variable costs are allocated to
production; fixed costs are listed separately.
Denominator Volume
Variance. Under absorption costing, fixed costs
are allocated based on overhead rates that use the
budgeted
production quantity
as a denominator. Unless the actual production
quantity exactly equals the budgeted production
quantity, too much or too little fixed
cost will be reported. At the end of the year, the
actual production quantity and actual
fixed costs are known. The denominator
volume variance is the actual fixed costs less the
amount of fixed costs that were
allocated to production in the cost of
sales figure. In other words, the denominator
volume variance is an adjustment so that
the correct amount of fixed costs will
appear on the profit and loss statement.
Absorption and variable
costing can also produce different profit figures.
If units are either drawn from or added to
inventory
(ie when sales does not equal
actual production), the two costing systems will
assign a different value to the opening and
closing inventories. Variable costing
places items into inventory at their variable cost
only. Absorption costing places items
into inventory bearing their share of
overhead costs. Example: Assume opening inventory
is zero. 10,000 items are produced
but
only 9,000 are sold. The variable cost of each
item is $$50 and fixed costs are $$200,000. Variable
costing will show a
closing inventory
value of $$50,000. However, absorption costing adds
a $$20 share of overhead to the value of each item.
As a
result, absorption costing will
show a closing inventory value of $$70,000.
Absorption costing must therefore also show a cost
of sales figure that is $$20,000 less
than that shown under variable costing, hence
$$20,000 more profit. The reverse situation,
where items are drawn from inventory
and more are sold than produced, will result in
lower profit under absorption costing.
Decision-Making
1.
Define the
problem and list all feasible alternatives.
2.
Cost the
alternatives. The relevant costs to consider are
solely those that differ between the alternatives
under review.
3.
Assess the qualitative factors. Most
decisions involve more than just considering the
accounting numbers.
4.
Make the decision.
It is essential that a company-wide
viewpoint is taken rather than a departmental one.
Again beware the unitizing
of fixed costs. Full cost figures can be deceptive
because the temptation is to vary them with
production. IE if we plan to make 1,000
widgets and their manufacturing cost is shown as
$$50 each, it is tempting to assume
that
if we only make 800, the total cost will now be
$$40,000. But if that $$50 included $$20 worth of
allocated overhead, then
the actual
cost to make 800 will be $$44,000, and at the new
production level the cost per unit will now be
$$55. When unitized,
variable costs
appear fixed and fixed costs appear variable.
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