ACC 561 FINAL EXAM

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Home.
Advertisements

Chapter 3 Working with Financial Statements
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA Copyright.
The Financial Statements
Analyzing Financial Statements
Analyzing Financial Statements 9/01/03
Financial Analysis & Ratios
A Framework for Financial Statement Analysis Chapter 11.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS RAJESH KEVIN SANJAY.
Dr. Mohamed A. Hamada Lecturer of Accounting Information Systems
1 Managerial Accounting Weygandt Kieso Kimmel Financial Statement Analysis: The Big Picture Chapter 14.
Financial Accounting, Tenth Edition
Lesson 10 Understanding and Using Financial Statements Task Team of FUNDAMENTAL ACCOUNTING School of Business, Sun Yat-sen University.
Accounting Principles, Ninth Edition
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 5th Edition Adelman and Marks Pearson Higher Education ©2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Chapter.
McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 Measuring and Evaluating Financial Performance PowerPoint.
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA CHAPTER.
Financial Statements for a Corporation
The Ownership of a Corporation
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.Glencoe Accounting Accounting for a Corporation The Ownership of a Corporation Section.
Financial Statement Analysis: The Big Picture
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Analyzing Financial Statements Chapter 14.
Analysis of Financial Statements. Learning Objectives  Understand the purpose of financial statement analysis.  Perform a vertical analysis of a company’s.
Chapter 18: Financial Statement Analysis Basics of Financial Statement Analysis Tools of AnalysisRatio Analysis.
CPS ® and CAP ® Examination Review MANAGEMENT, Fifth Edition By Haney and Mazzola ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River,
Financial Statements for a Corporation Chapter 19.
Analyzing Financial Statements
Financial Statements for a Corporation Making Accounting Relevant Public corporations often offer Web sites where they provide financial data. Making Accounting.
© McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Chapter 14 Analyzing Financial Statements.
PRE-PARED BY: AZHAR AHMED 1-1 CHAPTER 4 The Financial Statements.
ACC 561 Final Exam BY Copyright. All Rights Reserved by
上海金融学院 1-1 Lecture 3 Investment Banking Basics: The Financial Statements.
0 Glencoe Accounting Unit 4 Chapter 19 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Unit 4 The Accounting Cycle for a Merchandising.
Chapter 18-1 Chapter 18 Financial Statement Analysis Accounting Principles, Ninth Edition.
STR 581 Week 4 Capstone Final Examination Part 2 BY Copyright. All Rights Reserved by
Warren Reeve Duchac Corporate Financial Accounting 14e Chapter 1 Introduction to Adjusting and Business.
Book Cover Chapter Thirteen. ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2006McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Thirteen Financial Statement Analysis.
CHAPTER18 Financial Statement Analysis.
Chapter Chapter 18-2 Chapter 18 Financial Statement Analysis Accounting Principles, Ninth Edition.
str 581 capstone final examination part 2 answers
ACC 561 Assignment: Week 1 Practice Quiz To purchase this material click below link Assignment-Practice-Quiz.
ACC 561 Week 2 Assignment Practice Quiz ​ 100%Correct To purchase this material click below link Assignment-Week-2-Practice-Quiz.
ACC 561 Week 6 Assignment Practice Quiz Check this A+ tutorial guideline at 6-Assignment-Practice-Quiz.
Cost Analysis for Management Decision Making
Cost Analysis for Management Decision Making
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.
Prepared by: Carole Bowman, Sheridan College
Financial Statement Analysis
FIN 571 Final Exam
CHAPTER1 Accounting in Action.
Financial Statement Analysis
Analysis and Interpretation of Financial Statements
Fundamental Managerial Accounting Concepts
ACC 556 ASSIST Future Our Mission/acc556assist.com
Reporting and Interpreting Cost of Goods Sold and Inventory
Basic Accounting for Business Decision
AN INTRODUCTION TO FINANCIAL STATMENTS
$ $ $ $ Financial Information Chapter 19
Financial Statement Analysis
Financial statement analysis and interpretation
Financial Statement Analysis
Accounting Fundamentals
Kevin J. Collins, CPA/PFS, MST
Financial Analysis & Ratios
Chapter 1: Accounting and the Financial Statements
FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS
Accounting and Business
Introduction to Accounting and Business
Chapter 15 Financial Statement Analysis Student Version
Presentation transcript:

ACC 561 FINAL EXAM Small classes and personable lecturers. The lecturers all take the time to get to know the students on a level that would be impossible in any place. The course material of Accounts is also always current and relevant in the ever changing business world. - Tom Kearns

ACC 561 Final Exam UOP E Assignments supply full curriculum to understand the motive of writing paper of the ACC 561 Final Exam with latest online solution such as ACC 561 final exam question and answers, ACC 561 final exam answers free, Accounting 561 final exam, ACC 561 final exam 2015, ACC 561 financial statement analysis, ACC 561 week 6. All these available for the University of Phoenix students in the USA.

1. Which of the following is an advantage of corporations relative to partnerships and sole proprietorships? Lower taxes. Harder to transfer ownership. Most common form of organization. Reduced legal liability for investors. 2. The group of users of accounting information charged with achieving the goals of the business is its Auditors. Creditors. Managers. Investors. 3. Which of the following financial statements is concerned with the company at a point in time? Income statement. Balance sheet. Retained Earnings statement. Statement of cash flows.

4. An income statement presents the revenues and expenses for a specific period of time. summarizes the changes in retained earnings for a specific period of time. reports the assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity at a specific date. reports the changes in assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity over a period of time. 5. the most important information needed to determine if companies can pay their current obligations is the Net income for this year. Relationship between current assets and current liabilities. projected net income for next year. Relationship between short-term and long-term liabilities. 6. A liquidity ratio measures the Short-term ability of a company to pay its maturing obligations and to meet unexpected needs for cash. Percentage of total financing provided by creditors. Income or operating success of a company over a period of time. Ability of a company to survive over a long period of time.

The lectures are hard, but interesting and many of the lecturers are always ready to help you with your work and give you further support and large collection of course guide.. Thank you uop e assignments team for making my Leanne Marsh

7. The convention of consistency refers to consistent use of accounting principles throughout the accounting periods. among firms. within industries. among accounting periods. 8.Horizontal analysis is also known as common size analysis. linear analysis. vertical analysis. trend analysis. 9. Horizontal analysis is a technique for evaluating a series of financial statement data over a period of time to determine which items are in error. that has been arranged from the highest number to the lowest number. to determine the amount and/or percentage increase or decrease that has taken place. that has been arranged from the lowest number to the highest number.

10. Vertical analysis is a technique that expresses each item in a financial statement as a percent of a base amount. in dollars and cents. starting with the highest value down to the lowest value. as a percent of the item in the previous year. 11. Process costing is used when the production process is continuous. costs are to be assigned to specific jobs. production is aimed at filling a specific customer order. dissimilar products are involved. 12. An important feature of a job order cost system is that each job must be similar to previous jobs completed. has its own distinguishing characteristics. must be completed before a new job is accepted. consists of one unit of output.

13. In a process cost system, product costs are summarized: on job cost sheets. on production cost reports. when the products are sold. after each unit is produced. 14. Activity-based costing allocates overhead to multiple activity cost pools, and it then assigns the activity cost pools to products and services by means of cost drivers. assigns activity cost pools to products and services, then allocates overhead back to the activity cost pools. accumulates overhead in one cost pool, then assigns the overhead to products and services by means of a cost driver. allocates overhead directly to products and services based on activity levels.

Love it. Patient and approachable lecturers and a brilliant course that is informative. Lecturers are very approachable and they help you when you need it. - Leanne Marsh Join us now… Get perfect course guide for grand success in final examinations.

15. An activity that has a direct cause-effect relationship with the resources consumed is a(n) overhead rate. product activity. cost driver. cost pool. 16. A cost which remains constant per unit at various levels of activity is a mixed cost. fixed cost. manufacturing cost. variable cost. 17. The break-even point is where total sales equal total variable costs. total variable costs equal total fixed costs. total sales equal total fixed costs. contribution margin equals total fixed costs.

18. Fixed costs are $600,000 and the contribution margin per unit is $150. What is the break-even point? $1,500,000 $4,000,000 1,500 units 4,000 units 19. When a company assigns the costs of direct materials, direct labor, and both variable and fixed manufacturing overhead to products, that company is using product costing. operations costing. absorption costing. variable costing.

20. If a division manager's compensation is based upon the division's net income, the manager may decide to meet the net income targets by increasing production when using variable costing, in order to increase net income. variable costing, in order to decrease net income. absorption costing, in order to increase net income. absorption costing, in order to decrease net income. 21. An unrealistic budget is more likely to result when it has been developed by all levels of management. has been developed in a bottom up fashion. has been developed in a top down fashion. is developed with performance appraisal usages in mind. 22. A major element in budgetary control is the valuation of inventories. the preparation of long-term plans. approval of the budget by the stockholders. the comparison of actual results with planned objectives.

23. The purpose of the sales budget report is to control sales commissions. control selling expenses. determine whether income objectives are being met. determine whether sales goals are being met. 24. The accumulation of accounting data on the basis of the individual manager who has the authority to make day-to-day decisions about activities in an area is called flexible accounting. static reporting. responsibility accounting. master budgeting. 25. Internal reports that review the actual impact of decisions are prepared by the controller. management accountants. factory workers. department heads.

It is very focused and the lecturers are experienced. I would recommend these tutorial to anyone intending to study Rebecca Foster If you want to score good marks in examinations then click here….

26. The process of evaluating financial data that change under alternative courses of action is called cost-benefit analysis. contribution margin analysis. incremental analysis. double entry analysis. 27. Seasons manufacturing manufactures a product with a unit variable cost of $100 and a unit sales price of $176. Fixed manufacturing costs were $480,000 when 10,000 units were produced and sold. The company has a one-time opportunity to sell an additional 1,000 units at $140 each in a foreign market which would not affect its present sales. If the company has sufficient capacity to produce the additional units, acceptance of the special order would affect net income as follows: Income would increase by $40,000. Income would decrease by $8,000. Income would increase by $140,000. Income would increase by $8,000.

28. Carter, Inc. can make 100 units of a necessary component part with the following costs: Direct Materials $120,000 Direct Labor 20,000 Variable Overhead 60,000 Fixed Overhead 40,000 If Carter can purchase the component externally for $220,000 and only $10,000 of the fixed costs can be avoided, what is the correct make-or-buy decision? Buy and save $30,000 Make and save $10,000 Buy and save $10,000 Make and save $30, A company has a process that results in 15,000 pounds of Product A that can be sold for $16 per pound. An alternative would be to process Product A further at a cost of $200,000 and then sell it for $28 per pound. Should management sell Product A now or should Product A be processed further and then sold? What is the effect of the action? Sell now, the company will be better off by $20,000. Sell now, the company will be better off by $200,000. Process further, the company will be better off by $180,000. Process further, the company will be better off by $20,000.

Download Complete Courses OPS 571 Final Exam QNT 561 Final Exam FIN 575 Final Exam LAW 421 Final Exam LDR 300 Final Exam MKT 421 Final Exam MKT 571 Final Exam ECO 561 Final Exam FIN 370 Final Exam See more question and answers online for – ACC 561 Final Exam ACC 561 Final Exam