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Chapter 6. Define accounting principles related to inventory.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6. Define accounting principles related to inventory."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6

2 Define accounting principles related to inventory

3 ConsistencyDisclosure MaterialityConservatism Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.3

4  Consistency ◦ Businesses should use the same accounting methods from period to period  Disclosure ◦ Companies should report enough information for outsiders to make decisions about the company  Materiality ◦ Companies must follow accounting rules for significant items  Significant – cause a user to change decision  Conservatism ◦ Exercise caution in financial reporting Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.4

5 Define inventory costing methods

6 Specific-unit cost First-in, First-out Last-in, Last out Average- cost Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.6

7  Each inventory item is identified by its specific cost  Used by business that sell unique, easily identified items ◦ Examples: Cars, fine jewelry real estate Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.7

8 8 Assumes oldest items are sold first Oldest Costs Cost of Goods Sold Therefore, newest items are on hand Recent Costs Ending Inventory

9 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.9 Recent Costs Cost of Goods Sold Oldest Costs Ending Inventory Assumes newest items are sold first Therefore, oldest items are on hand

10 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.10 The average cost of each unit in inventory is assigned to cost of goods sold Average Cost Cost of Inventory on Hand Number of Units on Hand ÷=

11 Account for perpetual inventory by the three most common costing methods

12 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.12 $10 Beginning Inventory $12 Purchase 5 shirts Then we sell 4 shirts for $20 each. What costs should be assigned to Cost of goods sold? First-In, First-Out Cost of good sold = $42Inventory = $48

13 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.13 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTION REF DEBITCREDIT Accounts receivable ($20 x 4)80 Sales revenue80 To record sales on account Cost of goods sold42 Inventory42 To record cost of sales

14 Sales$80 Cost of goods sold 42 Gross profit$38 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.14

15 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.15 $10 Beginning Inventory $12 Purchase 5 shirts Then we sell 4 shirts for $20 each. What costs should be assigned to Cost of goods sold? Last-In, First-Out Cost of good sold = $48Inventory = $42 $12

16 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.16 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTION REF DEBITCREDIT Accounts receivable ($20 x 4)80 Sales revenue80 To record sales on account Cost of goods sold48 Inventory48 To record cost of sales

17 Sales$80 Cost of goods sold 48 Gross profit$32 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.17

18 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.18 $10 Beginning Inventory $12 Purchase 5 shirts Then we sell 4 shirts for $20 each. What costs should be assigned to Cost of goods sold? Compute the Average Cost UnitsCost Beginning inventory3$30 Purchases560 Total8$90 Average = $90/8 = $11.25 Cost of good sold = $11.25 x 4 = $45Inventory = $11.25 x 4 = $45 $12

19 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.19 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTION REF DEBITCREDIT Accounts receivable ($20 x 4)80 Sales revenue80 To record sales on account Cost of goods sold45 Inventory45 To record cost of sales

20 Sales$80 Cost of goods sold 45 Gross profit$35 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.20

21 Compare the effects of the three most common costing methods

22 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.22

23 FIFOLIFOAverage Sales$80 Cost of goods sold$42$48$45 Gross profit$38$32$35 23 Highest gross profit; highest net income Lowest gross profit; lowest net income If inventory prices are increasing Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

24 24 High income attracts investors “Middle ground” Lower income = Less taxes Last-In, First-Out First-In, First-Out Average Cost

25 Apply the lower-of-cost-or market rule to inventory

26  Example of Accounting Conservatism  Inventory is reported at lower of: ◦ Historical cost or ◦ Market value (current replacement cost)  If market is lower than cost, write down inventory value: Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.26

27 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.27 $25,000 #1 #2 $105,000 - $25,000

28 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.28 #3 $405,000 + $25,000 #4 Conservatism

29 Measure the effects of inventory errors

30 Ending inventory overstated Cost of goods sold understated Gross profit and net income overstated Next period beginning inventory overstated Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.30

31 Ending inventory understated Cost of goods sold overstated Gross profit and net income understated Next period beginning inventory understated Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.31

32 Estimate ending inventory by the gross profit method

33  Method to estimate ending inventory using the gross profit percent Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.33 Beginning inventory$15,000 Net purchases 70,000 Cost of goods available 85,000 Estimated cost of goods sold: Sales revenue$100,000 Less: Estimated gross profit of 35% (35,000) Estimated cost of goods sold(65,000) Estimated cost of ending inventory$20,000

34 Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.34 Beginning inventory$47,000 Net purchases 30,300 Cost of goods available 77,300 Estimated cost of goods sold: Sales revenue$63,000 Less: Estimated gross profit of 35% (22,050) Estimated cost of goods sold(40,950) Estimated cost of ending inventory$36,350

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