Fundamental Accounting Principles CH6 Flashcards

1
Q

Goods on Consignment

A

Goods on consignment are goods shipped by the owner, called the consignor, to another party, the consignee.

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2
Q

Net Realizable Value

A

Value is sales price - the cost of making the sale. A loss is recorded when the damage or obsolesce occurs.

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3
Q

Inventory Costs

A

Inventory costs include invoice cost minus any discount, plus any other costs. Other costs include shipping, storage, import duties, and insurance.

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4
Q

Expenses Recognition Principle

A

states that inventory costs are expensed as cost of goods sold when inventory is sold.

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5
Q

Internal Controls and Taking a Physical Count

A

Events can cause the Inventory account balance to be different than the actual Inventory available. Such events include theft, loss, damage, and errors.

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6
Q

Internal controls for Inventory

A
  • Prenumbered inventory tickets are distributed to counters - each ticket must be accounted for.
  • Counters of inventory are assigned and do not include those responsible for inventory.
  • Counters confirm the existence, amount and condition of inventory.
  • a second count is taken by a different counter.
  • a manager confirms all inventories are ticketed once, and only once.
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7
Q

Four methods to assign inventory and to cost of goods sold

A
  1. Specific identification
  2. first-in, first-out (FIFO)
  3. Last-in, First-out (LIFO)
  4. Weighted average
    * Goods purchased column is identical for all methods.
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8
Q

FIFO (First in, First out)

A

assumes cost flow in the order incurred.
assumes inventory items are sold in the order acquired. Leaves the cost from the most recent purchases in ending inventory.
*Yields the highest gross profit and net income

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9
Q

LIFO (last in, First out)

A

assumes cost flow in the reverse order incurred.
Assumes that the most recent purchases are sold first. By assigning costs from the most recent purchases to cost of goods sold, LIFO comes closest to matching current costs of goods sold with revenue.
*yields the lowest gross profit and net income

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10
Q

Weighted average

A

assumes cost flow at an average of the costs available.

*yields results between FIFO and LIFO

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11
Q

Specific Identification

A

common for custom made inventory

Jewelers, fashion designers.

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12
Q

Weighted Average

A

requires that we use the weighted average cost per unit of inventory at the time of each sale.
= COGS at each sales/# of units available at each sale

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13
Q

Kickbacks and Invoice Fraud

A

Inventory safeguards include restricted access, use of authorized requisitions, and security measures. Proper accounting includes matching inventory received with purchase order terms and quality requirements, preventing misstatements, and controlling access records.

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14
Q

Rising Costs

A

When purchase costs regularly rise, the following occurs,
FIFO reports are the lowest cost of goods sold
LIFO reports the highest COGS
Weighted average yields results between FIFO and LIFO

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15
Q

Falling Costs

A

When costs regularly decline, the revers occurs for FIFO and LIFO
FIFO gives the highest COGS
LIFO gives the lowest COGS

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16
Q

Method Advantages

A

Each method offers advantages.
FIFO - inventory on the balances sheet approximates its current cost; it also follows the actual flow of goods for most businesses.
LIFO - COGS on the income statement approximates its current cost; it also better matches current costs with revenue.
Weighted Average - smooths out erratic changes in costs.
Specific Identification - matches the costs of items with the revenues they generate.

17
Q

LCM - Lower of cost or market

A
applied to each individual item always yields the lowest inventory.
Applied 3 ways
1. each individual item separately
2. major categories or items
3. the whole of inventory
18
Q

Inventory Relation

A

Beginning inventory + net purchases - ending inventory = COGS

19
Q

Inventory Turnover

A

called merchandise inventory turnover
= COGS/Average Inventory
*Lower inventory turnover can reveal obsolescence.

20
Q

Gross Profit Method

A

estimates the cost of ending inventory by applying the gross profit ratio to net sales.

21
Q

FOB Shiping point

A

goods are included in buyer’s inventory once they are shipped.

22
Q

FOB destination

A

goods are included in buyer’s inventory after arrival at their destination

23
Q

Consignee

A

Never reports consigned goods in inventory; stays in consignor’s inventory until sold

24
Q

Merchandise inventory

A

Includes any necessary costs to make an item ready for sale. Examples- shipping, storage, import fees, and insurance.