Ch. 8 Current Liabilities Flashcards

1
Q

Liability

A

A PRESENT responsibility to sacrifice assets in the FUTURE due to a transaction or other event that happened in the PAST.

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2
Q

Current Liabilities

A

Debts that, in most cases, are due within one year. However, when a company has an operating cycle of longer than a year, its current liabilities are defined by the operating cycle rather than by the length of a year.

  • can also be called short-term liabilities
  • Given a choice, most companies would prefer to report a liability as long-term rather than current, because doing so may cause the firm to appear less risky.
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3
Q

Notes payable

A

Written promises to repay amounts borrowed plus interest.

-About 2/3 of bank loans are short-term. Short-term funds usually offer lower interest rates than long-term debt.

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4
Q

Line of credit

A

An informal agreement that permits a company to borrow up to a prearranged limit without having to follow formal loan procedures and prepare paperwork.

  • Rather than wait until borrowing becomes necessary, many companies prearrange the terms of a note payable by establishing a line of credit with a bank.
  • The recording for a line of credit is exactly the same as the recording for notes payable.
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5
Q

Commercial paper

A

Borrowing from another company rather than from a bank.

  • commercial paper is sold with maturities ranging from 30 to 270 days. Beyond 270 days, the issuing firm is required to file a registration statement with the SEC.
  • The interest rate on commercial paper is usually lower than on a bank loan.
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6
Q

FICA taxes

A

Based on the Federal Insurance Contribution Act; tax withheld from employees’ paychecks.

  • Social security and medicare taxes.
  • This act requires employers to withhold a 6.2% social security tax up to a maximum base amount plus a 1.45% Medicare tax with no maximum.
  • Therefore, the total FICA tax is 7.65% (6.2% + 1.45%) on income up to a base amount ($106,800 in 2010) and 1.45% on all income above the base amount.
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7
Q

Unemployment taxes

A

A tax to cover federal and state unemployment costs paid by the employer on behalf of its employees.

  • Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) requires a tax of 6.2% on the first $7,000 made by each employee. This amount is reduced by a 5.4% (max) credit for contributions to state unemployment programs, so the net federal rate often is 0.8%.
  • under the State Unemployment Tax Act (SUTA), in many states the maximum state unemployment tax rate is 5.4%, but many companies pay a lower rate based on past employment history.
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8
Q

Fringe benefits

A

Additional employee benefits paid for by the employer.

-ie: in the airline industry, the ability for the employee and family to fly free.

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9
Q

Unearned revenue

A

A liability account used to record cash received in advance of the sale or service.

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10
Q

Sales tax payable

A

Sales tax collected from customers by the seller, representing current liabilities payable to the government.
-The selling company records sales revenue in one account and sales tax payable in another

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11
Q

Current portion of long-term debt

A

Debt that will be paid within the next year.

  • Long-term obligations (notes, mortgages, bonds) usually are reclassified and reported as current liabilities when they become payable within the upcoming year (or operating cycle, if longer than a year)
  • ie: a firm reports a 10-year note payable as a long-term liability for 9 years but as a current liability on the balance sheet prepared during the 10th year of its term to maturity.
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12
Q

Contingencies

A

Uncertain situations that can result in a gain or a loss for a company.

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13
Q

Contingent liability

A

An existing uncertain situation that might result in a loss.

-Includes: lawsuits, product warranties, environmental problems, and premium offers.

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14
Q

Contingent gain

A

An existing uncertain situation that might result in a gain.
-We do not record contingent gains until the gain is certain and no longer a contingency.

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15
Q

Liquidity

A

Having sufficient cash (or other assets convertible to cash in a relatively short time) to pay currently maturing debts.
-3 liquidity measures: working capital, the current ratio, and the acid-test ratio

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16
Q

Working capital

A

The difference between current assets and current liabilities.

17
Q

Current ratio

A

Current assets divided by current liabilities; measures the availability of current assets to pay current liabilities.

18
Q

Acid-test ratio

A

Cash, current investments, and accounts receivable divided by current liabilities; measures the availability of liquid current assets to pay current liabilities.

19
Q

Quick assets

A

Includes only cash, current investments, and accounts receivable.
-(only assets that can be quickly converted to cash)

20
Q

Debt covenant

A

An agreement between a borrower and a lender that requires that certain minimum financial measures be met or the lender can recall the debt.
-ie suppose a company has entered into a debt covenant with its bank that requires a minimum current ratio of 1.25.

21
Q

Deferred Taxes

A
  • Net income in the income statement is not the same amount as taxable income reported to the IRS.
  • There are many differences between financial accounting rules and tax accounting rules (most use straight-line depreciation for financial accounting. But they use a different depreciation method called MACRS for tax accounting
  • Differences between financial accounting and tax accounting can result in a company recording financial income now, but deferring payment of some of its income tax expense to future years. In such a case, it will report a deferred tax liability (both current and long-term). (or the company may record an expense now, but deduct it for taxes in future years, in which case it will report a deferred tax asset)