chơi xổ số keno trực tuyến

{"appState":{"pageLoadApiCallsStatus":true},"categoryState":{"relatedCategories":{"headers":{"timestamp":"2025-03-04T08:01:19+00:00"},"categoryId":34230,"data":{"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","image":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"parentCategory":{"categoryId":34226,"title":"Accounting","slug":"accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"}},"childCategories":[],"description":"What's the relationship between Cost of Equity and Cost of Capital? How do mergers and acquisitions work? No matter what your question, we've got the info you'll need to make sense of any accounting issue.","relatedArticles":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles?category=34230&offset=0&size=5"},"hasArticle":true,"hasBook":true,"articleCount":679,"bookCount":13},"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"relatedCategoriesLoadedStatus":"success"},"listState":{"list":{"count":10,"total":680,"items":[{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-10-05T21:59:28+00:00","modifiedTime":"2025-02-26T18:54:57+00:00","timestamp":"2025-02-26T21:01:09+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"Quantitative Finance For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"quantitative finance for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"quantitative-finance-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"This cheat sheet can make sense of some equations and terms that you'll use on a regular basis whether you're a quantitative finance novice or an expert.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"No matter if you're a quantitative finance novice or an expert, this Cheat Sheet can make sense of some equations and terms that you'll use on a regular basis. The following demystifies and explains some of the complexities and models. You can refer regularly to this information to help you in your quant adventures.","description":"No matter if you're a quantitative finance novice or an expert, this Cheat Sheet can make sense of some equations and terms that you'll use on a regular basis. The following demystifies and explains some of the complexities and models. You can refer regularly to this information to help you in your quant adventures.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":10964,"name":"Steve Bell","slug":"steve-bell","description":" <p><b>Steve Bell </b>is a Quantitative Investment Researcher and Director at Research In Action. A highly experienced mathematical and statistical modeller, he is knowledgeable in energy markets and has a particular interest in systematic quantitative trading strategy development at any frequency.</p> ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/10964"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":0,"slug":null,"isbn":null,"categoryList":null,"amazon":null,"image":null,"title":null,"testBankPinActivationLink":null,"bookOutOfPrint":false,"authorsInfo":null,"authors":null,"_links":null},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[null]}]\" id=\"du-slot-65dcfc1577748\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[null]}]\" id=\"du-slot-65dcfc1578300\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":226703,"title":"Essential Maths for Quantitative Finance","slug":"essential-maths-quantitative-finance","categoryList":[],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226703"}},{"articleId":226721,"title":"Formulae for Futures and Option Payouts","slug":"formulae-futures-option-payouts","categoryList":[],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226721"}},{"articleId":226724,"title":"Calculating Option Prices Using Black-Scholes Formulae","slug":"calculating-option-prices-using-black-scholes-formulae","categoryList":[],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226724"}}],"content":[{"title":"Essential Maths for Quantitative Finance","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Quantitative finance uses lots of formulae. The following are the most important ones. Whether you&#8217;re studying for an exam, coding them up, or just curious about the strange things that quants do, these formulae should help:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Pi = 3.145927: This first one isn&#8217;t a formula, but you use the famous maths constant pi not because you need to work out the area of a circle but because it&#8217;s used in the formula for the normal distribution.</li>\n<li>e = 2.718282: Exponentials occur all the time in quantitative finance because of the present value of money formula and the normal distribution. &#8216;e&#8217; is the base of the natural logarithm, ln.</li>\n<li>ln(<em>ab</em>) = ln(<em>a</em>) + ln(<em>b</em>): Use this formula when taking the logarithm of the likelihood in applying the maximum likelihood method to estimate the parameters of your model.</li>\n<li>If <em>y</em> = <em>e<sup>x</sup></em>, then: <em>x</em> = ln <em>y</em>. Use this formula for calculations with continuously compounded interest rates.</li>\n<li>If <em>y</em> = <em>e<sup>x</sup></em>, then:</li>\n</ul>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0104.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-226704 size-full\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0104.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0104\" width=\"48\" height=\"32\" /></a></p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">The derivative of the exponential function is the same exponential function. You use this when you&#8217;re solving the Black-Scholes equation.</p>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0105.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-226705 size-full\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0105.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0105\" width=\"86\" height=\"37\" /></a></p>\n"},{"title":"Formulae for Futures and Option Payouts","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>How much will jam be worth tomorrow? In quantitative finance, you often want to explore the relationship between an amount of money promised in the future and the value of that money today. These formulae can help:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>In working out today&#8217;s value of option payoffs, use the present value, <em>P,</em> for a payoff, <em>C, </em>in the future. You can use exactly the same formula to work out the present value for the coupon <em>C</em> of a bond to be paid at time <em>T.</em> The continuously compounded interest rate is r and the time in the future in years is <em>T:</em></li>\n</ul>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0301.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-226713 size-full\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0301.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0301\" width=\"57\" height=\"14\" /></a></p>\n<ul>\n<li>To calculate the price of a European put from the price of a European call or vice versa, calculate put call parity for European options with strike price <em>K.</em> The current stock price is <em>S,</em> call price <em>C, </em>put price <em>P, </em>the time to expiry <em>T</em> and  the continuously compounded interest rate is <em>r:</em></li>\n</ul>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0302.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-226714 size-full\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0302.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0302\" width=\"109\" height=\"14\" /></a></p>\n"},{"title":"Calculating Option Prices Using Black-Scholes Formulae","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>The Black Scholes equation, perhaps the most famous in quantitative finance, expresses how the price of an option depends upon the price of the underlying asset and its volatility. The interest rate also gets a look-in.  The equation is complicated, but thankfully, mathematicians have solved it for some useful cases such as for European options.</p>\n<p>Use the cumulative normal distribution to express the solution to the Black-Scholes equation for the price of options:</p>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0401.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-226715 size-full\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0401.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0401\" width=\"137\" height=\"37\" /></a></p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p>The Black-Scholes solution for the price, <em>C,</em> of a European call option on a non-dividend-paying stock is given by the following formula. The volatility is a lower-case sigma, the risk-free interest rate is <em>r,</em> the expiry time is <em>T, </em>the current time is <em>t</em>, and the underlying stock price is <em>S.</em> The strike price is <em>K.</em> The formula is complicated: using the variables <em>d</em><sub>1</sub> and <em>d</em><sub>2 </sub>makes the final formula easier to digest.</p>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0402.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-226716 size-full\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0402.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0402\" width=\"205\" height=\"50\" /></a></p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0403.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-226717\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0403.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0403\" width=\"117\" height=\"20\" /></a></p>\n<p>Use the Black-Scholes solution for the price, <em>P,</em> of a European put option on a non-dividend-paying stock. The parameter names are the same as for a call option in the preceding formula:</p>\n<p><a href=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0404.gif\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-226718\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/eqcs0404.gif\" alt=\"eqcs0404\" width=\"188\" height=\"17\" /></a></p>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Solve","lifeExpectancy":"Six months","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2025-02-26T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":226727},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-27T16:47:48+00:00","modifiedTime":"2024-10-05T18:56:39+00:00","timestamp":"2024-10-05T21:01:02+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"Accounting For Canadians For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"accounting for canadians for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"accounting-for-canadians-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"This handy Cheat Sheet provides the basics of accounting, such as financial statements and accounting terms; and tips for business managers.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Accountants keep the books of businesses, not-for-profits, and government entities by following systematic methods of recording all financial activities. If you invest your hard-earned money in a private business or a real estate venture, save money in a credit union, or are a member of a nonprofit association or organization, you likely receive regular financial reports.\r\n\r\nYou should read these financial reports carefully, but if you don’t — or if you do but don’t understand what you’re reading — this Cheat Sheet can help you understand the language and necessity of accounting.","description":"Accountants keep the books of businesses, not-for-profits, and government entities by following systematic methods of recording all financial activities. If you invest your hard-earned money in a private business or a real estate venture, save money in a credit union, or are a member of a nonprofit association or organization, you likely receive regular financial reports.\r\n\r\nYou should read these financial reports carefully, but if you don’t — or if you do but don’t understand what you’re reading — this Cheat Sheet can help you understand the language and necessity of accounting.","blurb":"","authors":[],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281921,"slug":"accounting-for-canadians-for-dummies-3rd-edition","isbn":"9781394216307","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1394216300/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1394216300/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1394216300-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1394216300/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1394216300/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/accounting-for-canadians-for-dummies-4th-edition-cover-9781394216307-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Accounting For Canadians For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b><b data-author-id=\"34419\">Cecile Laurin</b>, CPA, CA,</b> teaches in Algonquin College's professional accounting program, and is the co-author of <i>Bookkeeping For Canadians For Dummies</i>. <p><b><b data-author-id=\"9473\">Tage C. Tracy</b></b> is principal owner of TMK &amp; Associates, an accounting, financial,and strategic business planning consulting firm.</p> <p><b>John A. Tracy</b> is Professor of Accounting at the University of Colorado in Boulder and the author of <i>Accounting For Dummies</i>.</p> <b><b data-author-id=\"9472\">John A. Tracy</b>, CPA,</b> is professor of accounting, emeritus, at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Earlier in his career, he was a staff accountant with Ernst &amp; Young.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":34419,"name":"Cecile Laurin","slug":"cecile-laurin","description":"<b>Cecile Laurin, CPA, CA,</b> teaches in Algonquin College's professional accounting program, and is the co-author of <i>Bookkeeping For Canadians For Dummies</i>.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/34419"}},{"authorId":9473,"name":"Tage C. Tracy","slug":"tage-c-tracy","description":" <p><b>Tage C. Tracy</b> is principal owner of TMK &amp; Associates, an accounting, financial,and strategic business planning consulting firm.</p> <p><b>John A. Tracy</b> is Professor of Accounting at the University of Colorado in Boulder and the author of <i>Accounting For Dummies</i>.</p>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9473"}},{"authorId":9472,"name":"John A. Tracy","slug":"john-a-tracy","description":"<b>John A. Tracy, CPA,</b> is professor of accounting, emeritus, at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Earlier in his career, he was a staff accountant with Ernst &amp; Young.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9472"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781394216307&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-651f240edb23c\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781394216307&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-651f240edc31b\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":183461,"title":"What Does an Accountant Do?","slug":"what-does-an-accountant-do","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/183461"}},{"articleId":183460,"title":"<b>Transactions and Balance Sheets in Accounting</b>","slug":"transactions-and-balance-sheets-in-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","bookkeeping"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/183460"}},{"articleId":148396,"title":"<b>The Basic Steps of Bookkeeping</b>","slug":"the-basic-steps-of-bookkeeping","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","bookkeeping"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/148396"}}],"content":[{"title":"Financial statements Q&A","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>In a <em>financial report, </em>accounting information is presented in the form of financial statements packaged with other information, such as explanatory footnotes and a letter from top management.</p>\n<p>Financial statements are prepared at the end of each accounting period, which may be one month, one quarter (three calendar months), or one year. Read on for info on what you find in these documents.</p>\n<p><strong>Q: Who is the target audience of financial statements?</strong></p>\n<p>A: Believe it or not, financial statements are for <em>nonaccountants</em> — in particular, the lenders, investors, and analysts who follow the business, as well as its managers. These users need to know how to read financial statements, which can be a challenge.</p>\n<p><strong>Q: What information is reported in financial statements?</strong></p>\n<p>A: Oh, not much . . . the profit or loss of the business, whether its financial condition is sound or precarious, and whether its cash flow is strong or weak. Just these little financial odds and ends about the business.</p>\n<p><strong>Q: Where do I find the top-line sales and bottom-line profit or loss of a business?</strong></p>\n<p>A: The very first line in the income statement should report total sales revenue (commonly referred to as the <em>top line</em>). The <em>bottom-line</em> profit or loss is the last line in its <em>income statement,</em> which summarizes the sales revenue, income, expenses, and losses of the business for the period. Public companies also report earnings per share in their income statements. Private companies don’t have to.</p>\n<p><strong>Q: Where do I find the summary of assets and liabilities of a business?</strong></p>\n<p>A: In its <em>balance sheet, </em>which also reports the sources of its owners’ equity. The sales and expense activities of a business propel or drive its assets and liabilities (not all, but most). The asset values reported in a balance sheet reflect past transactions and may differ from their current replacement or market values.</p>\n<p><strong>Q: Where do I find the good or bad news about cash flow of a business?</strong></p>\n<p>A: Read the business’s<em> statement of cash flows.</em> Cash flow generated from making profit is disclosed in the first section of this financial statement. A business could report a decent profit but still have cash flow problems.</p>\n<p><strong>Q: Are standard financial statements adequate for managing a business?</strong></p>\n<p>A: No, not by a long shot. Financial statements are a good starting point, but managers need more detailed information, which is confidential and not circulated outside the business, to do their jobs. Accountants who don’t understand this should be fired on the spot.</p>\n"},{"title":"Accounting tips for business managers","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Business managers should get the most out of their accounting information — to know how the business is doing and how to do better, and whether or not it’s on the verge of serious cash flow and financial problems. You wouldn’t pilot a plane without knowing how to read the flight map.</p>\n<p>A business manager should know how to read the financial map of the business provided by accounting information. Here are some useful tips to keep in mind:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Take charge in choosing the accounting methods for your business and the design of your accounting reports.</strong> All too often, business managers adopt the policy that accounting is best left to the accountants. Unfortunately, this may result in your not fully understanding your own financial information.</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para&quot;\"><strong>Make sure you have a smartly designed profit and loss (P&amp;L) report that serves as a hands-on tool for managing profit.</strong> A good P&amp;L report highlights the key variables that drive performance for each major profit center of your business. It should serve like a well-used guide that directs you to the right destinations. You may need different formats for different profit centers in your business. A P&amp;L report generally should focus on key margins (gross margin or profit, operating margins, and contribution margins), sales volume, variable expenses, and fixed expenses.</p>\n<p class=\"child-para\">Margin per unit equals sales price minus product cost and minus the variable expenses of making the sale. Your business must sell enough volume to earn total margin equal to fixed expenses before breaking into the profit zone. After sales reach the breakeven point, the margin from additional sales goes entirely to profit (before income tax).</p>\n</li>\n<li><strong>Remember that relatively small changes in profit factors can yield dramatic results.</strong> A small slippage in margin per unit can have a devastating impact because unit margin is multiplied by total sales volume. On the other hand, even a slight boost in sales price — or a little more sales volume — yields lots more profit.</li>\n<li><strong>Make sure you clearly understand every cost figure you use.</strong> Product costs depend on which accounting method is used, such as the choice between the weighted average and the first-in, first-out (FIFO) methods, or they depend on rather arbitrary allocation methods. Know how your costs are calculated! Press your accountant to explain if you aren’t clear about costs.</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\"><strong>Establish and enforce strong internal controls, especially in the technology digital age.</strong> More companies are storing their data in the cloud, and more employees are handling confidential data on their home devices; some use public Wi-Fi that isn’t secure. Businesses process a large amount of data, confidential information, financial transactions, and money, which present countless opportunities for errors, theft, embezzlement, and fraud.</p>\n<p class=\"child-para\">Make sure bulletproof internal controls are in place and working well, and actively involve the technology team to implement best-in-class security firewalls. When your internal controls are weak, you can be sure that some of your hard-earned profit will go down a rat hole.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"A few key accounting terms","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Knowing the correct accounting terms and what they mean can make a world of difference when you’re deciphering financial statements and reports and determining profits and losses.</p>\n<p>It’s easy to get debits and credits confused, and it’s a must to know which documents make up a complete financial report. A ton of cash could depend on your understanding of the following basic accounting terms:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\"><strong>Accounting: </strong>The methods and procedures for identifying, analyzing, recording, accumulating, and storing information and data about the activities of an entity that has financial results and for preparing summary reports of these activities internally for managers and externally for those entitled to receive financial reports about the entity.</p>\n<p class=\"child-para\">A business’s managers, investors, and lenders depend on accounting reports called <em>financial statements</em> to make informed decisions. Accounting also encompasses preparing tax returns that the entity must file with government tax authorities and facilitating day-to-day operating functions.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\"><strong>Balance sheet: </strong>A financial statement that summarizes the assets, liabilities, and owners’ equity of a business at a moment in time. It’s prepared at the end of every profit period (and whenever else it’s needed). The main elements of a balance sheet are called <em>accounts </em>— such as cash, inventory, notes payable, and share capital.</p>\n<p class=\"child-para\">Each account has a dollar amount, which is called its <em>balance.</em> But be careful: The fact that the accounts have balances is not the reason this financial statement is called a <em>balanc</em>e <em>sheet;</em> rather, the name refers to the equality (or balance) of assets with the total of liabilities and owners’ equity. This financial statement is also called the <em>statement of financial position.</em></p>\n</li>\n<li><strong>Cash flow: </strong>An ambiguous term that can refer to several different sources of or uses of cash. This term is often shorthand for cash flow from earning profit or from operating activities. Some friendly advice: When using this term, always make clear the particular source or use of cash you have in mind!</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\"><strong>Debits and credits: </strong>Accounting jargon for decreases and increases recorded in accounts according to the centuries-old scheme based on the accounting equation (Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ equity). An increase in an asset is a debit, and the ingenious twist of the scheme is that a decrease in a liability or an owners’ equity is also a debit.</p>\n<p class=\"child-para\">Conversely, a decrease in an asset is a credit, and an increase in a liability or an owners’ equity is a credit. Revenue is recorded as a credit, and expenses are recorded as debits. In recording transactions, the debit or sum of debits must equal the credit or sum of credits. The phrase “the books are in balance” means that the total of accounts with debit balances equals the total of accounts with credit balances.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\"><strong>Financial reports: </strong>The periodic financial communications from a business (and other types of organizations) to those entitled to know about the financial performance and position of the entity. Financial reports of businesses include three primary financial statements (the balance sheet, income statement, and statement of cash flows) as well as notes and other information relevant to the owners of the business.</p>\n<p class=\"child-para\">Public companies must file several types of financial reports and forms with the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA), which are open to the public. The financial reports of a private business are generally sent only to its owners and lenders.</p>\n</li>\n<li><strong>Financial statement: </strong>Generally refers to one of the three primary accounting reports of a business: the balance sheet, statement of cash flows, and income statement. Sometimes financial statements are simply called <em>financials.</em> Internal financial statements and other accounting reports to managers contain considerably more detail, which is needed for decision-making and control.</li>\n<li><strong>Fixed or capital assets:</strong> The shorthand term for the variety of long-life physical resources used by a business in conducting its operations, which include land, buildings, machinery, equipment, furnishings, tools, and vehicles. These resources are held for use, not for sale. Please note that <em>fixed assets </em>is an informal term; the more formal term used in a balance sheet is <em>property, plant, and equipment.</em></li>\n<li><strong>Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP): </strong>The authoritative standards and approved accounting methods that should be used by profit-motivated businesses and private not-for-profit organizations domiciled in Canada to measure and report their revenue and expenses; to present their assets, liabilities, and owners’ equity; and to report their cash flows in their financial statements. GAAP are not a straitjacket; these official standards are loose enough to permit alternative interpretations.</li>\n<li><strong>Income statement (also known as the P&amp;L or profit &amp; loss statement): </strong>A financial statement that summarizes sales revenue (and other income) and expenses (and losses) for a period and reports one or more different profit lines. The income statement is one of the three primary financial statements of a business included in its financial report and is also called the <em>earnings statement,</em> <em>operating statement, </em>simply<em> the P&amp;L,</em> or similar titles.</li>\n<li><strong>Profit:</strong> A very general term that is used with different meanings. It may mean gains minus losses or other kinds of increases minus decreases. In business, the term means sales revenue (and other sources of income) minus expenses (and losses) for a period of time, such as one year. In an income statement, the preferred term for final or bottom-line profit is <em>net income. </em>For public companies, net income is put on a per-share basis, called <em>earnings per share.</em></li>\n</ul>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2024-10-05T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":207626},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-26T14:50:26+00:00","modifiedTime":"2024-08-01T14:33:07+00:00","timestamp":"2024-08-01T15:01:02+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"How to Create a Normal Job Cost Sheet for Cost Accounting","strippedTitle":"how to create a normal job cost sheet for cost accounting","slug":"how-to-create-a-normal-job-cost-sheet-for-cost-accounting","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"When cost accounting, you put together your budgeting process for indirect costs with a plan for direct costs. Think of the combined process as normal costing .","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"<p>When cost accounting, you put together your budgeting process for indirect costs with a plan for direct costs. Think of the combined process as <i>normal costing</i>. This is an important point: You <i>trace</i> direct costs and <i>allocate</i> indirect costs.</p>\r\n<p>Normal costing combines indirect cost rate with actual production. The process gets you closer to actual total costs for your product.</p>\r\n<p>Here are the two steps to implement normal costing:</p>\r\n<ul>\r\n <li><b>Direct costs:</b> Traced to the cost object by multiplying (actual prices/rates) x (actual quantity for a specific job object)</li>\r\n <li><b>Indirect costs:</b> Allocated to the cost object multiplying (predetermined or budgeted indirect cost rate) x (actual quantity for a specific job object)</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p>Note that both direct and indirect costs use actual quantity in the formula. While you come up with an indirect cost rate in planning, the rate is multiplied by actual quantities. In this case, the quantity is jobs for the month.</p>\r\n<p>A <i>job cost sheet</i> lists every cost you’ve incurred for a particular job. That includes direct material, direct labor, and all indirect costs. The job cost sheet is your basis for computing your sale price and your profit. You use this document to prepare a cost estimate for a client. Here is a job cost sheet using normal costing for a landscaping job.</p>\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Normal Job Cost Sheet — Landscaping Job</h2>\r\n<table>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th>Type of Cost</th>\r\n<th>Amount or Quantity</th>\r\n<th>Price or Rate</th>\r\n<th>Total Cost (Rounded)</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Direct material</td>\r\n<td>100 square feet of grass seed</td>\r\n<td>$12 per square foot</td>\r\n<td>$1,200</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Direct labor</td>\r\n<td>15 hours of labor</td>\r\n<td>$15 per hour</td>\r\n<td>$225</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Mileage</td>\r\n<td>30 miles driven</td>\r\n<td>$0.18 per mile</td>\r\n<td>$5</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Indirect costs</td>\r\n<td>30 miles driven</td>\r\n<td>$5.36 per mile</td>\r\n<td>$161</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>\r\n</td>\r\n<td>\r\n</td>\r\n<td><b>Total job costs</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$1,591</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</table>\r\n<p>The indirect cost calculation (vehicle and equipment costs) uses the actual quantity (miles driven) and the estimated rate per mile. The other direct costs on the job sheet use actual quantities and actual prices/rates.</p>","description":"<p>When cost accounting, you put together your budgeting process for indirect costs with a plan for direct costs. Think of the combined process as <i>normal costing</i>. This is an important point: You <i>trace</i> direct costs and <i>allocate</i> indirect costs.</p>\r\n<p>Normal costing combines indirect cost rate with actual production. The process gets you closer to actual total costs for your product.</p>\r\n<p>Here are the two steps to implement normal costing:</p>\r\n<ul>\r\n <li><b>Direct costs:</b> Traced to the cost object by multiplying (actual prices/rates) x (actual quantity for a specific job object)</li>\r\n <li><b>Indirect costs:</b> Allocated to the cost object multiplying (predetermined or budgeted indirect cost rate) x (actual quantity for a specific job object)</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p>Note that both direct and indirect costs use actual quantity in the formula. While you come up with an indirect cost rate in planning, the rate is multiplied by actual quantities. In this case, the quantity is jobs for the month.</p>\r\n<p>A <i>job cost sheet</i> lists every cost you’ve incurred for a particular job. That includes direct material, direct labor, and all indirect costs. The job cost sheet is your basis for computing your sale price and your profit. You use this document to prepare a cost estimate for a client. Here is a job cost sheet using normal costing for a landscaping job.</p>\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Normal Job Cost Sheet — Landscaping Job</h2>\r\n<table>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th>Type of Cost</th>\r\n<th>Amount or Quantity</th>\r\n<th>Price or Rate</th>\r\n<th>Total Cost (Rounded)</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Direct material</td>\r\n<td>100 square feet of grass seed</td>\r\n<td>$12 per square foot</td>\r\n<td>$1,200</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Direct labor</td>\r\n<td>15 hours of labor</td>\r\n<td>$15 per hour</td>\r\n<td>$225</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Mileage</td>\r\n<td>30 miles driven</td>\r\n<td>$0.18 per mile</td>\r\n<td>$5</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Indirect costs</td>\r\n<td>30 miles driven</td>\r\n<td>$5.36 per mile</td>\r\n<td>$161</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>\r\n</td>\r\n<td>\r\n</td>\r\n<td><b>Total job costs</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$1,591</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</table>\r\n<p>The indirect cost calculation (vehicle and equipment costs) uses the actual quantity (miles driven) and the estimated rate per mile. The other direct costs on the job sheet use actual quantities and actual prices/rates.</p>","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9050,"name":"Kenneth Boyd","slug":"kenneth-boyd","description":"Ken Boyd, a former CPA, has more than 37 years of experience in accounting, education, and financial services. He is the owner of Accounting Accidentally (<a href=\"//www.accountingaccidentally.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.accountingaccidentally.com</a>), which provides written and video content on accounting, personal finance, and entrepreneurship topics. His YouTube channel (<a href=\"//www.youtube.com/user/kenboydstl\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">kenboydstl</a>) has hundreds of videos on accounting and finance.\r\n\r\nIn recent years, Boyd has served as an adjunct professor of accounting at the Cook School of Business at St. Louis University. He has written hundreds of articles for QuickBooks, Investopedia, and a number of other publications.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9050"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[{"label":"Normal Job Cost Sheet — Landscaping Job","target":"#tab1"}],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":208104,"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/208104"}},{"articleId":171024,"title":"Must Know Formulas for Cost Accounting","slug":"must-know-formulas-for-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171024"}},{"articleId":171020,"title":"Important Terms and Principles Cost Accountants Should Know","slug":"important-terms-and-principles-cost-accountants-should-know","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171020"}},{"articleId":171019,"title":"Avoiding Pitfalls on Cost Accounting Exams","slug":"avoiding-pitfalls-on-cost-accounting-exams","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171019"}},{"articleId":166828,"title":"Accrual Accounting in Cost Accounting","slug":"accrual-accounting-in-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/166828"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":282119,"slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119856023","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119856027-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/9781119856023-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b><b data-author-id=\"34810\">Kenneth W. Boyd</b></b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":34810,"name":"Kenneth W. Boyd","slug":"kenneth-w-boyd","description":" <p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/34810"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-64c91e2ee8ff9\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-64c91e2ee9537\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Two years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2024-08-01T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":165636},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-27T16:56:22+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-09-02T13:54:11+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:20:01+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"Accounting Workbook For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"accounting workbook for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"accounting-workbook-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"Learn about some of the core accounting activities, including preparing financial statements, financial analyses, and accounting reports.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"As a business manager or owner, taking care of your company’s accounting needs is a top priority. Correctly preparing financial statements, financial analyses, and accounting reports involves knowing all the financial data and information that needs to appear in these items.\r\n\r\nMaking a profit helps keep you in business, while maintaining a strong balance sheet ensures you can stay in business. So, make sure you understand the financial statements, record adjustments if needed, and follow some basic rules for presenting accounting information to your business’s managers, owners, investors, and creditors.","description":"As a business manager or owner, taking care of your company’s accounting needs is a top priority. Correctly preparing financial statements, financial analyses, and accounting reports involves knowing all the financial data and information that needs to appear in these items.\r\n\r\nMaking a profit helps keep you in business, while maintaining a strong balance sheet ensures you can stay in business. So, make sure you understand the financial statements, record adjustments if needed, and follow some basic rules for presenting accounting information to your business’s managers, owners, investors, and creditors.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9472,"name":"John A. Tracy","slug":"john-a-tracy","description":" <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. 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Tracy</b></b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":9472,"name":"John A. Tracy","slug":"john-a-tracy","description":" <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9472"}},{"authorId":9473,"name":"Tage C. Tracy","slug":"tage-c-tracy","description":" <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9473"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119897637&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b5116c3d\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119897637&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b511762b\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":192701,"title":"Formulas and Functions for Financial Statements","slug":"formulas-and-functions-for-financial-statements","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/192701"}},{"articleId":192700,"title":"Making Accounting Adjustments to Reach Profit Potential","slug":"making-accounting-adjustments-to-reach-profit-potential","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/192700"}}],"content":[{"title":"Formulas and functions for financial statements","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>As the accounting controller, you’re in command of your business’s accounting needs, so you need a strong understanding of the ins and outs of financial statements, including what goes on them and in what order.</p>\n<p>If you don’t prepare them correctly, they won’t reflect a true picture of your business’s financial status. Keep the following important rules and points in mind as you prepare and use your business’s financial statements.</p>\n<h2>Accounting equation</h2>\n<p>Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity</p>\n<p>Liabilities and owners’ equity are the two basic types of claims on the assets of an entity. The two-sided nature of the accounting equation is the basis for double entry accounting that records both sides of the entity’s transactions — what is received and what is given in the economic exchange.</p>\n<h3>Financial effects of revenues and expenses</h3>\n<p>Revenue = Asset increase (debit) or Liability decrease (debit)<br />\nExpense = Asset decrease (credit) or Liability increase (credit)</p>\n<h3>Connections between income statement and balance sheet accounts</h3>\n<p>Sales revenue → Cash and Accounts receivable</p>\n<p>Cost of goods sold expense ← Inventory</p>\n<p>Operating expenses → Cash</p>\n<p>Operating expenses ← Prepaid expenses</p>\n<p>Operating expenses → Accounts payable</p>\n<p>Operating expenses → Accrued expenses payable</p>\n<p>Depreciation expense ← Fixed assets</p>\n<p>Interest expense → Accrued expenses payable</p>\n<p>Income tax expense → Accrued expenses payable</p>\n<h3>Bookkeeping cycle</h3>\n<p>In today’s economy and digital world, most of the bookkeeping cycle is handled by computers, which process vast amounts of digital data by capturing financial transactions and processing the information through original entries (in journals) and postings in the general ledger chart of accounts.</p>\n<p>As a refresher, the following bookkeeping cycle remains intact, whether the accounting function is fully automated or completed manually:</p>\n<blockquote><p>Financial Transactions (and certain other events) → Original Entries in Journals → Postings in General Ledger Chart of Accounts → End-of-Period Adjusting Entries → Preparation of Financial Statements, Tax Returns, and Internal Accounting Reports → Closing Entries at End of Year.</p></blockquote>\n"},{"title":"Making accounting adjustments to reach profit potential","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Having your business reach a profit is important; if it doesn’t, sooner or later the business will fail. As a business manager, you want to keep a close eye on the financial statements and make the necessary (and legal) accounting adjustments to your financial records as needed.</p>\n<p>These tips can help you make the necessary adjustments to your business’s net income, eye two different profit analysis models, and communicate the reports to your managers.</p>\n<h3>Adjustments to net income for determining sash flow from operating activities</h3>\n<p>Accounts payable and accrued expenses payable are operating liabilities used in the profit-making process.</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Operating asset increases and operating liability decreases are negative adjustments (decrease cash flow from operating activities)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Operating asset decreases and operating liability increases are positive adjustments (increase cash flow from operating activities)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Depreciation and amortization expenses are positive adjustments (increase cash flow from operating activities)</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p><b>Cardinal Rule:</b> Make all cash flow adjustments to net income; do not simply add back depreciation and amortization, which could be seriously misleading.</p>\n<h3>Two profit analysis models for management decision making</h3>\n<p><b>Contribution margin minus fixed expenses model</b><b>:</b></p>\n<table>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Sales price</td>\n<td>$100</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Less variable costs per unit</td>\n<td><u>$60</u></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Equals contribution margin per unit</td>\n<td>$40</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Times annual sales volume, in units</td>\n<td><u>120,000</u></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Equals total contribution margin</td>\n<td>$4,800,000</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Less fixed operating expenses</td>\n<td><u>$3,000,000</u></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Equals operating profit</td>\n<td>$1,800,000</td>\n</tr>\n</tbody>\n</table>\n<p><b>Excess of sales over breakeven model:</b></p>\n<p>$3,000,000 annual fixed operating expenses ÷ $40 contribution margin per unit = 75,000 units breakeven point (volume)</p>\n<table>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Annual sales volume for year, in units</td>\n<td>120,000</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Less annual breakeven volume, in units</td>\n<td><u>75,000</u></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Equals excess over breakeven, in units</td>\n<td>45,000</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Times contribution margin per unit</td>\n<td><u>$40</u></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Equals operating profit</td>\n<td>$1,800,000</td>\n</tr>\n</tbody>\n</table>\n<h3>Guidelines for internal accounting reports to managers</h3>\n<p>When you’re preparing financial information for your business’s managers, follow these tips:</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Follow the organizational structure (responsibility accounting)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Orient your report based on whether organization unit is a profit center or a cost center</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Know the mind of the manager</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Highlight significant factors and deemphasize non-significant factors</p>\n</li>\n<li>Keep in mind the acronym CART — always prepare <strong>C</strong>omplete, <strong>A</strong>ccurate, <strong>R</strong>eliable, and <strong>T</strong>imely financial reports, statements, and information</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"Choosing an accounting method for your business","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Different businesses make different accounting decisions. Some businesses choose conservative accounting methods, while others choose liberal accounting methods.</p>\n<p>Accounting is more than just reading the facts or interpreting the financial outcomes of business transactions. It also requires accountants to choose between alternative methods and why accounting being is as much of a form of art as science.</p>\n<p>Similar to the conservative states and liberal states addressed in politics, accounting has:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Conservative accounting methods:</strong> These tend to delay the recording of revenue and accelerate the recording of expenses. Profit is reported slowly and, generally, at lower levels in early reporting periods.</li>\n<li><strong>Liberal accounting methods:</strong> These tend to accelerate the recording of revenue and defer or delay the recording of expenses. Profit is reported quickly and, generally, at higher levels in early reporting periods.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>In general terms, conservative accounting methods are pessimistic, and liberal methods are optimistic. The choice of accounting method also affects the values reported for assets, liabilities, and owners’ equities in the balance sheet.</p>\n<p>Accounting methods must stay within the boundaries of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). A business can’t conjure up accounting methods out of thin air. GAAP isn’t a straitjacket; it leaves plenty of wiggle room. But the one fundamental constraint is that a business must stick with its accounting method once it makes a choice. If the business elects to change the accounting method, it must be fully and clearly disclosed.</p>\n<p>Consistency is the rule; the same accounting methods must be used year after year. The Internal Revenue Service allows businesses to change their accounting methods once in a while, but the justification has to be persuasive.</p>\n<p>A new business with no accounting history has to make accounting decisions, such as the following, for the first time:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>If the business sells products, it has to select which cost of goods sold expense method to use.</li>\n<li>If the business owns fixed assets, it has to select which depreciation method to use.</li>\n<li>If the business owns intangible assets, such as patents, it has to select an appropriate method to amortize the value of the intangible asset.</li>\n<li>If the business makes sales on credit, it has to decide which bad debts expense method to use.</li>\n<li>If the business offers a product warranty, it must establish a reasonable method to estimate future warranty claims for current products sold.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>The choices of accounting methods for these five expenses — cost of goods sold, depreciation, amortization, warranty, and bad debts — can make a sizable difference in the amount of profit or loss recorded for the year.</p>\n<p>Choosing conservative accounting methods for these three expenses can cause profit for the year to be lower by a relatively large percent compared with using liberal accounting methods for the expenses.</p>\n"},{"title":"Knowing your debits from your credits","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Accountants and bookkeepers record transactions as debits and credits, while keeping the accounting equation constantly in balance. This process is called <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/business/accounting/the-basics-of-double-entry-bookkeeping/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>double-entry bookkeeping</em></a>. Double-entry bookkeeping records both sides of a transaction — debits and credits — and the accounting equation remains in balance as transactions are recorded.</p>\n<p>For example, if a transaction decreases cash $25,000, then the other side of the transaction is a $25,000 increase in some other asset, or a $25,000 decrease in a liability, or a $25,000 increase in an expense (to cite three possibilities).</p>\n<p>The illustration below summarizes the basic rules for debits and credits. By long-standing convention, debits are shown on the left and credits on the right.</p>\n<p>An increase in a liability, owners’ equity, revenue, and income account is recorded as a credit, so the increase side is on the right. The recording of all transactions follows these rules for debits and credits:</p>\n<div class=\"figure-container\"><figure id=\"attachment_18207\" aria-labelledby=\"figcaption_attachment_18207\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\" style=\"width: 545px\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"size-full wp-image-18207\" src=\"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/239192.image0.jpg\" alt=\"Rules for debits and credits.\" width=\"535\" height=\"187\" /><figcaption id=\"figcaption_attachment_18207\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Rules for debits and credits.</figcaption></figure></div><div class=\"clearfix\"></div>\n<p>Notice the horizontal and vertical lines under the accounts in the illustration above. These lines form the letter T. Although the actual accounts maintained by a business don’t necessarily look like T accounts, they usually have one column for increases and another column for decreases. In other words, an account has a debit column and a credit column.</p>\n<p>Also, an account may have a running balance column to continuously keep track of the account’s balance. While T accounts represent an old school accounting concept (back in the days when accountants wore green eye shades and had no personalities), they do drive home a key concept in accounting related to ensuring debits and credits are properly recorded.</p>\n<p>Practically everyone has trouble with the rules of debits and credits. The rules aren’t very intuitive, but learning them is a rite of passage for bookkeepers and accountants. The only way to really understand the rules is to make accounting entries — over and over again. After a while, using the rules becomes like tying your shoes — you do it without even thinking about it.</p>\n"},{"title":"Classification of business transactions","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>In understanding accounting, you need to be very clear about which classification of business transaction you’re looking at. Almost all businesses are profit-motivated, so one basic type of transaction is obvious: profit-making transactions. In a nutshell, profit-making transactions consist of generating sales revenue and incurring business expenses.</p>\n<p>A business may have other income in addition to sales revenue, and it may record losses in addition to expenses. But the bread and butter profit-making activities of a business are generating sales and controlling expenses. The profit-making transactions of a business over a period of time are reported in its income statement.</p>\n<p>A business’s other transactions fall into three basic categories:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Set-up and follow-up transactions for sales and expenses: </strong>Includes collecting cash from customers after sales made on credit are recorded; the purchase of products (goods) that are held for some time before being sold, at which time the expense is recorded; and making cash payments for expenses some time after the expenses are recorded.</li>\n<li><strong>Investing activities (transactions):</strong> Includes the purchase, construction, and disposals of long-term operating assets such as buildings, machinery, equipment, and tools or investing in intangible assets, such as patents, or acquiring goodwill.</li>\n<li><strong>Financing activities (transactions):</strong> Includes borrowing money and repaying amounts borrowed; owners investing capital in the business and the business returning capital to them; and making cash distributions to owners based on the profit earned by the business.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Investing and financing activities of a particular period are reported in that period’s statement of cash flows. In contrast, set-up and follow-up transactions for sales and expenses stay in the background, meaning that they are not reported in a financial statement. Nevertheless, these transactions are essential to the profit-making process.</p>\n<p>Consider, for instance, the purchase of products for inventory. As far as profit is concerned, nothing happens until the business makes a sale of that inventory and records the cost of goods sold expense against the revenue from the sale. Because the business needs to have the products available for sale, the purchase of inventory is the important first step, or set-up transaction.</p>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Two years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-02-28T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":209042},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-09-29T19:41:44+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-08-19T17:07:05+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:19:56+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"10 Tips for Reading a Financial Report","strippedTitle":"10 tips for reading a financial report","slug":"10-tips-reading-financial-report","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"Learn what to focus on in a business's financial report, including the relevant numbers, what parts to read, profit performance, and more.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"You can compare reading a business’s financial report with shucking an oyster: You have to know what you’re doing and work to get at the meat. You need a good reason to pry into a financial report. The main reason to become informed about the financial performance and condition of a business is <em>because you have a stake in the business.</em> The financial success or failure of the business makes a difference to you.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Get in the right frame of mind</h2>\r\nYou don’t have to be a math wizard or rocket scientist to extract the essential points from a financial report. You can find the bottom line in the income statement and compare this profit number with other relevant numbers in the financial statements. You can read the amount of cash in the balance sheet. If the business has a zero or near-zero cash balance, you know that this is a serious — perhaps fatal — problem.\r\n\r\nGet in the right frame of mind. Don’t let a financial report bamboozle you. Locate the income statement, find bottom-line profit (or loss!), and get going. You can do it!\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Decide what to read</h2>\r\nSuppose you want more financial information than you can get in news articles. The annual financial reports of public companies contain lots of information: a letter from the chief executive, a highlights section, trend charts, financial statements, extensive footnotes to the financial statements, historical summaries, and a lot of propaganda. In contrast, the financial reports of most private companies are significantly smaller; they contain financial statements with footnotes and not much more.\r\n\r\nYou could read just the highlights section and let it go at that. This might do in a pinch. You should read the chief executive’s letter to shareowners as well. Ideally, the letter summarizes in an evenhanded and appropriately modest manner the main developments during the year. Be warned, however, that these letters from the top dog often are self-congratulatory and typically transfer blame for poor performance on factors beyond the control of the managers. Read them, but take these letters with a grain of salt.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Many public businesses release a condensed summary version in place of their much longer and more detailed annual financial reports. The scaled-down, simplified, and shortened versions of annual financial reports are adequate for average stock investors. They aren’t adequate for serious investors and professional investment managers. These investors and money managers should read the full-fledged financial report of the business, and they perhaps should study the company’s annual 10-K report that is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Improve your accounting savvy</h2>\r\nFinancial statements — the income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows — are the core of a financial report. To make sense of financial statements, you need at least a rudimentary understanding of financial statement accounting. You don’t have to be a CPA, but the accountants who prepare financial statements presume that you’re familiar with accounting terminology and financial reporting practices. If you’re an accounting illiterate, the financial statements probably look like a Sudoku puzzle. There’s no way around this demand on financial report readers. After all, accounting is the language of business.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab4\" >Judge profit performance</h2>\r\nA business earns profit by making sales and by keeping expenses less than sales revenue, so the best place to start in analyzing profit performance is not the bottom line but the top line: <em>sales revenue.</em> Here are some questions to focus on:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>How does sales revenue in the most recent year compare with the previous year’s?</strong></li>\r\n \t<li><strong>What is the gross margin ratio of the business?</strong></li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Based on information from a company’s most recent income statement, how do gross margin and the company’s bottom line (net income, or net earnings) compare with its top line (sales revenue)?</strong></li>\r\n</ul>\r\nOne last point: Put a company’s profit performance in the context of general economic conditions.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab5\" >Test earnings per share (EPS) against change in bottom line</h2>\r\nAs you know, public companies report net income in their income statements. Below this total profit number for the period, public companies also report <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/business/accounting/calculating-the-earnings-per-share-eps-ratio/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">earnings per share</a> (EPS), which is the amount of bottom-line profit for each share of its stock. Strictly speaking, therefore, the bottom line of a public company is its EPS. Private companies don’t have to report EPS; however, the EPS for a private business is fairly easy to calculate: Divide its bottom-line net income by the number of ownership shares held by the equity investors in the company.\r\n\r\nThe market value of ownership shares of a public company depends mainly on its EPS. Individual investors obviously focus on EPS, which they know is the primary driver of the market value of their investment in the business. The book value per share of a private company is the closest proxy you have for the market value of its ownership shares. The higher the EPS, the higher the market value for a public company. And the higher the EPS, the higher the book value per share for a private company.\r\n\r\nNow, you would naturally think that if net income increases, say, 10 percent over last year, then EPS would increase 10 percent. Not so fast. EPS — the driver of market value and book value per share — may change more or less than 10 percent:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li>Less than 10 percent: The business may have issued additional stock shares during the year, or it may have issued additional management stock options that get counted in the number of shares used to calculate diluted EPS. The profit pie may have been cut up into a larger number of smaller pieces. How do you like that?</li>\r\n \t<li>More than the 10 percent: The business may have bought back some of its own shares, which decreases the number of shares used in calculating EPS. This could be a deliberate strategy for increasing EPS by a higher percent than the percent increase in net income.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Compare the percent increase/decrease in total bottom-line profit over last year with the corresponding percent increase/decrease in EPS. Why? Because the percent changes in EPS and profit can diverge. For a public company, use its diluted EPS if it’s reported. Otherwise, use its basic EPS.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab6\" >Tackle unusual gains and losses</h2>\r\nMany income statements start out normally: sales revenue less the expenses of making sales and operating the business. But then there’s a jarring layer of <em>unusual gains and losses</em> on the way down to the final profit line. This could be the result of a flooded building or a lawsuit. What’s a financial statement reader to do when a business reports such unusual, nonrecurring gains and losses in its income statement?\r\n\r\nThere’s no easy answer to this question. You could blithely assume that these things happen to a business only once in a blue moon and should not disrupt the business’s ability to make profit on a sustainable basis. Think of this as the <em>earthquake mentality</em> approach: When there’s an earthquake, there’s a lot of damage, but most years have no serious tremors and go along as normal. Unusual gains and losses are supposed to be nonrecurring in nature and recorded infrequently. In actual practice, however, many businesses report these gains and losses on a regular and recurring basis — like having an earthquake every year or so.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab7\" >Check cash flow from profit</h2>\r\nThe objective of a business is not simply to make profit but to generate cash flow from making profit as quickly as possible. <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/article/business-careers-money/business/accounting/general-accounting/the-relationship-between-cash-flow-and-profit-in-business-156778\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Cash flow from making profit</a> is the most important stream of cash inflow to a business. A business could sell off some assets to generate cash, and it can borrow money or get shareowners to put more money in the business. But cash flow from making profit is the spigot that should always be turned on. A business needs this cash flow to make cash distributions from profit to shareowners, to maintain liquidity, and to supplement other sources of capital to grow the business.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">The income statement does not — this bears repeating, does not — report the cash inflows of sales and the cash outflows of expenses. Therefore, the bottom line of the income statement is not a cash flow number. The net cash flow from the profit-making activities of the business (its sales and expenses) is reported in the statement of cash flows. When you look there, you’ll undoubtedly discover that the cash flow from operating activities (the official term for cash flow from profit-making activities) is higher or lower than the bottom-line profit number in the income statement.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab8\" >Look for signs of financial distress</h2>\r\nA business can build up a good sales volume and have very good profit margins, but if the company can’t pay its bills on time, its profit opportunities could go down the drain. <em>Solvency</em> refers to a business’s prospects of being able to meet its debt and other liability payment obligations on time, in full. <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/business/start-a-business/business-solvency-measurements-tools/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Solvency analysis</a> looks for signs of financial distress that could cause serious disruptions in the business’s profit-making operations. Even if a business has a couple billion bucks in the bank, you should ask, “How does its solvency look? Is there any doubt it can pay its bills on time?”\r\n<h2 id=\"tab9\" >Recognize the possibility of restatement and fraud</h2>\r\nWhen a business restates its original financial report and issues a new version, it doesn’t make restitution for any losses that investors suffered by relying on the originally reported financial statements. In fact, few companies even say they’re sorry when they put out revised financial statements.\r\n\r\nAll too often, the reason for the restatement is that someone later discovered that the original financial statements were based on fraudulent accounting. Frankly speaking, CPAs don’t have a very good track record for discovering financial reporting fraud. What it comes down to is this: Investors take the risk that the information in the financial statements they use in making decisions is subject to revision at a later time.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab10\" >Remember the limits of financial reports</h2>\r\nThere’s a lot more to investing than reading financial reports. Financial reports are an important source of information, but investors also should stay informed about general economic trends and developments, political events, business takeovers, executive changes, technological changes, and much more.\r\n\r\nWhen you read financial statements, keep in mind that these accounting reports are somewhat tentative and conditional. Accountants make many estimates and predictions in recording sales revenue and income and recording expenses and losses. Some soft numbers are mixed in with hard numbers in financial statements. In short, financial statements are iffy to some extent. There’s no getting around this limitation of accounting.","description":"You can compare reading a business’s financial report with shucking an oyster: You have to know what you’re doing and work to get at the meat. You need a good reason to pry into a financial report. The main reason to become informed about the financial performance and condition of a business is <em>because you have a stake in the business.</em> The financial success or failure of the business makes a difference to you.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Get in the right frame of mind</h2>\r\nYou don’t have to be a math wizard or rocket scientist to extract the essential points from a financial report. You can find the bottom line in the income statement and compare this profit number with other relevant numbers in the financial statements. You can read the amount of cash in the balance sheet. If the business has a zero or near-zero cash balance, you know that this is a serious — perhaps fatal — problem.\r\n\r\nGet in the right frame of mind. Don’t let a financial report bamboozle you. Locate the income statement, find bottom-line profit (or loss!), and get going. You can do it!\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Decide what to read</h2>\r\nSuppose you want more financial information than you can get in news articles. The annual financial reports of public companies contain lots of information: a letter from the chief executive, a highlights section, trend charts, financial statements, extensive footnotes to the financial statements, historical summaries, and a lot of propaganda. In contrast, the financial reports of most private companies are significantly smaller; they contain financial statements with footnotes and not much more.\r\n\r\nYou could read just the highlights section and let it go at that. This might do in a pinch. You should read the chief executive’s letter to shareowners as well. Ideally, the letter summarizes in an evenhanded and appropriately modest manner the main developments during the year. Be warned, however, that these letters from the top dog often are self-congratulatory and typically transfer blame for poor performance on factors beyond the control of the managers. Read them, but take these letters with a grain of salt.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Many public businesses release a condensed summary version in place of their much longer and more detailed annual financial reports. The scaled-down, simplified, and shortened versions of annual financial reports are adequate for average stock investors. They aren’t adequate for serious investors and professional investment managers. These investors and money managers should read the full-fledged financial report of the business, and they perhaps should study the company’s annual 10-K report that is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Improve your accounting savvy</h2>\r\nFinancial statements — the income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows — are the core of a financial report. To make sense of financial statements, you need at least a rudimentary understanding of financial statement accounting. You don’t have to be a CPA, but the accountants who prepare financial statements presume that you’re familiar with accounting terminology and financial reporting practices. If you’re an accounting illiterate, the financial statements probably look like a Sudoku puzzle. There’s no way around this demand on financial report readers. After all, accounting is the language of business.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab4\" >Judge profit performance</h2>\r\nA business earns profit by making sales and by keeping expenses less than sales revenue, so the best place to start in analyzing profit performance is not the bottom line but the top line: <em>sales revenue.</em> Here are some questions to focus on:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>How does sales revenue in the most recent year compare with the previous year’s?</strong></li>\r\n \t<li><strong>What is the gross margin ratio of the business?</strong></li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Based on information from a company’s most recent income statement, how do gross margin and the company’s bottom line (net income, or net earnings) compare with its top line (sales revenue)?</strong></li>\r\n</ul>\r\nOne last point: Put a company’s profit performance in the context of general economic conditions.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab5\" >Test earnings per share (EPS) against change in bottom line</h2>\r\nAs you know, public companies report net income in their income statements. Below this total profit number for the period, public companies also report <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/business/accounting/calculating-the-earnings-per-share-eps-ratio/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">earnings per share</a> (EPS), which is the amount of bottom-line profit for each share of its stock. Strictly speaking, therefore, the bottom line of a public company is its EPS. Private companies don’t have to report EPS; however, the EPS for a private business is fairly easy to calculate: Divide its bottom-line net income by the number of ownership shares held by the equity investors in the company.\r\n\r\nThe market value of ownership shares of a public company depends mainly on its EPS. Individual investors obviously focus on EPS, which they know is the primary driver of the market value of their investment in the business. The book value per share of a private company is the closest proxy you have for the market value of its ownership shares. The higher the EPS, the higher the market value for a public company. And the higher the EPS, the higher the book value per share for a private company.\r\n\r\nNow, you would naturally think that if net income increases, say, 10 percent over last year, then EPS would increase 10 percent. Not so fast. EPS — the driver of market value and book value per share — may change more or less than 10 percent:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li>Less than 10 percent: The business may have issued additional stock shares during the year, or it may have issued additional management stock options that get counted in the number of shares used to calculate diluted EPS. The profit pie may have been cut up into a larger number of smaller pieces. How do you like that?</li>\r\n \t<li>More than the 10 percent: The business may have bought back some of its own shares, which decreases the number of shares used in calculating EPS. This could be a deliberate strategy for increasing EPS by a higher percent than the percent increase in net income.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Compare the percent increase/decrease in total bottom-line profit over last year with the corresponding percent increase/decrease in EPS. Why? Because the percent changes in EPS and profit can diverge. For a public company, use its diluted EPS if it’s reported. Otherwise, use its basic EPS.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab6\" >Tackle unusual gains and losses</h2>\r\nMany income statements start out normally: sales revenue less the expenses of making sales and operating the business. But then there’s a jarring layer of <em>unusual gains and losses</em> on the way down to the final profit line. This could be the result of a flooded building or a lawsuit. What’s a financial statement reader to do when a business reports such unusual, nonrecurring gains and losses in its income statement?\r\n\r\nThere’s no easy answer to this question. You could blithely assume that these things happen to a business only once in a blue moon and should not disrupt the business’s ability to make profit on a sustainable basis. Think of this as the <em>earthquake mentality</em> approach: When there’s an earthquake, there’s a lot of damage, but most years have no serious tremors and go along as normal. Unusual gains and losses are supposed to be nonrecurring in nature and recorded infrequently. In actual practice, however, many businesses report these gains and losses on a regular and recurring basis — like having an earthquake every year or so.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab7\" >Check cash flow from profit</h2>\r\nThe objective of a business is not simply to make profit but to generate cash flow from making profit as quickly as possible. <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/article/business-careers-money/business/accounting/general-accounting/the-relationship-between-cash-flow-and-profit-in-business-156778\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Cash flow from making profit</a> is the most important stream of cash inflow to a business. A business could sell off some assets to generate cash, and it can borrow money or get shareowners to put more money in the business. But cash flow from making profit is the spigot that should always be turned on. A business needs this cash flow to make cash distributions from profit to shareowners, to maintain liquidity, and to supplement other sources of capital to grow the business.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">The income statement does not — this bears repeating, does not — report the cash inflows of sales and the cash outflows of expenses. Therefore, the bottom line of the income statement is not a cash flow number. The net cash flow from the profit-making activities of the business (its sales and expenses) is reported in the statement of cash flows. When you look there, you’ll undoubtedly discover that the cash flow from operating activities (the official term for cash flow from profit-making activities) is higher or lower than the bottom-line profit number in the income statement.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab8\" >Look for signs of financial distress</h2>\r\nA business can build up a good sales volume and have very good profit margins, but if the company can’t pay its bills on time, its profit opportunities could go down the drain. <em>Solvency</em> refers to a business’s prospects of being able to meet its debt and other liability payment obligations on time, in full. <a href=\"//coursofppt.com/business/start-a-business/business-solvency-measurements-tools/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Solvency analysis</a> looks for signs of financial distress that could cause serious disruptions in the business’s profit-making operations. Even if a business has a couple billion bucks in the bank, you should ask, “How does its solvency look? Is there any doubt it can pay its bills on time?”\r\n<h2 id=\"tab9\" >Recognize the possibility of restatement and fraud</h2>\r\nWhen a business restates its original financial report and issues a new version, it doesn’t make restitution for any losses that investors suffered by relying on the originally reported financial statements. In fact, few companies even say they’re sorry when they put out revised financial statements.\r\n\r\nAll too often, the reason for the restatement is that someone later discovered that the original financial statements were based on fraudulent accounting. Frankly speaking, CPAs don’t have a very good track record for discovering financial reporting fraud. What it comes down to is this: Investors take the risk that the information in the financial statements they use in making decisions is subject to revision at a later time.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab10\" >Remember the limits of financial reports</h2>\r\nThere’s a lot more to investing than reading financial reports. Financial reports are an important source of information, but investors also should stay informed about general economic trends and developments, political events, business takeovers, executive changes, technological changes, and much more.\r\n\r\nWhen you read financial statements, keep in mind that these accounting reports are somewhat tentative and conditional. Accountants make many estimates and predictions in recording sales revenue and income and recording expenses and losses. Some soft numbers are mixed in with hard numbers in financial statements. In short, financial statements are iffy to some extent. There’s no getting around this limitation of accounting.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9472,"name":"John A. Tracy","slug":"john-a-tracy","description":" <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9472"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[{"label":"Get in the right frame of mind","target":"#tab1"},{"label":"Decide what to read","target":"#tab2"},{"label":"Improve your accounting savvy","target":"#tab3"},{"label":"Judge profit performance","target":"#tab4"},{"label":"Test earnings per share (EPS) against change in bottom line","target":"#tab5"},{"label":"Tackle unusual gains and losses","target":"#tab6"},{"label":"Check cash flow from profit","target":"#tab7"},{"label":"Look for signs of financial distress","target":"#tab8"},{"label":"Recognize the possibility of restatement and fraud","target":"#tab9"},{"label":"Remember the limits of financial reports","target":"#tab10"}],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":226417,"title":"Accounting and the Theory of Financial Reporting","slug":"accounting-theory-financial-reporting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226417"}},{"articleId":226414,"title":"Beware of Accounting Tricks: Smoothing the Rough Edges Off Year-to-Year Profit Fluctuations","slug":"beware-accounting-tricks-smoothing-rough-edges-off-year-year-profit-fluctuations","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226414"}},{"articleId":226410,"title":"Beware of Window Dressing in Accounting: Pumping Up the Ending Cash Balance and Cash Flow","slug":"beware-window-dressing-accounting-pumping-ending-cash-balance-cash-flow","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226410"}},{"articleId":226406,"title":"Using Accounting Information to Make Investment Choices","slug":"using-accounting-information-make-investment-choices","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226406"}},{"articleId":226403,"title":"Reading Financial Reports of Private Versus Public Businesses","slug":"reading-financial-reports-private-versus-public-businesses","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/226403"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281922,"slug":"accounting-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119837527","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119837529/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119837529/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119837529-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119837529/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119837529/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/9781119837527-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Accounting For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. <b><b data-author-id=\"9472\">John A. Tracy</b></b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":9473,"name":"Tage C. Tracy","slug":"tage-c-tracy","description":" <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9473"}},{"authorId":9472,"name":"John A. Tracy","slug":"john-a-tracy","description":" <b>John A. Tracy</b> is a former accountant and professor of accounting. He is also the author of Accounting For Dummies. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9472"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119837527&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b4c8aa27\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119837527&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b4c8b44a\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-08-19T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":226420},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-26T14:45:15+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-08-11T17:10:57+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:19:53+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"Separable Cost Reduction in Cost Accounting","strippedTitle":"separable cost reduction in cost accounting","slug":"separable-cost-reduction-in-cost-accounting","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"In cost accounting, you want to reduce separable costs, when possible. Learn how to figure joint costs and separable cost reduction.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"In cost accounting, the cost of goods available for sale represents the product’s total costs. Total costs have two components — joint costs and separable costs. When possible, you want to reduce separable costs, but first take a look at your company’s joint costs.\r\n\r\nAssume you manufacture leaf blowers. Your two products are heavy-duty blowers and yardwork blowers. The separable costs are $1,200,000 for the heavy-duty blower and $912,000 for the yardwork blower. If you know the separable costs and the cost of goods available for sale, you can compute the joint cost allocation. This table shows the process.\r\n<table><caption>Joint Cost Allocation</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Cost of goods available for sale</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Less separable costs</td>\r\n<td>$1,200,000</td>\r\n<td>$912,000</td>\r\n<td>$2,112,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Equals joint cost allocation</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$551,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$348,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$900,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nEach company division provides the separable costs. So altogether, this table gives you a joint cost allocation.\r\n\r\nNow assume that the heavy-duty blower division is able to sharply reduce its separable costs to an amazingly low $500,000. The first table listed heavy-duty separable costs of $1,200,000. Consider what now happens to heavy-duty’s joint cost allocation. Take a look at the next table.\r\n<table><caption>Cost Allocation — Less Heavy Duty Separable Costs</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Cost of goods available for sale</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Less separable costs</td>\r\n<td>$500,000</td>\r\n<td>$912,000</td>\r\n<td>$1,412,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Equals joint cost allocation</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$1,251,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$348,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$1,600,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nHeavy-duty’s joint cost allocation increases to $1,251,163 (from $551,163). That doesn’t seem right. The goal is to analyze costs to reduce or eliminate them. If you do, supposedly you increase your profits.\r\n\r\nIn this case, the heavy-duty division’s reducing separable costs <i>increased</i> its joint cost allocation. There doesn’t seem to be a benefit to operating more efficiently.\r\n\r\nHere’s an explanation: The gross margin percentage method (calculated as gross margin ÷ total sales value x 100) <i>locks</i> in total costs as a percentage of sales value. If the gross margin is about 12.5 percent of sales value, it means that costs must be about 87.5 percent of sales value. For heavy-duty, that 87.5 percent total cost number is $1,751,163. Those costs are either separable or joint costs. If one increases, the other decreases.\r\n\r\nThe heavy-duty manager may have a problem with this process. The manager works hard (using good old cost accounting) to lower the separable costs. The manager’s “reward” is a higher joint cost allocation. The heavy-duty division has lowered costs but doesn’t get any savings in total costs.\r\n\r\nThe constant gross margin percentage method clarifies the revenue and profit calculations company-wide. This method eliminates some of the variation between company divisions. Although some managers may complain, each division has the same gross margin percentage. The process makes managing company profit easier.\r\n<p class=\"Tip\">This is one of those “Here’s why the chief financial officer (CFO) makes the big bucks” moments. As CFO, you explain the gross margin percentage method to the heavy-duty division manager. The goal is to allocate joint costs so that each product maintains the same gross margin percentage of about 12.5 percent. If a division reduces separable costs, it must get a bigger joint cost allocation — <i>otherwise, the gross margin percentage would increase</i>.</p>\r\nNow heavy-duty’s manager should be evaluated based on the successful cost reduction. The manager had a success, and you want to encourage more cost savings. Although the gross margin percentage process requires a bigger joint cost allocation, that must not take away from the manager’s good performance.","description":"In cost accounting, the cost of goods available for sale represents the product’s total costs. Total costs have two components — joint costs and separable costs. When possible, you want to reduce separable costs, but first take a look at your company’s joint costs.\r\n\r\nAssume you manufacture leaf blowers. Your two products are heavy-duty blowers and yardwork blowers. The separable costs are $1,200,000 for the heavy-duty blower and $912,000 for the yardwork blower. If you know the separable costs and the cost of goods available for sale, you can compute the joint cost allocation. This table shows the process.\r\n<table><caption>Joint Cost Allocation</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Cost of goods available for sale</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Less separable costs</td>\r\n<td>$1,200,000</td>\r\n<td>$912,000</td>\r\n<td>$2,112,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Equals joint cost allocation</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$551,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$348,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$900,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nEach company division provides the separable costs. So altogether, this table gives you a joint cost allocation.\r\n\r\nNow assume that the heavy-duty blower division is able to sharply reduce its separable costs to an amazingly low $500,000. The first table listed heavy-duty separable costs of $1,200,000. Consider what now happens to heavy-duty’s joint cost allocation. Take a look at the next table.\r\n<table><caption>Cost Allocation — Less Heavy Duty Separable Costs</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Cost of goods available for sale</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Less separable costs</td>\r\n<td>$500,000</td>\r\n<td>$912,000</td>\r\n<td>$1,412,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Equals joint cost allocation</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$1,251,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$348,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$1,600,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nHeavy-duty’s joint cost allocation increases to $1,251,163 (from $551,163). That doesn’t seem right. The goal is to analyze costs to reduce or eliminate them. If you do, supposedly you increase your profits.\r\n\r\nIn this case, the heavy-duty division’s reducing separable costs <i>increased</i> its joint cost allocation. There doesn’t seem to be a benefit to operating more efficiently.\r\n\r\nHere’s an explanation: The gross margin percentage method (calculated as gross margin ÷ total sales value x 100) <i>locks</i> in total costs as a percentage of sales value. If the gross margin is about 12.5 percent of sales value, it means that costs must be about 87.5 percent of sales value. For heavy-duty, that 87.5 percent total cost number is $1,751,163. Those costs are either separable or joint costs. If one increases, the other decreases.\r\n\r\nThe heavy-duty manager may have a problem with this process. The manager works hard (using good old cost accounting) to lower the separable costs. The manager’s “reward” is a higher joint cost allocation. The heavy-duty division has lowered costs but doesn’t get any savings in total costs.\r\n\r\nThe constant gross margin percentage method clarifies the revenue and profit calculations company-wide. This method eliminates some of the variation between company divisions. Although some managers may complain, each division has the same gross margin percentage. The process makes managing company profit easier.\r\n<p class=\"Tip\">This is one of those “Here’s why the chief financial officer (CFO) makes the big bucks” moments. As CFO, you explain the gross margin percentage method to the heavy-duty division manager. The goal is to allocate joint costs so that each product maintains the same gross margin percentage of about 12.5 percent. If a division reduces separable costs, it must get a bigger joint cost allocation — <i>otherwise, the gross margin percentage would increase</i>.</p>\r\nNow heavy-duty’s manager should be evaluated based on the successful cost reduction. The manager had a success, and you want to encourage more cost savings. Although the gross margin percentage process requires a bigger joint cost allocation, that must not take away from the manager’s good performance.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9050,"name":"Kenneth Boyd","slug":"kenneth-boyd","description":"Ken Boyd, a former CPA, has more than 37 years of experience in accounting, education, and financial services. He is the owner of Accounting Accidentally (<a href=\"//www.accountingaccidentally.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.accountingaccidentally.com</a>), which provides written and video content on accounting, personal finance, and entrepreneurship topics. His YouTube channel (<a href=\"//www.youtube.com/user/kenboydstl\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">kenboydstl</a>) has hundreds of videos on accounting and finance.\r\n\r\nIn recent years, Boyd has served as an adjunct professor of accounting at the Cook School of Business at St. Louis University. He has written hundreds of articles for QuickBooks, Investopedia, and a number of other publications.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9050"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":208104,"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/208104"}},{"articleId":171024,"title":"Must Know Formulas for Cost Accounting","slug":"must-know-formulas-for-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171024"}},{"articleId":171020,"title":"Important Terms and Principles Cost Accountants Should Know","slug":"important-terms-and-principles-cost-accountants-should-know","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171020"}},{"articleId":171019,"title":"Avoiding Pitfalls on Cost Accounting Exams","slug":"avoiding-pitfalls-on-cost-accounting-exams","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171019"}},{"articleId":166828,"title":"Accrual Accounting in Cost Accounting","slug":"accrual-accounting-in-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/166828"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":282119,"slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119856023","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119856027-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/9781119856023-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b><b data-author-id=\"34810\">Kenneth W. Boyd</b></b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":34810,"name":"Kenneth W. Boyd","slug":"kenneth-w-boyd","description":" <p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/34810"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b49e71ab\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b49e7b3a\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-08-11T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":164989},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-26T14:45:17+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-08-11T17:07:36+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:19:53+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"Cost Accounting: Joint Cost Allocation and Gross Margin Percentage","strippedTitle":"cost accounting: joint cost allocation and gross margin percentage","slug":"cost-accounting-joint-cost-allocation-and-gross-margin-percentage","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"In cost accounting, if you know the separable costs and costs of goods for sale, you can calculate joint cost allocation. Here's how.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"In cost accounting, the cost of goods available for sale represents the product’s total costs. Total costs have two components — joint costs and separable costs.\r\n\r\nAssume the <i>cost of goods</i><i> available for sale</i> are $1,751,163 and $1,260,837 for the heavy-duty blower and the yardwork blower. Say the <i>separable costs</i> are $1,200,000 and $912,000. If you know the separable costs and the cost of goods available for sale, you can compute the joint cost allocation. The first table shows the process.\r\n<table><caption>Joint Cost Allocation</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Cost of goods available for sale</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Less separable costs</td>\r\n<td>$1,200,000</td>\r\n<td>$912,000</td>\r\n<td>$2,112,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Equals joint cost allocation</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$551,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$348,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$900,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nEach company division provides the separable costs. So altogether, the table gives you a joint cost allocation.\r\n\r\nNow calculate the <i>gross margin percentage</i>. Say your <i>sales values</i> are $2,000,00 and $1,440,000 for heavy-duty and yardwork blowers. The total cost is the cost of goods available for sale from the first table. The gross margin percentage is the gross margin divided by the sales value. For each product, the gross margin percentage is the same (12.442 percent) as the company’s overall gross margin.\r\n<table><caption>Verifying Gross Margin Percentage</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Sales value (<i>A</i>)</td>\r\n<td>$2,000,000</td>\r\n<td>$1,440,000</td>\r\n<td>$3,440,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Total cost (<i>B</i>)</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Gross margin (</b><b><i>A</i></b> <b>–</b>\r\n<b><i>B</i></b><b>)</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$248,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$179,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$428,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Gross margin percentage</td>\r\n<td>12.442</td>\r\n<td>12.442</td>\r\n<td></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nHere’s the point of this table: it uses the traditional formula to compute gross margin and gross margin percentage. The table verifies that the calculations are correct.\r\n\r\nIf the heavy-duty product has the higher sales value, it ends up with a higher gross margin in dollars than the yardwork product. However, both sale values are multiplied by the same gross margin percentage. Both products have a gross margin of about 12.5 percent (rounded). That means that about 87.5 percent of sales value represents cost of goods available for sale.","description":"In cost accounting, the cost of goods available for sale represents the product’s total costs. Total costs have two components — joint costs and separable costs.\r\n\r\nAssume the <i>cost of goods</i><i> available for sale</i> are $1,751,163 and $1,260,837 for the heavy-duty blower and the yardwork blower. Say the <i>separable costs</i> are $1,200,000 and $912,000. If you know the separable costs and the cost of goods available for sale, you can compute the joint cost allocation. The first table shows the process.\r\n<table><caption>Joint Cost Allocation</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Cost of goods available for sale</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Less separable costs</td>\r\n<td>$1,200,000</td>\r\n<td>$912,000</td>\r\n<td>$2,112,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Equals joint cost allocation</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$551,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$348,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$900,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nEach company division provides the separable costs. So altogether, the table gives you a joint cost allocation.\r\n\r\nNow calculate the <i>gross margin percentage</i>. Say your <i>sales values</i> are $2,000,00 and $1,440,000 for heavy-duty and yardwork blowers. The total cost is the cost of goods available for sale from the first table. The gross margin percentage is the gross margin divided by the sales value. For each product, the gross margin percentage is the same (12.442 percent) as the company’s overall gross margin.\r\n<table><caption>Verifying Gross Margin Percentage</caption>\r\n<tbody>\r\n<tr>\r\n<th></th>\r\n<th>Heavy-Duty</th>\r\n<th>Yardwork</th>\r\n<th>Total</th>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Sales value (<i>A</i>)</td>\r\n<td>$2,000,000</td>\r\n<td>$1,440,000</td>\r\n<td>$3,440,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Total cost (<i>B</i>)</td>\r\n<td>$1,751,163</td>\r\n<td>$1,260,837</td>\r\n<td>$3,012,000</td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td><b>Gross margin (</b><b><i>A</i></b> <b>–</b>\r\n<b><i>B</i></b><b>)</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$248,837</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$179,163</b></td>\r\n<td><b>$428,000</b></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n<tr>\r\n<td>Gross margin percentage</td>\r\n<td>12.442</td>\r\n<td>12.442</td>\r\n<td></td>\r\n</tr>\r\n</tbody>\r\n</table>\r\nHere’s the point of this table: it uses the traditional formula to compute gross margin and gross margin percentage. The table verifies that the calculations are correct.\r\n\r\nIf the heavy-duty product has the higher sales value, it ends up with a higher gross margin in dollars than the yardwork product. However, both sale values are multiplied by the same gross margin percentage. Both products have a gross margin of about 12.5 percent (rounded). That means that about 87.5 percent of sales value represents cost of goods available for sale.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9050,"name":"Kenneth Boyd","slug":"kenneth-boyd","description":"Ken Boyd, a former CPA, has more than 37 years of experience in accounting, education, and financial services. He is the owner of Accounting Accidentally (<a href=\"//www.accountingaccidentally.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.accountingaccidentally.com</a>), which provides written and video content on accounting, personal finance, and entrepreneurship topics. His YouTube channel (<a href=\"//www.youtube.com/user/kenboydstl\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">kenboydstl</a>) has hundreds of videos on accounting and finance.\r\n\r\nIn recent years, Boyd has served as an adjunct professor of accounting at the Cook School of Business at St. Louis University. He has written hundreds of articles for QuickBooks, Investopedia, and a number of other publications.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9050"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":208104,"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/208104"}},{"articleId":171024,"title":"Must Know Formulas for Cost Accounting","slug":"must-know-formulas-for-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171024"}},{"articleId":171020,"title":"Important Terms and Principles Cost Accountants Should Know","slug":"important-terms-and-principles-cost-accountants-should-know","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171020"}},{"articleId":171019,"title":"Avoiding Pitfalls on Cost Accounting Exams","slug":"avoiding-pitfalls-on-cost-accounting-exams","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171019"}},{"articleId":166828,"title":"Accrual Accounting in Cost Accounting","slug":"accrual-accounting-in-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/166828"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":282119,"slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119856023","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119856027-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/9781119856023-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b><b data-author-id=\"34810\">Kenneth W. Boyd</b></b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":34810,"name":"Kenneth W. Boyd","slug":"kenneth-w-boyd","description":" <p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/34810"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b49dd44e\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b49de094\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-08-11T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":164995},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-26T15:35:26+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-08-02T18:46:54+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:19:50+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"What Capital Is in Corporate Finance","strippedTitle":"what capital is in corporate finance","slug":"what-capital-is-in-corporate-finance","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"Learn about the types of assets and capital within a corporation, including the cash used to launch the venture.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Everything that makes up a corporation and everything a corporation owns, including the building, equipment, office supplies, brand value, research, land, trademarks, and everything else, are considered <i>assets.</i> Believe it or not, when you start a corporation, that company’s assets aren’t just included in a Welcome Letter; you have to go out and acquire them. Generally speaking, you start off with cash, which you then use to purchase other assets.\r\n\r\nFor most new companies, this cash consists of a combination of the following:\r\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\r\n \t<li>\r\n<p class=\"first-para\"><b>The owner’s own money:</b> This money is considered <i>equity</i> because the owner can still claim full possession over it.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li>\r\n<p class=\"first-para\"><b>Small loans, such as business and personal loans from banks, business and personal lines of credit, and government loans:</b> The money obtained through loans is considered a <i>liability</i> because the corporation has to pay it back at some point. In other words, these loans are a form of debt.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n</ul>\r\nThe combination of these two funding sources leads to the explanation of the most fundamental equation in corporate finance:\r\n<blockquote>Assets = Liabilities + Equity</blockquote>\r\nThe total value of assets held by a company is equal to the total liabilities and total equity held by the company. Because the total amount of debt a company incurs goes into purchasing equipment and supplies, increasing debt through loans increases a company’s liabilities and total assets.\r\n\r\nAs an owner contributes his own funding to the company’s usage, the total amount of company equity increases along with the assets. <b><i>Note:</i></b> <i>Capital, assets, money,</i> and <i>cash</i> are basically all the same thing at this point; after a company raises the original capital, or cash, it exchanges that cash for more useful forms of capital, such as erasable markers.\r\n\r\nUnlike liabilities,<i> </i>equity represents ownership in the company. So if a company owns $100,000 in assets and $50,000 was funded by loans, then the owner still holds claim over $50,000 in assets, even if the company goes out of business, requiring the owner to give the other $50,000 in assets back to the bank.\r\n\r\nFor corporations, the equity funding varies a bit, however, because the owners of a corporation are the stockholders. The equity funding of corporations comes from the initial sale of stock, which exchanges shares of ownership for cash to be used in the company.","description":"Everything that makes up a corporation and everything a corporation owns, including the building, equipment, office supplies, brand value, research, land, trademarks, and everything else, are considered <i>assets.</i> Believe it or not, when you start a corporation, that company’s assets aren’t just included in a Welcome Letter; you have to go out and acquire them. Generally speaking, you start off with cash, which you then use to purchase other assets.\r\n\r\nFor most new companies, this cash consists of a combination of the following:\r\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\r\n \t<li>\r\n<p class=\"first-para\"><b>The owner’s own money:</b> This money is considered <i>equity</i> because the owner can still claim full possession over it.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li>\r\n<p class=\"first-para\"><b>Small loans, such as business and personal loans from banks, business and personal lines of credit, and government loans:</b> The money obtained through loans is considered a <i>liability</i> because the corporation has to pay it back at some point. In other words, these loans are a form of debt.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n</ul>\r\nThe combination of these two funding sources leads to the explanation of the most fundamental equation in corporate finance:\r\n<blockquote>Assets = Liabilities + Equity</blockquote>\r\nThe total value of assets held by a company is equal to the total liabilities and total equity held by the company. Because the total amount of debt a company incurs goes into purchasing equipment and supplies, increasing debt through loans increases a company’s liabilities and total assets.\r\n\r\nAs an owner contributes his own funding to the company’s usage, the total amount of company equity increases along with the assets. <b><i>Note:</i></b> <i>Capital, assets, money,</i> and <i>cash</i> are basically all the same thing at this point; after a company raises the original capital, or cash, it exchanges that cash for more useful forms of capital, such as erasable markers.\r\n\r\nUnlike liabilities,<i> </i>equity represents ownership in the company. So if a company owns $100,000 in assets and $50,000 was funded by loans, then the owner still holds claim over $50,000 in assets, even if the company goes out of business, requiring the owner to give the other $50,000 in assets back to the bank.\r\n\r\nFor corporations, the equity funding varies a bit, however, because the owners of a corporation are the stockholders. The equity funding of corporations comes from the initial sale of stock, which exchanges shares of ownership for cash to be used in the company.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9764,"name":"Michael Taillard","slug":"michael-taillard","description":" <p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9764"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":208127,"title":"Corporate Finance For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"corporate-finance-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/208127"}},{"articleId":171478,"title":"Pursuing Corporate Finance Professionally","slug":"pursuing-corporate-finance-professionally-2","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171478"}},{"articleId":171477,"title":"Understanding How Behavior Affects Corporate Finance","slug":"understanding-how-behavior-affects-corporate-finance","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171477"}},{"articleId":169321,"title":"The Gross Profit Portion of the Corporate Income Statement","slug":"the-gross-profit-portion-of-the-corporate-income-statement","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/169321"}},{"articleId":169320,"title":"How Corporate Finance Rules Your Life","slug":"how-corporate-finance-rules-your-life","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/169320"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":282117,"slug":"corporate-finance-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119850311","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119850312/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119850312/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119850312-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119850312/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119850312/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/9781119850311-1-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Corporate Finance For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":9764,"name":"Michael Taillard","slug":"michael-taillard","description":" <p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9764"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119850311&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b4680962\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119850311&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b468131f\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-08-02T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":169309},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-26T14:50:25+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-08-01T16:38:29+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:19:50+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"Theoretical and Practical Capacity in Cost Accounting","strippedTitle":"theoretical and practical capacity in cost accounting","slug":"theoretical-and-practical-capacity-in-cost-accounting","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"Learn about theoretical and practical capacity in cost accounting, including factors to consider and how to calculate them.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"In cost accounting, two types of capacity focus on production<i>: theoretical capacity</i> and <i>practical capacity</i>. Consider how much you could produce if customer demand was unlimited. Select a capacity method that makes sense to you, and use that as a tool to plan production and spending.\r\n\r\n<i>Theoretical capacity</i> assumes that nothing in your production ever goes wrong. Accountants describe this capacity as working at full efficiency all the time.\r\n\r\nConsider what your pie-in-the-sky or perfect-world capacity would be. It’s a world in which everything runs perfectly and no machines or equipment ever break down. It’s utopia where no worker ever makes a mistake. That would be great, wouldn’t it? That’s theoretical capacity, and you can’t reach it. It seems silly, but you need to see this level of capacity to understand the others.\r\n\r\nSay you own a business that makes athletic running shorts and other clothing. At maximum capacity, you can make 200 pairs of shorts per shift. You run three 8-hour shifts per day, 365 days a year. Based on those numbers, here is your theoretical capacity:\r\n<blockquote>Theoretical capacity = shorts x shifts x 365 days</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Theoretical capacity = 200 x 3 x 365 days</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Theoretical capacity = 219,000</blockquote>\r\nUnfortunately, this level of capacity isn’t attainable. You need to take into account the unavoidable. That gets you to practical capacity.\r\n\r\n<i>Practical capacity</i> is the level of capacity that includes unavoidable operating interruptions. Another description is unavoidable losses of operating time. Consider maintenance on equipment, employee vacations, and holidays. You’re willing to accept a good, rather than perfect, capacity level.\r\n\r\nThe people in your company can help you determine your practical capacity. Your production and engineering staff can answer questions about machine capacity and repair time. Your human resources staff can forecast employee availability, based on vacations and holidays.\r\n\r\nYou determine that 250 days is a more realistic number of production days, given unavoidable operating interruptions. Also, you decide that two shifts per day are realistic. Here’s the practical capacity calculation:\r\n<blockquote>Practical capacity = shorts x shifts x days</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Practical capacity = 200 x 2 x 250</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Practical capacity = 100,000</blockquote>\r\nThe practical capacity is 100,000 units (pairs of shorts) per year.","description":"In cost accounting, two types of capacity focus on production<i>: theoretical capacity</i> and <i>practical capacity</i>. Consider how much you could produce if customer demand was unlimited. Select a capacity method that makes sense to you, and use that as a tool to plan production and spending.\r\n\r\n<i>Theoretical capacity</i> assumes that nothing in your production ever goes wrong. Accountants describe this capacity as working at full efficiency all the time.\r\n\r\nConsider what your pie-in-the-sky or perfect-world capacity would be. It’s a world in which everything runs perfectly and no machines or equipment ever break down. It’s utopia where no worker ever makes a mistake. That would be great, wouldn’t it? That’s theoretical capacity, and you can’t reach it. It seems silly, but you need to see this level of capacity to understand the others.\r\n\r\nSay you own a business that makes athletic running shorts and other clothing. At maximum capacity, you can make 200 pairs of shorts per shift. You run three 8-hour shifts per day, 365 days a year. Based on those numbers, here is your theoretical capacity:\r\n<blockquote>Theoretical capacity = shorts x shifts x 365 days</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Theoretical capacity = 200 x 3 x 365 days</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Theoretical capacity = 219,000</blockquote>\r\nUnfortunately, this level of capacity isn’t attainable. You need to take into account the unavoidable. That gets you to practical capacity.\r\n\r\n<i>Practical capacity</i> is the level of capacity that includes unavoidable operating interruptions. Another description is unavoidable losses of operating time. Consider maintenance on equipment, employee vacations, and holidays. You’re willing to accept a good, rather than perfect, capacity level.\r\n\r\nThe people in your company can help you determine your practical capacity. Your production and engineering staff can answer questions about machine capacity and repair time. Your human resources staff can forecast employee availability, based on vacations and holidays.\r\n\r\nYou determine that 250 days is a more realistic number of production days, given unavoidable operating interruptions. Also, you decide that two shifts per day are realistic. Here’s the practical capacity calculation:\r\n<blockquote>Practical capacity = shorts x shifts x days</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Practical capacity = 200 x 2 x 250</blockquote>\r\n<blockquote>Practical capacity = 100,000</blockquote>\r\nThe practical capacity is 100,000 units (pairs of shorts) per year.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9050,"name":"Kenneth Boyd","slug":"kenneth-boyd","description":"Ken Boyd, a former CPA, has more than 37 years of experience in accounting, education, and financial services. He is the owner of Accounting Accidentally (<a href=\"//www.accountingaccidentally.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.accountingaccidentally.com</a>), which provides written and video content on accounting, personal finance, and entrepreneurship topics. His YouTube channel (<a href=\"//www.youtube.com/user/kenboydstl\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">kenboydstl</a>) has hundreds of videos on accounting and finance.\r\n\r\nIn recent years, Boyd has served as an adjunct professor of accounting at the Cook School of Business at St. Louis University. He has written hundreds of articles for QuickBooks, Investopedia, and a number of other publications.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9050"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34230,"title":"General Accounting","slug":"general-accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":null,"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":208104,"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/208104"}},{"articleId":171024,"title":"Must Know Formulas for Cost Accounting","slug":"must-know-formulas-for-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171024"}},{"articleId":171020,"title":"Important Terms and Principles Cost Accountants Should Know","slug":"important-terms-and-principles-cost-accountants-should-know","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171020"}},{"articleId":171019,"title":"Avoiding Pitfalls on Cost Accounting Exams","slug":"avoiding-pitfalls-on-cost-accounting-exams","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/171019"}},{"articleId":166828,"title":"Accrual Accounting in Cost Accounting","slug":"accrual-accounting-in-cost-accounting","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/166828"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":277438,"title":"Financial Accounting: The Effect of Business Transactions","slug":"financial-accounting-the-effect-of-business-transactions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277438"}},{"articleId":277429,"title":"What Are Accounting Journals?","slug":"what-are-accounting-journals","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277429"}},{"articleId":277423,"title":"How to Read Corporate Annual Reports","slug":"how-to-read-corporate-annual-reports","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277423"}},{"articleId":277418,"title":"Showing the Money: The Statement of Cash Flows","slug":"showing-the-money-the-statement-of-cash-flows","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277418"}},{"articleId":277410,"title":"10 Accounting Career Opportunities","slug":"10-accounting-career-opportunities","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/articles/277410"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":282119,"slug":"cost-accounting-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119856023","categoryList":["business-careers-money","business","accounting","general-accounting"],"amazon":{"default":"//www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"//www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"//www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=//www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119856027-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"//www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"//www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119856027/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"//coursofppt.com/wp-content/uploads/9781119856023-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Cost Accounting For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b><b data-author-id=\"34810\">Kenneth W. Boyd</b></b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":34810,"name":"Kenneth W. Boyd","slug":"kenneth-w-boyd","description":" <p><b>Kenneth W. Boyd</b> has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four&#45;time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/34810"}}],"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b462e1e3\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;business&quot;,&quot;accounting&quot;,&quot;general-accounting&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119856023&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221b462eac7\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-08-01T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":165633},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2017-03-27T16:47:33+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-02-28T16:44:23+00:00","timestamp":"2023-09-14T18:19:18+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Business","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34225"},"slug":"business","categoryId":34225},{"name":"Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34226"},"slug":"accounting","categoryId":34226},{"name":"General Accounting","_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/categories/34230"},"slug":"general-accounting","categoryId":34230}],"title":"1,001 Accounting Practice Problems For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"1,001 accounting practice problems for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"1001-accounting-practice-problems-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","手机搜检索擎改善":{"metaDescription":"Sharpen your math skills and study up on some of the most important formulas you'll need for accounting practice.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Accounting, as you may guess, involves a lot of math. As you practice various types of accounting problems, and when you begin doing accounting work for real, you will need to utilize various formulas to calculate the information you need.","description":"Accounting, as you may guess, involves a lot of math. As you practice various types of accounting problems, and when you begin doing accounting work for real, you will need to utilize various formulas to calculate the information you need.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":9050,"name":"Kenneth Boyd","slug":"kenneth-boyd","description":"Ken Boyd, a former CPA, has more than 37 years of experience in accounting, education, and financial services. He is the owner of Accounting Accidentally (<a href=\"//www.accountingaccidentally.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">www.accountingaccidentally.com</a>), which provides written and video content on accounting, personal finance, and entrepreneurship topics. His YouTube channel (<a href=\"//www.youtube.com/user/kenboydstl\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">kenboydstl</a>) has hundreds of videos on accounting and finance.\r\n\r\nIn recent years, Boyd has served as an adjunct professor of accounting at the Cook School of Business at St. Louis University. He has written hundreds of articles for QuickBooks, Investopedia, and a number of other publications.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"//dummies-api.coursofppt.com/v2/authors/9050"}},{"authorId":9051,"name":"Kate Mooney","slug":"kate-mooney","description":" <p><b>Kenneth Boyd</b> is the owner of St. Louis Test Preparation &#40;www.stltest.net&#41;. He provides online tutoring in accounting and finance. Kenneth has worked as a CPA, Auditor, Tax Preparer, and College Professor. He is the author of <i>CPA Exam For Dummies</i>. <b>Kate Mooney</b> has been teaching accounting to both undergraduates and MBA students at St. Cloud State University since 1986, after earning her PhD from Texas A &#38; M University. She is a licensed CPA in Minnesota and is a member of the State Board of Accountancy. 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This list is not comprehensive, but it should cover the items you’ll use most often as you practice solving various accounting problems.</p>\n<h2>Balance sheet formula</h2>\n<p>Assets – liabilities = equity (or assets = liabilities + equity)</p>\n<p>This basic formula must stay in balance to generate an accurate balance sheet. This means that all accounting transactions must keep the formula in balance. If not, the accountant has made an error.</p>\n<h2>Retained earnings formula</h2>\n<p>Beginning balance + net income – net losses – dividends = ending balance</p>\n<h2>Income statement formula</h2>\n<p>Revenue (sales) – expenses = profit (or net income)</p>\n<p>Keep in mind that revenue and sales may be used interchangeably. Profit and net income may also be used interchangeably. The income statement is also referred to as a <i>profit and loss statement.</i></p>\n<h2>Gross margin</h2>\n<p>Sales – cost of sales</p>\n<p>Gross margin is not a company’s net income or profit. Other expenses, such as selling, general, and administrative (SG and A) expenses, are subtracted to arrive at net income.</p>\n<h2>Operating income (earnings)</h2>\n<p>Gross profit – selling, general, and administrative (SG and A) expenses</p>\n<h2>Statement of cash flows formula</h2>\n<p>Beginning cash balance + cash flow sources (uses) from operations + cash flow sources (uses) from financing + cash flow sources (uses) from investing = ending cash balance</p>\n<p>This formula adds cash sources and subtracts cash uses.</p>\n<h2>Inventory formula</h2>\n<p>Beginning inventory + purchases – cost of sales = ending inventory (or beginning inventory + purchases – ending inventory = cost of sales)</p>\n<h2>Net sales formula</h2>\n<p>Gross sales – sales discounts – sales returns and allowances</p>\n<h2>Book value of fixed (depreciable) assets</h2>\n<p>Original cost – accumulated depreciation</p>\n<h2>Straight line depreciation</h2>\n<p>(Original cost – salvage value) / number of years in useful life</p>\n<p><i>Salvage </i><i>value </i>is the dollar amount that the owner can receive for selling the asset at the end of its useful life.</p>\n"},{"title":"Financial statement formulas","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>After you create financial statements, you need some tools to analyze a company’s results. Following are the most frequently used formulas to analyze financial statements. Get familiar with them so that you can analyze statements with confidence.</p>\n<h2>Components of work-in-process</h2>\n<p>Direct materials + direct labor + factory overhead applied</p>\n<p>Work-in-process (WIP) represents cost incurred in production for partially completed goods. WIP is a subaccount within inventory. When goods are completed, they are moved to finished goods (another inventory account).</p>\n<h2>Current ratio</h2>\n<p>Current assets ÷ current liabilities</p>\n<p>The current ratio illustrates how easily a company can cover its current bills.</p>\n<h2>Quick ratio</h2>\n<p>(Current assets less inventory) ÷ current liabilities</p>\n<p>The quick ratio excludes inventory from current assets. The rationale is that inventory is the current asset that will take the longest time to convert into cash. Other current assets, such as collecting accounts receivable, may be converted into cash more quickly.</p>\n<h2>Asset turnover ratio</h2>\n<p>Revenue (or sales) ÷ assets</p>\n<p>This ratio explains how much profit a company generates for every dollar of assets.</p>\n<h2>Return on equity</h2>\n<p>Net income ÷ equity</p>\n<p>This ratio explains how much profit a company generates for every dollar of equity.</p>\n<h2>Debt to equity ratio</h2>\n<p>Debt ÷ equity</p>\n<p>This ratio measures what percentage of a firm’s total capitalization is debt. Capitalization refers to all funds raised by the company to operate the business.</p>\n<h2>Contribution margin</h2>\n<p>Sales less variable costs</p>\n<p>Contribution margin represents the amount that will be used to cover fixed costs. Any dollars remaining after paying fixed costs is considered profit.</p>\n<h2>Return on capital</h2>\n<p>Operating profit ÷ capital</p>\n<p>Capital is similar to equity. It represents funds raised to operate a business. Operating profit refers to profit generated from normal business activity.</p>\n<h2>Break-even formula</h2>\n<p>Sales – variable costs – fixed costs = $0 profit</p>\n<p>The break-even formula calculates the level of sales that will generate a profit of $0.</p>\n<h2>Formula to assign overhead costs</h2>\n<p>Total overhead costs incurred ÷ activity level</p>\n<p>Overhead costs, such as a factory’s utility costs, can’t be directly traced to a product. Instead, overhead costs are allocated based on an activity level. The activity level chosen should impact the amount of overhead costs incurred. For example, the number of machine hours used drives machinery repair costs. Machine hours should be the activity level for machine repair costs.</p>\n"},{"title":"More financial analysis formulas","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>After you create financial statements, you need some tools to analyze the company’s results. Following are some additional formulas accountants use to analyze financial statements. Become familiar with these formulas, and use them as you practice various accounting problems.</p>\n<h2>Burden rate</h2>\n<p>Fixed manufacturing costs ÷ units produced</p>\n<p>Fixed costs can’t be directly traced to a unit produced. For example, a $50,000 monthly factory lease must be paid, regardless of the number of units produced in a given month. To assign fixed cost to each unit of product, companies used the burden rate.</p>\n<h2>Cost of idle capacity</h2>\n<p>Percentage of available capacity unused × fixed manufacturing overhead costs</p>\n<p><i>Idle capacity</i> refers to unused capacity. Assume you could produce 20% more baseball gloves this month, using your existing factory costs (materials, labor, and overhead). Say that the factory pays a foreman $50,000 in salary and benefits to supervise production. The cost of idle capacity is 20% multiplied by $50,000, or $10,000. The firm is paying an extra $10,000 for production capacity it’s not using.</p>\n<h2>Calculating loan interest</h2>\n<p>Interest rate for period × principal amount of loan</p>\n<p>Interest can be compounded (computed) annually, monthly, or even daily. Pay attention to the stated annual interest rate on the loan and how often interest is compounded. If a 12% loan is compounded monthly, the monthly interest rate is 12% ÷ 12 months, or 1%.</p>\n<h2>Effective interest rate</h2>\n<p>Interest paid ÷ principal amount owed</p>\n<p>Because of the effects of compounding, the actual interest paid on a loan may be different from the stated interest rate on the note multiplied by the principal.</p>\n<h2>Present value and future value factors</h2>\n<p>Present value factor less than 1; future value factor more than 1</p>\n<p>A present value factor discounts a cash flow to its present value. To calculate the present value, you multiply the factor times the cash flow amount. A present value factor will be less than 1. The future value of a cash flow adjusts the cash flow to its future value, given an interest rate. A future value factor will always be more than 1.</p>\n<h2>Return on investment (ROI)</h2>\n<p>Profit (net income) from investment ÷ cost of investment</p>\n<p>A more complex version of the formula is operating income divided by operating assets. Operating assets represent an investment in a project or business. The purpose of this formula is to determine the profitability of a given project.</p>\n<h2>Return on investment (DuPont model)</h2>\n<p>Profit margin × asset turnover</p>\n<p>This is a more complex formula that’s used for ROI. Profit margin is operating profit divided by sales. Asset turnover is calculated as sales divided by average assets. Average assets refers to assets at beginning of period + assets balance at end of period ÷ 2.</p>\n<h2>Return of investment to shareholders</h2>\n<p>Retained earnings balance – payments to shareholders</p>\n<p>A <i>dividend</i> is a payment of retained earnings to shareholders (investors). If a company makes payments to shareholders that are greater than the balance of retained earnings, those payments are a return of the investors’ original investment.</p>\n<h2>Rule of 72</h2>\n<p>72 ÷ rate of return on investment</p>\n<p>The <i>rule of 72</i> states how many years it will take for a sum of money to double, given a rate of return that is compounded each year. If, for example, the rate of return is 8%, a sum of money will double in 72÷8, or 9 years.</p>\n<h2>Weighted average cost of capital (WACC)</h2>\n<p>Annual cost to obtain financing ÷ capital balance</p>\n<p>Companies can raise funds by issuing debt or equity. Outstanding debt requires annual interest payments. Shareholders who purchase equity may also insist on required annual dividend payments. Interest payments on debt and dividend payments to shareholders are both considered financing costs. 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