the recording, measurement, and interpretation of financial information
accounting
cash flow
budget
assets
an individual who has state certified to provide accounting services ranging form the preparation of financial records and the filling of tax returns to complex audits of corporate financial records
certified public accountant
private accountants
accountants employed be large corporations, government agencies and other organizations to prepare and analyze their financial statements
certified public accountants
private accountants who, after rigorous examination, are certified by the national association of accountants and who have some managerial responsibility
certified management accountants
the internal use of accounting statements by mangers in planning and directing the organizations activities
managerial accounting
the movement of money through an organization over a daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly basis
an internal financial plan that forecasts expenses and income over a set period of time
summary of firms financial information, products, and growth plans for owners and potential investors
annual report
a firms economic resources or items of value that it owns, such as cash, inventory, land, equipment, buildings, and other tangible, and intangible things
liabilities
owners equity
debts that a firm news to others
all the money that has ever been contributed to the company that never has to be paid back
assets equal liabilities plus owners equity
accounting equation
a system of recording and classifying business transactions in separate accounts to maintain the balance of the accounting equations
double-entry equation
accounting cycle
ledger
the four step procedure of an accounting system, examining source documents, recording, transactions in an accounting journal, posting
journal
a time ordered list of account transactions
a book or computer program with separate files for each account
a financial report that shows an organization's probability over a period of time- month, quarter, or year
income statement
the total amount of money received from the state of goods or services as well as from related business activities
revenue
cost of goods
gross income
the amount of money a firm spent to buy or produce the products it sold during the period to which the income statement applies
cost of goods sold
revenues minus the cost of goods sold required to generate the revenues
subtotal
the costs incurred in the day-to-day operations of an organization
expenses
costs of good sold
the total profit after all expenses, including taxes, have been deducted from revenue, also called net earnings
net income
sub total
the process of spreading the costs of long-lived assets such as buildings and equipment over the total number of accounts periods in which they are expected to be used
depreciation
owner equity
a snapshot of an organizations financial position at a given moment
balance sheet
retaining earning
accounts receivable
assets that are used or converted into cash within the course of a calendar year
current assets
money owed a company by its clients or customers who have promised to pay for the products at a later date
account receivable
a firms financial obligations to short term creditors, which must be repaid within one year
current liabilities
accounts payable
accrued expenses
retaining earnings
the amount a company owes to suppliers for goods and services purchased with credit
total assets
an account representing all unpaid financial obligations incurred by the organization
income statements
explains how the company's cash changed from the beginning of the accounting period to the end
statement of cash flows
calculations that measure an organization's financial health
ratio analysis
statement of cash flow
ratios that measure the amount of operating income or net income an organization is able to generate relative to its assets, owner's equity, and sales
probability ratios
profit margins
return on assets
return on equity
net income divided by sales
net income divided by assets
profit margin
net income divided by owners equity; also called return on investment
ratios that measure how well a firm uses its assets to generate each $1 of sales
asset utilization ratios
receivables tune over
inventory turnover
total asst turnover
sale divided by accounts receivable
receivable turnover
total asset turnover
liquidity ratios
sales divided by total inventory
total assets turnover
sales divided by total assets
recevable turnover
ratios that measure the speed with which a company can turn its assets into cash to meet shot-term debt
receivables turnover
current ratios
current assets divided by current liabilities
liquidity ratio
inventory ratios
a stringent measure of liquidity that eliminates inventory
quick ratio (acid test)
current ratio
debt utilization ratios
ratios that measure how much debt an organization is using relative to there sources of capital, such as owners equity
debt utilization's ratios
a ratio indicating how much of the firm is financed by debt and how much by owners equity
debt to total assets ratio
operating income divided by interest expense
times interest earned ratio
data used by the investors to compare the performance of one company with another on an equal, per-share basis
per share data
net income or profit divided by the number of stock shares outstanding
earnings per share
dividends per share
paid by the corporation to the stockholders for each share owned
time interest earned ratio