2 Cash + Cash Equiv, Bank Reconciliation Flashcards

1
Q

What is a Current Asset?

A

An asset expected to be used up or converted into cash within one year or one operating cycle, whichever is longer.

Examples: Cash, trading securities, Demand deposits, cash equivalents, accounts receivable, inventory, pre-paids

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2
Q

What is a Current Liability?

A

An obligation

  • expected to be settled within one year or one operating cycle, whichever is longer; OR
  • which will require the use of current assets.
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3
Q

What is a Cash Equivalent?

A

A security

  • easily converted into cash
  • fixed maturity amount
  • an original maturity of < 90 days

Examples:

  • US Treasury obligations (bills, notes, bonds)
  • commercial paper
  • money market accounts,
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4
Q

Are postdated checks or non-sufficient funds included in cash?

A

No; they are treated as receivables

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5
Q

Do compensating or restricted balances require disclosure in the notes to the financial statements?

A

Yes

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6
Q

What items are included in cash?

A

The components of cash include

  • coin and currency,
  • petty cash,
  • cash in bank, and
  • negotiable instruments such as
    • ordinary checks,
    • cashier’s checks,
    • certified checks, and
    • money orders.

also some types of

  • deposits: held as compensating balance but not legally resticted
  • checks written but not mailed (added back to balance)
  • certificates of deposit: w/ original maturities < 3m
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7
Q

How is a bank overdraft accounted for?

A

GAAP: Treated as a current Liability

IFRS: subtract it from cash

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8
Q

What is a compensating balance?

A

This is a minimum balance that must be maintained by the firm in relation to a borrowing

  • increases the effective rate of interest on the borrowing
  • reduces the risk to the lender

classification

  • if related to a short-term loan = current A but NOT part of unrestricted cash balance
  • if related to a long-term loan = non-current A
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9
Q

What is a separation of duties?

A

Separation of Duties, in effect,

  • forces employees to collude if they attempt to fraudulently remove any of the company’s cash resources.
  • At a minimum, the duties related to cash that should be separated are:
    • custody of cash
    • recording of cash
    • reconciliation of bank accounts.
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10
Q

What is not included in CASH

A

overdraft of bank account

  • when checks cashed > balance in account
  • offset against other cash accounts w/ SAME bank, but not w/ cash in other banks_: current liablity_

excluded:

  • certificates of deposit (orig maturities > 3m),
  • legal restricted compensating balances,
  • restricted cash funds (such as a bond sinking fund),
  • postdated checks rec’d from customers (A/Rec),
  • advances to EE (a receivable),
  • postage stamps (prepaid exp, L)
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11
Q

monetary asset

A
  • an A w/ fixed nominal (stated) value doesn’t change w/ inflation
  • cash is most monetary of all assets, b/c no uncertainty to stated/nominal value at present or future
  • purchasing power of cash declines w/ inflation
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12
Q

Bank Reconciliation

Benefits

A
  • periodic comparison bank account vs cash balance
  • ID errors in firm/bank records
  • Establish correct end balance
  • Provide info for adj entries
  • Reduce cash theft by EE
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13
Q

Bank Reconciliation

3 formats (general)

A
  • Bank to book: start w/ balance per bank,
    • adj to get balance per book
  • Book to bank: start w/ balance per book,
    • adj to get bank
  • Bank and book to true balance: both bank and book are separately* adj to *true cash balance (on B/S).
    • adjustments are changes not recorded in bank or book at end of period
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14
Q

Bank Reconcilation

Adjustments to Bank Balance

A
  1. Deposit in transit: made by company but NOT cleared bank. Common bank policy to hold deposits after 2pm and post next business day
  2. Cash on hand: reflects petty cash and undeposited cash receipts (not deposited yet)
  3. Outstanding checks: written and mailed by company but not cleared by bank
  4. Errors made by bank: addition or subtraction mistake to balance
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15
Q

Bank Reconcilation

Adjustments to Book Balance

A
  1. Interest earned: added to account by bank but not yet by company
  2. Note collected: bank deducted, but not on book yet
  3. Service charges: bank recorded by not on book yet
  4. NSF (nonsufficient funds) checks: rec’d from customers, when bank determines is NSF will reduce company’s checking balance, company records NSF check when see statement
  5. Errors in firm’s records: ex: pmt $96 recorded as $69 or $11,000 vs $1,100
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16
Q

Bank Reconciliation

GAAP v IFRS

A

no differences