Acct 351 Chapter 08 Flashcards
allowance method
A method of estimating uncollectible accounts receivable whereby bad debt expense is recorded in the same period as the sale to obtain a proper matching of expense and revenues and to achieve a proper carrying value for accounts receivable. (Synonym: indirect method)
asset retirement costs
These are costs recognized at the same time as the liability associated with the retirement of an asset is recognized
average days to sell inventory
A variable of the inventory turnover ratio that represents the average age of the inventory on hand or the number of days it takes to sell inventory once purchased
basket purchase
When a group of units with different characteristics is purchased at a single lump-sum price
consigned goods
Goods that are sold on consignment yet remain the consignor’s property and therefore must be included in inventory
conventional retail inventory method
A method to value inventory that uses the cost-to-retail ratio incorporating net markups but excluding net markdowns. This method is designed to approximate the lower of average cost and market.
Conversion costs
A type of product cost that includes labour and allocated fixed and variable production overhead costs incurred in processing materials into finished goods
cost formula
A method of assigning inventory costs incurred during the accounting period to inventory that is still on hand at the end of the period. The three acceptable formulas are: specific identification; first-in, first-out (FIFO); and weighted average cost
cost of goods available for sale or use
This is the total of (1) the cost of goods on hand at the beginning of the period and (2) the cost of the goods acquired or produced during the period
cost of goods manufactured
The costs of goods that are completed and transferred to Finished Goods Inventory
cost of goods sold
This is the difference between those goods available for sale during the period and those on hand at the end of the period
cost-to-retail ratio
A ratio used in the retail inventory method determined by dividing goods available for sale at cost, by the goods available for sale at retail
current ratio
The ratio of total current assets to total current liabilities
cut-off schedule
Prepared by the accountant for the end of the period to ensure that goods received from suppliers around the end of the year are recorded in the appropriate period
direct method
Where cash flow is derived from operating activities directly by identifying the sources of the cash receipts and payments
executor contract
An agreement requiring continuing performance by both parties
f.o.b. destination
The legal title of an asset does not pass to the buyer until the goods reach the customer’s location
f.o.b. shipping point
The legal title of an asset belongs to the buyer when the goods leave the shipping dock.
finished goods inventory
The reporting of the costs associated with the completed but unsold units at the end of the fiscal period
first-in, first-out (FIFO) cost formula
The method that assigns cost to inventory assuming that goods are used in the order in which they are purchased
gross method
The use of a Purchase Discounts account indicates that the company is reporting its purchases and accounts payable at the gross amount
gross profit method
A method for estimating inventory where taking a physical count is impractical or impossible. It is based on three assumptions: (1) the beginning inventory plus purchases equal total goods to be accounted for; (2) goods not sold must be on hand; (3) and when the net sales, reduced to cost, are deducted from the total goods to be accounted for, the result is the ending inventory
gross profit percentage
The gross profit expressed as a percentage of sales.
indirect method
Where cash flow is derived from operating activities indirectly by making the necessary adjustments to net income reported on the income statement
inventory turnover ratio
A ratio that measures the number of times, on average, the inventory was sold during the period
joint cost
A cost of purchasing or producing multiple items that must be allocated between the multiple products
last-in, first-out (LIFO) cost formula
A method no longer permitted under PE GAAP and IFRS that assigns inventory costs on the assumption that the cost of the most recent purchase is the first cost to be charged to cost of goods sold
lower of cost and market (LCM)
A basis for stating inventory at the lower of its original cost and the net realizable value at the end of the period
lower of cost and net realizable value
A basis for stating inventory at the lower of its original cost and the net realizable value at the end of the period
lower of cost and net realizable value (LC&NRV) standard
A basis for stating inventory at the lower of its original cost and the net realizable value at the end of the period.