Cash, Receivables, & Investments Flashcards

1
Q

Credit terms - example 2/10 net 30

A

pay w/in 10 days, get 2% discount; otherwise must pay by 30th day

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2
Q

Annual financing cost (AFC)

credit terms

A

Formula:
AFC = [discount / 100 - discount] * [365/(credit period - discount period)]

E.g. 2/10, net 30
AFC = [2/98] * [365/20]
[2%/98%] * [total year/(30 days - 10 days)]

aka, if it is 2% for 20 days, how much is it for 365 days?

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3
Q

How to determine if you should take the credit terms?

credit terms

A

Calculate the AFC, compare to interest rate in the market

annual financing cost > interest rate
if have the money, take the discount
it not have the money, borrow and take discount

annual financing cost < interest rate
if have money, pass on discount (invest money)
if not have the money, pass on discount

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4
Q

Discount types

credit terms

A

Trade discounts & purchase discounts

  • never entered into the books (it is a decrease in profit, not a cost)
  • purchaser would record purchased inventory at net of trade discount

Cash discount

  • discount is recorded
  • can be recorded gross of discount or net of discount
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5
Q

Cash discount - when to record sales gross of discount?

credit terms

A

Based on historical experience, if customers will NOT be likely to take the discount, record GROSS.

  • record sales and A/R at full value
  • record discount only if customer takes it

Conservatism principle - don’t record expenses you are not likely to take (i.e. customer will not take the discount so you will not have that expense)

sale made
A/R 100
sales 100

cash rec’d - discount not taken
cash 100
A/R 100

cash rec’d - discount taken
cash 98
discount 2
A/R 100

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6
Q

Cash discount - when to record sales net of discount?

credit terms

A

Based on historical experience, if customers WILL be likely to take the discount, record NET.
- record sales and A/R at net value of discount

Conservatism (prudence) principle - record the future expense you are likely to incur with the related revenue (i.e. customer will take the discount so don’t record the gross rev)

sale made
A/R 98
sales 98

cash rec’d - discount taken
cash 98
A/R 98

cash rec’d - discount not taken
cash 100
A/R 98
sales 2

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7
Q

Bad debts - direct write off method

bad debt

A

Not allowed for GAAP. Required for tax.

No bad debt allowance allowed. Only record bad debts when actually occur.

Does not comply with GAAP prudence & matching, but is used for tax to prevent tax rate gaming.

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8
Q

Bad debts - allowance method

bad debt

A

Used to comply with prudence and matching.

  • not overstating revenues
  • matching expense to the period in which the sale occurred.

From the sales made, anticipate some will be future bad debts and create an allowance.

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9
Q

Allowance for bad debts - sample journal entries

bad debt

A

At time of sale:
A/R (B) 100
sale (I) 100
bad debt expense (I) 2
ADA* (B) 2
*allowance for doubtful accounts

Cash collection:
cash 90
A/R 90
ADA 10
A/R 10

Bad debt recovery:
A/R 10
ADA 10
cash 10
A/R 10

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10
Q

Allowance for bad debts - % of A/R

bad debt

A

A company can estimate a percentage of A/R at period end as the ADA.
The % of A/R at period end is calculated. ADA ending balance is adjusted to match this amount.

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11
Q

What items are included in cash & cash equivalents?

cash

A
  • cash-in-hand
  • checkable accounts (savings & current accts)
  • negotiable instruments (checks, notes receivable, money order)
  • t-bill, mm funds, commercial paper, & CDs where original maturity is less than 3 months (issue date to maturity)
  • investments w/ remaining time to maturity of less than 3 months (purchase date to maturity)
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12
Q

What investments are not included in cash & cash equivalents?

cash

A
  • bank overdraft (this is a ST loan); can be netted with a checkable acct at the same bank
  • restricted cash (e.g. compensating balances, escrow accts, security deposit
  • treasury bills, mm funds, commercial paper, and CDs where maturity date is greater than 3 months (issue date to maturity)
  • investments with remaining time to maturity of greater than 3 months (purchase date to maturity)
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13
Q

Pledging, Assigning, Factoring A/R

A

Pledging: A/R is used as collateral on a loan. Control of the receivable stays with the borrower. A/R only goes to lender in case of default.

Assigning: A/R used as collateral on a loan. Promising that all the proceeds from A/R will be used to pay off ht the loan. Control stays w/ the borrower.

Factoring: A/R is sold to a 3rd party for less than 100% (risk, fees, etc.). Factoring w/ recourse and w/o recourse

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14
Q

Credit losses - reporting ADA

A

credit losses need to be disclosed on two levels:

  • by portfolio segment
  • by class of financing receivable

portfolio segment: level used by the entity in developing an documenting systematic method for determining losses

class of financing receivable - disaggregation of portfolio segment.

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